That podcast with Seek One he made mention of the deer hammering it. I rolled my eyes. But I can't say much because I haven't done much about the pike of it I have on my property.
They may be hammering it, but that's because that's what's available, not because it's what they prefer. Most of our forest have virtually no understory left other then Bush Honeysuckle. Well besides the properties I work on .That podcast with Seek One he made mention of the deer hammering it. I rolled my eyes. But I can't say much because I haven't done much about the pike of it I have on my property.
Yeah, he was talking about that inner city buck he killed. He didn't know the name of it "bright green leaves with red berries". Hmmmm. Like corn, shit nutrients for deer.They may be hammering it, but that's because that's what's available, not because it's what they prefer. Most of our forest have virtually no understory left other then Bush Honeysuckle. Well besides the properties I work on .
Oh gosh. Those guys huh.Yeah, he was talking about that inner city buck he killed. He didn't know the name of it "bright green leaves with red berries". Hmmmm. Like corn, shit nutrients for deer.
That podcast with Seek One he made mention of the deer hammering it. I rolled my eyes. But I can't say much because I haven't done much about the pike of it I have on my property.
Deer thrive in native habitat. If you see them eating or living in invasive infested habitat it's because that's what's available for them and not out of preference. Eliminating your invasive species will lead to your property being more desirable to deer. As far as opening city property to hunting, this is where a good drone survey protocol over course of time would be a wise investment for all parties.My property is on the edge of a SE OH city and has more Honeysuckle that China.......you know what it doesnt have? Deer., let alone good bucks. It has been a war clearing some of this crap. Burning bush is another der are supposed to like...as well as MF rose..... Ive got it all and not the deer to eat it. The city also opened up some more of their properties to hunting to hunting claiming "too many deer" and "tree damage" (while it is much mroe about the permit cost). Totally unjustified in areas and potentially substantiated in others....but they just opened all of them up the same, no population estimate, quota number, nothing....money grab.
I like the idea. Not sure I'm a fan of forcing land owners to allow hunters in exchange for kill permits. I wouldn't want a bunch of random people on my ground.That's why I don't think Ohio has a deer population problem as much as a HUNTER access problem.
I think there should be a process to register for a lottery for private lands. Then any agricultural lands that apply for deer kill permits have to give out a number of permits into the lottery to receive kill permits in the future. The registration on the hunter's end links them to their access to minimize slob hunters ruining access, the agricultural end gives them the end result without the resource being wasted.
The ODNR states the deer are property of the state, not the landowner. That's why you pay restitution to the state when you poach.I like the idea. Not sure I'm a fan of forcing land owners to allow hunters in exchange for kill permits. I wouldn't want a bunch of random people on my ground.
Is that funny. Most men will cringe when their spouse goes shopping....she doesnt know whats in the account but will be thrilled to find a sale on chit not needed and spend away. Deer biologists are the same...small sample size they project on something bigger, and say kill more without ever knowing how many are there. The darn things are transient especially in areas of OH. The guy who has a feed filled in late Feb could have pics or observations supporting an excessive number of deer for the area.....but in reality, Hes the only one offering food at that time and locale skewing the data to paint a picture of a falsehood.Without a program giving real life data on actual population numbers WITH habitat, I don't care to listen to what they say a healthy population is. Every piece of property is built different and can hold a different amount of deer. Decimated land does nothing for the lands not hunted at all or very little. But if the land is holding these pockets of high deer density, who is the government to say it's a problem? Especially if the landowner has the property for deer.