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GrowingDeer.tv
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Добавлен 25 окт 2010
GrowingDeer.tv: short videos with deer hunting action, hunting tips and tactics, food plots, trail cameras, bow hunting, deer management with an informational hunting blog from whitetail expert Dr. Grant Woods. For more information visit www.GrowingDeer.tv.
#AvantLink # 303841
#AvantLink # 303841
Six Years of Habitat Restoration: Reaping the Rewards
From an unproductive, closed-canopy forest to a thriving wildlife habitat, witness the progress made! Will and Drew have made incredible progress in 6 years time. Patience and strategic planning have resulted in impressive improvements, showcasing the importance of intentional and sustainable practices. Follow along to learn how you can create high-quality wildlife habitats!
If you'd like us to visit your property to enhance your hunting experience, email us at info@growingdeer.tv
0:00 Intro
0:30 Fire Recommendations
2:37 Hunting Success - How to Improve Habitat to Increase Hunting Opportunities
8:57 Girdling / Hack & Squirt results
18:02 Native Habitat Productivity - Native Grass or Native G...
If you'd like us to visit your property to enhance your hunting experience, email us at info@growingdeer.tv
0:00 Intro
0:30 Fire Recommendations
2:37 Hunting Success - How to Improve Habitat to Increase Hunting Opportunities
8:57 Girdling / Hack & Squirt results
18:02 Native Habitat Productivity - Native Grass or Native G...
Просмотров: 1 132
Видео
Native vs. Disked Soil: Comparing Health and Soil Loss
Просмотров 8 тыс.7 часов назад
Discover the differences between native and disked soil in terms of health and soil loss. Learn how maintaining natural soil structure supports a thriving ecosystem, while disking can lead to erosion and decreased fertility. Find out how soil management impacts your land! Green Cover Seed - www.growingdeer.tv/gcsd @GrowingDeerTV #deerhunting #hunting
How to Improve a Hunting Property During the Summer | Land Management Part 4
Просмотров 15 тыс.12 часов назад
Looking to improve your hunting property during the off season? We'll cover spraying invasive species to promote native vegetation, maintaining access roads for better mobility, and ensuring your tree stands are safe and ready for the hunting season. Join Grant for practical tips and hands-on advice to make the most of your land management efforts during the warmer months. Tracker Off-Road - ww...
Your Guide to Timber Stand Improvement | Land Management Series Part 3
Просмотров 9 тыс.16 часов назад
Your Guide to Timber Stand Improvement | Land Management Series Part 3
Timber Stand Makeover: Improving Wildlife Habitat in Georgia
Просмотров 10 тыс.14 дней назад
Timber Stand Makeover: Improving Wildlife Habitat in Georgia
How To Make a Small Food Plot with Hand Tools
Просмотров 10 тыс.21 день назад
How To Make a Small Food Plot with Hand Tools
How Sunlight and Fire Improve Wildlife Habitat
Просмотров 10 тыс.28 дней назад
How Sunlight and Fire Improve Wildlife Habitat
Timber Stand Improvement - Easy Technique we're using at The Proving Grounds 2
Просмотров 9 тыс.Месяц назад
Timber Stand Improvement - Easy Technique we're using at The Proving Grounds 2
Grant shares a few observations about kudzu!
Просмотров 6 тыс.Месяц назад
Grant shares a few observations about kudzu!
