My Land Tour...The Big Woods

Nice gobbler! Weight? Beard? Spurs?

Old farm equipment is the "seasoning" in your pictures. Sense of history, H20. Really cool.
 
Nice gobbler! Weight? Beard? Spurs?

Old farm equipment is the "seasoning" in your pictures. Sense of history, H20. Really cool.

Thanks Bows.

For weight....way heavier than a goose, maybe twice as much!
Beard not long...spurs not long....but it's body was really big for its age that I estimated to be about a year?
We were sure happy about the whole thing and the wife wants it cooked for mother’s day for the family along with a couple grouse....I thought that was great idea!
 
I went turkey hunting Monday morning with no luck, did have two gobbling to the west on a neighbor a mile away early. Saw five deer and had a few pair of wood ducks landing in trees in the woods looking for nest sites. I parked over in the orchard so I snapped a few pics of the fruit tree progress.

The pears seem way ahead of the apple tree's waking up this spring and are in blossom.

Couple Keiffers
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An third leaf Olympic that is blossoming like crazy
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A third leaf Golden Hornet on G222 that is still holding apples from last fall and is about to break blossom?
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A Honey Crisp that seems to be about the furthest along of the apples one warm afternoon and it should blossom
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Elberta peach in blossom
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Put up a mason bee hive a couple weeks ago, the wife was very interested in it and after a lengthy mason bee chat she wants me to put another up.
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On my way out of the woods I noticed the early stuff is in bloom and snapped a few wildflower pics. The ground is covered in flowers.

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Lots of buzzing..the girls are busy
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And I notice some of these peeking through the understory
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So I went home ate breakfast and Darcy and I came back for a mushroom hunt.
About halfway through picking
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I ended up finding over a hundred...and Darcy got a nice run in.
 
Very bird and very special photos. Congratultions to you both.
 
Looks like lots of life there fowler! Beautiful!
 
Went out for one last try at turkeys Monday morning, it was 29f at first light. Never heard a turkey but two hens did come in, they took off at a sprint as I fumbled for my phone.

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Had the dog with me a few days ago at the farm while I was working on some stuff and she flushed a hen turky in the pasture on top of the spoil pile about fifty yards from me, it flew to the woods landed in a big oak and sat there watching us. I gathered Darcy up and put her in the truck then walked over and found a nest with seven eggs...today it has nine.

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The apple trees are all in blossom now about two weeks behind the pears. About half the pears have a decent fuit set, the cold frosted the new leaves bad on all of the chestnut trees hopefully they will recover quick.
 
Checked on the fruit trees yesterday pruned off any suckers trying to start since pruning and gave them one more shot of fertilizer. Took a few pics of what’s going on in the orchard and how things are doing. The orchard is planted where the old homestead used to sit, it is around an acre in size.

The west side of the orchard that is apple trees

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A third leaf Enterprise that I trimmed the low stuff off hard this spring
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The south side that is pears

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A few have a decent fruit set but lost a lot to frost and late freeze.
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The east side of orchard, cherry tree in foreground and another over it's right shoulder the rest of trees are mix of apple/pear

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The north side I left a good sized space open to maybe one day put a small cabin.
We get these wildflowers every spring in the orchard
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Ground cover in the orchard was a good clover mix with chicory and orchard grass but it is starting to get pretty weedy and thistles are starting to act rude.
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In the shrub strips the highbush cranberry is finally starting to look like something
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The American plums are growing well, we put in 50 over the last two years
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Congrats on a nice bird! Everything is looking great, really liked the morel shot.

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Went out to the farm yesterday afternoon to do some spot spraying on the cattails around ponds...definitely will be going after the frogs soon and I know that I hate wearing waders with temps in the high 80's too.
Took a few pics while getting my sweat on;

There are a few different wildflowers in the pasture now to keep bee's busy, should be really coming on next month.
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Shrub strips are greening up and are easy to row until the switch covers them up.
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My pinoaks are more like bushes with the deer browsing
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The two things that seem to grow well in the strips with wet feet are ROD and Highbush cranberry.
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The wildflower bloom is coming along in the pasture and orchard and keeping the bee's very busy. We spilt a hive yesterday and started two more Nuc hives, that brings us up to four on this place. The original hives are really putting some honey on we keep adding supers to them. Splitting the hives I got stung three times, with the hot muggy temp and being overcast they were really worked up and mad.

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Raspberries are on now to
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And in the last couple weeks we have had some fun fishing, the bass have really grown and act hungry for as fat as they look, also catching a lot of the green sunfish.

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It has been pretty dry here but the wildflowers are still putting them out, not as showy as last summer but still seeing a good bloom with a lot of variety. The wife and I took a walk this weekend and had a good look around.

A natural bouquet growing in the pasture.

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Some of the others keeping the bees busy

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And the pollinator strip was buzzing with activity

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We also found another axe head along the field edge behind the orchard. I always keep whatever old artifacts that turn up from the old homestead that used to sit there, have found some horse shoes and a post hole digger T handle in the past and hung them on fruit tree cages.

Put the hatchet/axe head in the old locust tree stump with one from a few years ago.

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Pollinator strip looks great. Something I haven’t done but would like to.
 
