teamsprock
FNG
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2019
- Messages
- 97
Will they let you plant? There are some grasses that will provide bedding cover and not go nuts & take over landscape.I think the point you hit on with ag fields is where private lands managers are falling short. There are big private ag fields in Wyoming I am glassing that don't have crap for bedding nearby - it's irrigated in the sage brush with no places for them to hide. Seeing low to no deer numbers on ag fields where there is zero hunting pressure is one of the driving forces behind this question.
Not sure how easy it is to get private landowners on board but I am leading up a project to replant bitterbrush with the BLM and a couple of conservation groups (Wyoming Wildlife Federation and Muley Fanatics) near my hometown of Lander because something wiped out a couple thousand acres of it about 5 years ago.Will they let you plant? There are some grasses that will provide bedding cover and not go nuts & take over landscape.
Flip side is you could plant brush/bushes that will also provide some kind of browse.
I shot my only muley off a crop field. Area was flat as a pancake griddle. Adjacent to blm land w grasses and brush. Not sure where this bunch of 20 or so deer bedded but they came in from a diff direction ever evening and always fled the same way across blm to public.
Those stands of bitterbrush take a long time to mature . I've watched a hillside that I helped plant 15 years ago, grow to be a nicely covered hill. Unfortunately it burned again last summer in the Paddock Fire.Not sure how easy it is to get private landowners on board but I am leading up a project to replant bitterbrush with the BLM and a couple of conservation groups (Wyoming Wildlife Federation and Muley Fanatics) near my hometown of Lander because something wiped out a couple thousand acres of it about 5 years ago.
Toughest part of these projects is it's a 5-10 year time horizon before you ever see any results. Probably 10-20 years before you see a deer herd benefit. And that's just to keep what we have.
That's always the struggle, no doubt! If you have some photos, I'd love to see the work you guys did (before the fire of course).Those stands of bitterbrush take a long time to mature . I've watched a hillside that I helped plant 15 years ago, grow to be a nicely covered hill. Unfortunately it burned again last summer in the Paddock Fire.
Best of luck with your project, I hope it gets to grow!
THIS IS EXACTLY WHAT I WAS LOOKING FOR!My place is a mix of ag and native ground plus I have 90% water rights in local spring/dribble that is mainly used for livestock water and very near a roadway. I have always had decent mule deer and in the last 10-15 years more and more elk. A big difference I noticed was when I added guzzlers to the mix in 2008. Big bucks were and still are pretty transient, as noted it's pretty hard to keep a muley buck in a relatively small area, but the does/fawns and cows/calves now spend probably 4 months from birth time to winter migration on my place - neighbors call it the nursery. My neighbor who added guzzlers a few years after me noticed the same. I don't think it's so much the addition of water to the area because there has always been springs and livestock tanks available - problem was most of those were fairly close to busy roadways. My seat of the pants observation, since I/we added guzzlers up in secluded draws away from the roads, the roadkill thru my stretch seems to be much less.
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I have tried to get into programs with the NRCS but haven't managed to break thru into the good ol boys club. (my perception) I've talked with FnG about their programs but they tell me there is really nothing further habitat wise they'd recommend. I put about 1/2 of my established ag land into a "CRP mix" as well on my own dollar but I still lease out a decent chunk that has been in a variety of dryland crops...some that really bring in the deer and elk...to the dismay of my leasee who is less thrilled with elk and deer than I am of course.
Me planting ~280 acres of a hycrest and intermediate crested wheatgrass mix:
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Anyway, to answer the OP's question...I am a private landowner that has done things to try to improve mule deer/elk/wildlife habitat and believe I have seen some benefits to it.
We will usually shoot a buck or two per year - mostly kid first deer type stuff or typical buck for the tag. A 2024 buck:
For Sale...always open to offers