Timber Stand Improvement in Maryland
Просмотров 7 тыс.Месяц назад
Timber Stand Improvement in Maryland
Improving Soil Health - The Release Process™
Просмотров 16 тыс.Месяц назад
Improving Soil Health - The Release Process™
What You Need to Know about Broadcasting Seed for Food Plots
Просмотров 11 тыс.Месяц назад
What You Need to Know about Broadcasting Seed for Food Plots
3 MOST Important Things to Remember when Planting Food Plots
Просмотров 12 тыс.Месяц назад
3 MOST Important Things to Remember when Planting Food Plots
How to Improve Hardwood Timber for Wildlife - Part 3: Girdling Results
Просмотров 15 тыс.Месяц назад
How to Improve Hardwood Timber for Wildlife - Part 3: Girdling Results
Fast habitat improvement! | Landowner's Transition from Low to High-Quality Habitat
Просмотров 17 тыс.Месяц назад
Fast habitat improvement! | Landowner's Transition from Low to High-Quality Habitat
Transforming Red Clay into Healthy Soil: 3 Year Results
Просмотров 18 тыс.2 месяца назад
Transforming Red Clay into Healthy Soil: 3 Year Results
Don't Crimp Early - Understanding the Dough Stage
Просмотров 8 тыс.2 месяца назад
Don't Crimp Early - Understanding the Dough Stage
Trail Camera Tips for Monitoring Deer Growth Post-Turkey Season
Просмотров 2,7 тыс.2 месяца назад
Trail Camera Tips for Monitoring Deer Growth Post-Turkey Season
Tagging a Tom Right Off the Roost! Missouri Turkey Hunting at its Finest
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.2 месяца назад
Tagging a Tom Right Off the Roost! Missouri Turkey Hunting at its Finest
Grant's First Tom of 2024 - Missouri Turkey Season
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 месяца назад
Grant's First Tom of 2024 - Missouri Turkey Season
How to Improve Turkey Populations! Expanding Turkey Populations for Future Generations (811)
Просмотров 22 тыс.2 месяца назад
How to Improve Turkey Populations! Expanding Turkey Populations for Future Generations (811)
Optimize Your Land: Land Management Tips from Grant Woods
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 месяца назад
Optimize Your Land: Land Management Tips from Grant Woods
Transforming 700 Acres in Alabama for White Tail Deer
Просмотров 8 тыс.2 месяца назад
Transforming 700 Acres in Alabama for White Tail Deer
Logging Pines - Fast Progress in Georgia - Landowner getting it done!
Просмотров 10 тыс.2 месяца назад
Logging Pines - Fast Progress in Georgia - Landowner getting it done!
Tough Mountain Hunt - Hunting Turkeys at the Proving Grounds 2
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.2 месяца назад
Tough Mountain Hunt - Hunting Turkeys at the Proving Grounds 2
Locating Prime Food Sources and Strut Zones
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.2 месяца назад
Locating Prime Food Sources and Strut Zones
The Release Process™ Transforms Texas Soil in 4 Years!
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 месяца назад
The Release Process™ Transforms Texas Soil in 4 Years!
Your Guide to Prescribed Fire | Land Management Series Part 2
Просмотров 8 тыс.2 месяца назад
Your Guide to Prescribed Fire | Land Management Series Part 2
Looks like a savannah. Great work guys. Bet it’s full of game.
Who is brave enought to show This version of TV Woman Elite Cameraman? 👄😻👅
I dont see how 80lb of lime is gonna raise your ph from 5 to good when lime calls for tons per acer honestly dont see how 2 bags makes any dofference at all
Cody - Pelletized lime is very finely ground with a water soluble adhesive. Lime reacts on surface area. The more surface area the more particles can have a positive charge. Ag lime (tons per acre) is not finely ground. It will slowly improve the pH over a much longer period of time, but not near as quick as finely ground pelletized lime. This is well researched.
@GrowingDeerTV so basically it takes less palletized lime?
Merit resides on both sides of this issue.Soil health is science based, not just opinions. I’m sympathetic to both, I’m a producer as well. Regenerative farming works; however, it’s not generic-per your comment, and it stills needs refinement. Remember, was it 4 people who died in an Illinois dust storm last spring?
Scott - That dust storm was due to tillage - there's no till in a good regenerative ag production system. I assume I understood your comment?
