by Land & Legacy
The Land & Legacy podcast brings expert advice each week on everything from habitat management, hunting, and recreational land investments. We unpack real world scenarios that we experience through consulting across the country to help you become a more productive landowner and hunter. If you own land, this is the podcast for you!
Language
🇺🇲
Publishing Since
10/23/2018
Email Addresses
1 available
Phone Numbers
0 available
April 30, 2025
LandBeat Breakdown analyzes the ineffective application of timber stand improvement and prescribed fire, revealing how overuse can negatively impact wildlife habitat and forage.
April 25, 2025
Matt Dye explores old field management techniques that change vegetation to create diverse food and cover for deer, turkey, and quail, ultimately promoting native species.
April 16, 2025
Sometimes it may take years to see the results of your hard work. However, other projects may be immediate. Matt and Alan dive into some of the most overlooked areas that occur on pretty much every property we see throughout our consulting travels. Wildlife openings can be a huge part of the success of not only harvesting turkeys, but providing beneficial plant structures that are conducive to raising more poults. It's time to start evaluating the areas of the property that may not be doing much currently, but with a little work, could be a huge piece of the puzzle to help hens have a place to take their poults. Wildlife openings should be managed in a way that removes any nonnative grasses, and focused more on promoting native forbs and legumes. These areas provide ample opportunity for young poults to move through and have the perfect amount of cover above them with bare soil underneath that they can navigate without becoming soaked from dews. The structure of the forbs and legumes also allow the poults to move freely through the opening with ease while also attracting a multitude of bugs providing crucial nutrition to young poults. When these areas are also in close proximity to good nesting cover, the chance of a hen raising a brood is really high. It's truly amazing to see how quick the wildlife will respond to the work we do. The creation of this wildlife opening started with spraying the fescue on March 2, then followed up with a burn on March 12. Turkeys showed up on March 13, and have been utilizing the fresh burn ever since. A huge part of the success of this hunt was providing an area that was different from the hundreds of acres of fields that surrounded this small timber block and wildlife opening. It's time to start taking a different approach to the odd areas of our fields or open areas of our timber. Every opening doesn't have to be a foodplot, and in most cases these openings can be the best strut zones on the property. A native wildlife opening will be much better than a mediocre foodplot, or even a poorly placed foodplot on the property.
Jared Van Hees
Dr. Bronson Strickland & Dr. Steve Demarais
Mossy Oak
Dr. Marcus Lashley & Dr. Will Gulsby
Terry Peer
Jake Hofer
Jake Hofer
Mossy Oak
Drury Outdoors
HUNTR
MeatEater
Arron Bleise
Andrew Maxwell & Jacob Myers
Dan Johnson, Sportsmen's Empire
Lake Pickle & Jordan Blissett
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