Put truck in 4wd helps so you don’t spin the rear wheels n cause ruts
Beautiful, Grant! Absolutely spot-on! Love the shout-out to Aldo Leopold. I think of how much your message has, and continues, to influence what we do on our farm/property. Thank you!!!
Lead sled and he says little recoil
A Landplane goes a long way for driveway, maintenance
"seek the creator's will for your life and apply it daily" Exactly!!! Thank you for this important education about trapping bobcats.
Grant, You are so spot on with this video. Addressing invasive plants/trees, maintaining trails, and trimming trees around the edges of food plots is a never ending task but it gets us outside and gives us some exercise. My only tip would be "don't be afraid to hire a professional". When I purchased my property the internal roads were so washed out you could hardly ride an ATV on them. I tried building berms with a shovel and making wooden dams to slow the water but eventually gave up and hired a dozer. He did the entire job in half a day, put in berms, widened the roads and improved a creek crossing. Now I just have to keep up on the maintenance.
Thank you for the education I have gotten from all of your videos Grant .
Thanks for the kind words!
The tall grass is more mature than the short grass.thats why the root system looks bigger
Shane - there were annuals in the fence row. There was no sign of earthworms, etc. The roots of the plants in the ag area were bare. The roots of plants in the fence row showed signs of great microbe populations. There was no sign of erosion in the fence row and a bunch of erosion in the fields. There was no comparison between the quality of soil in the ag field and the fence row.
Thats fill material from clearing. If you want to calculate soil loss just run a RUSLE2. You would be surprised how little soil you lose even with conventional tillage if you use the proper crop rotation. It tends to still meet T in all accords unless you run continuous beans with no cover or tobacco.
Goodness, there are BUNCHES of studies and farmers' testimonies about soil loss. This isn't debatable.
@@GrowingDeerTV So you are saying the RUSLE2 & national standard for calculating soil erosion is incorrect?
Amen Grant! During my trip out to Bladen, Nebraska last month from Pennsylvania it was very depressing to see 95 percent of the farm land I saw on my trip in bare soil, the erosion after the severe storms last month, and just how dead the soil was. As I drove past bio diesel and ethanol plants I couldn't help but wonder, is the damage from the way we are farming the crops to produce that fuel far greater than it's benifits? There is alot of work to be done to educate farmers and consumers on the benifits of soil health and its impact on the planet and our health. Thanks for continuing to spread this message.
Thanks for sharing!
What about a sickle bar mower?
Austin - Does mowing control weeds in yards? Of course it doesn't and the same is true in food plots. Grasses are not terminated by mowing .
@@GrowingDeerTV sorry I meant to lay down the grass that’s there to protect soil from the heat?
you should do a special on how to repair and go back to old way - plowing a bit may still be a good idea but adding in compost and organic inputs to actively build things back up
They recommend no plowing 99% of the time
You guys ever hear of planting very light amounts of corn, buckwheat and oats with your soybeans????? Guy around me who plants fields for a business says he mixes 5lbs of each to 50 lbs of soybeans. Drills that mix to 1 acre
Often corn doesn't pollentate at low populations.
While I appreciate the idea those deer are going to have a definite preference to feed in those beans vs that grown up fence row. I enjoy the idea of conservation and regenerative techniques, but it's growing deer not growing soil.
I don't understand Brandon. Are you saying soil health isn't important to deer and other species of wildlife?
I think part of that higher fence row soil was because that’s where they put the debris from clearing the land.
Bingo
There are lot of studies showing the amount of erosion. Unfortunately, this isn't arguable.
Well said, especially about Aldo! I’ve read the book multiple times, and we as landowners are OBLIGATED to be stewards of the land! This (regenerative ag) is one way of many.
Oh yeah 👍
Farmers would still argue with you/us.
Most folks find change very difficult. However, the stats are clear that if government subsidies are removed, most farmers would go broke. Taking care of the soil should be job one for farmers and wildlife folks.
Yes because we are tired of listing to this man try to tell everyone how to farm when he has no idea how to efficiently run any type of working farm besides a “deer farm.” No tilling and raising cover crops and not using glyphosate is all fine and great, while yes it does work for some farmers with certain soil types or certain farming methods, it isn’t going to necessarily work for everyone. Quit being so one-sided and open your mind up to other ideas besides attacking farmers that use methods that are different to your deer farm.
@@spargofarms9991 You made a very lengthy ad hominem attack, but didn't refute his claim that most farmers would not be in business without direct payments from the government.
@@Winterascent what kind of “direct payments” are you referring to that farmers are receiving. While yes there are certain programs that farmers can take advantage of it isn’t always the case. What makes you people qualified to get on here and make farmers the bad guys and misinform and miseducate people that don’t know any better. I have been watching @GrowingDeerTV for several years now and it has just gotten worse and worse. I’m not saying he isn’t a smart man and doesn’t have a good plan of action for something that works in the ozark hills. But what he does isn’t economically feasible for large scale row crop farmers. Farmers are Stewart’s of the land weather you can see it or not. And just because we use different methods from you guys isn’t a bad thing.
After the tree has been hacked and squirted, do you leave the dead tree in place? Or can you eventually drop it and remove it? Use it for firewood? 🤷♂️
The tree can be dropped, but most Timber Stand Improvement project have more firewood that locals will use.
👍👍
Thank you, Grant! What an awesome video! Hard to argue against logic for sure.
Very interesting!
Great message. I realize my ecosystem probably isn’t as degraded and overrun with invasives as many of the southern farms I see on all of the wildlife habitat channels, but I can’t help but be disturbed by the amount of herbicides used. Is using glyphosate and other chemicals on a food producing property (including hunted game) really necessary?
Unfortunately, herbicides are necessary to correct years of mismanagement.
Amen
I've always wanted to hunt a deer so thank you very much. 😀
Where do you get the summer release blend
GreenCoverFoodPlots.com
@@GrowingDeerTV we rolled the first year I bought the property and planted brassicas and peas then overseeded late season with winter rye. . The second year planted buck wheat then did a greens blend on part and brassicas with peas on the other part. Late season I over seeded with winter rye and winter wheat. Then this year I planted buckwheat crimped and rolled the wheat and rye over it. So I currently have buckwheat growing I bought perennial clovers, chicory, and alfalfa to seed into the buckwheat and crimp and cultipack come August when there should be more rain fall. So with your method of creating a no till and enriching the soil with microorganisms can I stick with what I was going to plant or should I add something else with it or go to something else altogether? This is for deer and Turkey
No problem with using sprays in moderation. Problem with walking directly into wet sprayed areas as you are spraying. Why get it on your clothes and shoes if you don't have to? 48oz pump up sprayer still the ticket to hack & squirt. Way more control and less mess.
Well why did they take the meat from you and what do they do with it
I don't know but assume the meat is placed in a lined landfill so no prions (the causative agent) can escape in the the environment
Herbicide? Why risk messing up your native plants and pollinators? Smart young land managers are learning to just make a few trips with trimmers every year. Ive tortured my Canada thistle on many acres and they're 99% gone. Cheap, easy, and oddly satisfying. Monsanto says this is futile - they're dead wrong!
Marty - Mowing doesn't terminate many weeds, especially grass species. Mowing uses lots of fuel, wear and tear on equipment and results in added soil compaction. There are always tradeoffs.
@@GrowingDeerTV good point. Just don't always assume you need roundup when a portable trimmer can do just as well if not better when herbicides just get washed off in the rain. Lymphoma is no fun.
Maaan I didn't realize how terrible the sericea lesedeza invasion here is in the southeast! They're EVERYWHERE so prolific I genuinely thought they were a native species. You learn something new everyday. Btw we might not have to worry about chinese privit much longer cause my deer on my property here in North Carolina have been observed multiple times now browsing established privit bushes and munching on new seedlings coming up! Hopefully my crazy deer get some ideas and start eating the sericea lespedeza
Deer will consume privitt but not the taller limbs and privitt makes a lot of seeds!
@@GrowingDeerTV Of course! I don't think any force on this earth be it god, or man can actually fully get rid of privet but I hope one day we get to the point where it's able to be controlled by man and wildlife and stop the invasions advance or at least slow it LOL
Thanks for another great educational video, Grant! I'm going to be implementing hack-and-squirt (and girdling/spray in the winter) on my properties. I've been working with my local NRCS folks, and it's been a great experience. They are saying exactly what you have been saying for many years regarding FSI. I do have one question...when you mix a blue dye into the 'Harper cocktail', I'm assuming it's a water-based dye? In what order do you put the dye in, or does it not matter? Thank you for all you and your team do, Grant!
I use a dye made for herbicides and I add it last.
Pro tip. Fill ANY open metal sections of a tree stand with gap filler. Wasps will make their nests in there!
What scope are they recommending for the 400 Legend?
I have a Burris Field Staff 3x9 and it works great!
We burned a field this year and bunch of locust trees have came up. What's best way to terminate them?
Tordon works well on honey locust.
@@GrowingDeerTV thanks we'll try that
Great info
i liked this video because not everyone has time or money to complete a big task. But like you said, small projects each year can make a huge improvment. cheers Growing Deer TV!!
Thanks for the video Grant! Quick question for your team. We are getting hit with the Emerald Ash Borer here in Wisconsin. About 60% of our woods is ash and has died, or is dieing, doing a great job of naturally clearing the woods. As we take these trees out would you recommend using a herbicide on it as well? I'm just not sure if it will rebound and shoot out sprouts from the stump once cut down like hardwood do. Thanks!
Tyler - I'm not seeing any sprouts from ash trees there that the Emerald Ash Borer impacted.
Grant What mapping land app do you use? Another great video
Depends =- we use both HuntStand, Onx, and Google Maps.
is your blend effective on mesquite?
I lot of folks use a mixture of triclopyr (Remedy) and clopyralid (Reclaim) to terminate mesquite. Some use a newer product called Sendero. Read the labels!
Do you have a video discussing safety of timber cutting versus safety of leaving dead standing timber? Do you self-limit the size of trees you cut down or terminate and leaving standing?
i remember a video he talks about cutting down a living tree that’s super heavy and when it comes down it’s destructive to the good trees and dangerous. once it’s dead the small branches fall first, then the larger ones and eventually the rest of the tree in years to come but everything weighs almost nothing.
@@dylanhalseth1755 Thanks for the reply. I'm not a big fan of dead standing timber, but I can see it being relatively safer.
I don't have a video on that subject. Felling trees is certainly more dangerous than leaving then standing. I don't use a limit of size for trees to leave standing. Most woodlots have a few large dead trees standing from lightning strikes, disease, etc.
What chemical do you use
For most hardwoods I use the Harper blend of 50% Garlon 3A, 40% water, and 10% Arsenal AC. The generics of these work fine and I purchase online to find the best price.
@@GrowingDeerTV Awesome Thanks
I’ve got thousands of gum trees in my thinned rows of loblolly pines and don’t have the best equipment to manage them
The least expensive and best way to terminate gums in a pine stand is by spraying it with a chopper or drone. This often costs about $115 per acre or so, pending on the total acres to be treated, etc.
Another great video, Grant! Keep hammering on forest stand improvement. You know, and I know, the deer and the turkey population will approve.
Great video with lots of information
Why not Garlon 4?
I think Garlon 4 is what they use in basal spraying applications. Someone might need to correct me here
Garlon 3A is water soluble and mixes better.
Turning the woods into a savanna I understand during the growing season. But what about during late fall/winter dormancy when the 0-4' is deposited or laid over by snow? Is there enough cover to offer security?
Doug - that depends on the species present. In addition, not all of the property has to be a savanna.