Saw what I thought was a bluebird hit on the road along the woods the other day, after I backed up and looked it was a male indigo bunting. I hate to see it hit but it is the first one I've ever seen that close. We see a couple every summer at the farm.

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Seeing a lot of deer beds out in the pasture, it finaly is turning into something that the wildlife seem to want to use.

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Getting ready for deer season, put up a shooting hut on skids last week on one of the logging trails.

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and I put three of these together yesterday, replacing a few old cheap ones with the boys this Saturday.

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Saw what I thought was a bluebird hit on the road along the woods the other day, after I backed up and looked it was a male indigo bunting. I hate to see it hit but it is the first one I've ever seen that close. We see a couple every summer at the farm.

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Seeing a lot of deer beds out in the pasture, it finaly is turning into something that the wildlife seem to want to use.

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Getting ready for deer season, put up a shooting hut on skids last week on one of the logging trails.

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and I put three of these together yesterday, replacing a few old cheap ones with the boys this Saturday.

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I have swapped out most of my older stands with millenniums. You won’t be sorry about that they are very comfortable. I also saw your blind thread. I have looked at those several times. They were pretty far up in Michigan and look to be the same source.
 
You’ll be getting more of those boxes.
 
Wow youre getting things done! I love those ladder stands too. I agree the boxes are nice but I can just never decide on 1 spot...
 
Pulled five supers off the hives this weekend, we will spin the frames out next month when we have more time. The bee's seem to have made it through the chaos fine and have settled back down.
There are still a few wildflowers popping to keep them busy especially the goldenrod, it is thick along the woods.

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We had a little over six inches of rain the other night and it really made the native grasses in the pasture bolt and thankfully brought the ponds back up over a foot. Seeing all kinds of wildlife activity in the pasture with daily sightings of deer and turkeys in it. See the same two hens with poults in the same spot around 9:00 am chasing grasshoppers, they act tame as long as I stay in the truck. Darcy always ends up flushing them but they come right back and are in same place next day.

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The hazelnuts produced about half as much as last year, I was glad for any with the late freeze in May and the lack of rain this summer.

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We finally got Some rain too. I’m sure all my native grasses are going to be short this year.
 
I forgot to ad this yesterday to my tour;

As I said we replaced a few of our old Menards ladder stands with Millenniums a couple weeks ago, well my wife decided this year she might want to try and shoot a deer. She does not want to hunt in the woods though, she has been spotting all these deer beds and what she thinks is buck poop all over the orchard. We have a couple Osage that have some size that I haven't cut yet right in the middle of the orchard and she wanted one of the old ladder stands put up in one.
Sounded like a nice evening husband wife project so a couple days ago we went out to put one up. I walked the stand up and leaned it against the tree, then I ask her to hang on to stand pushing it towards tree while I go up and chain it quick. Told her once I get it chained it will be safe and she can toss me up a couple ratchet straps to make it solid.
So I am up the tree on this wobbly shaky stand sixteen plus feet in the air with the love of my life keeping me safe....all of the sudden she says "hey look a cool bottle" as I start swaying back way too far and have to bear hug the tree to keep from falling. She had spotted some little bottle in the dirt and let go of the ladder stand to get it!
I start telling her in no uncertain terms "GRAB THE LADDER STAND AND PUSH IT BACK TO TREE" she half ass pushes the stand back and keeps going on about this little bottle.
After some very fast explanation to her about how important her job right now was to me for the next few seconds or so she gets back with the program and I get the chain around tree/stand and lock it.
Got the straps on while she kept blathering about her new found treasure and where she wanted "her" trail camera placed. So I survived and she got a new family heirloom that is apparently more important than her husband of 33 years wellbeing. Orchard is on the old homestead and it is fun finding old things from previous owners there.
Her luck she will kill a booner there...good for her!
The least that stand will be for now is a great stand to call yotes from and cover with the 243, I can see for half a country block from it. In a few years as fruit trees really come on it will be a sweet spot to deer hunt.

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Her treasure;

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Added stand pic 9/16/20
 
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Was out at farm yesterday working the dog and got a real good chance to look the pasture over and do some reflection on the goals we started with and how some have changed.

Originally we bought the place just to hunt, it isn't big but was about all we could afford at the time. We have tried to do as much with it as we possibly could to make it better for hunting, mostly deer and turkeys...along the way the goals changed a lot. Got into the habitat part of it heavy and started taking a huge interest in all the nature on the place...plants, birds, bugs, animals. Started really wanting to get the place back into good shape after over a hundred and fifty years of rotated crops, got more concerned about bringing the soil and native plants back and what we were doing and could do. In the beginning I was lucky enough to have a state biologist to help with the planning then I found this site and really started searching the internet and reading up on things that I could do. Putting in wetland ponds and the native grass pasture was a lot of work early on and took a few years to start seeing results...the shrub strips will take some more time.
To some of the local farmers the place looks like an unkept mess and they tell me that, I just smile. My goals aren't their goals. I hardly mow, I hardly spray..I've got weeds and no crops except for the fruit and nut trees and the ground around them looks like a jungle, I'm raising bunnies and fawns and poults along with a whole lot of other stuff!
I've learned more about plants and bugs and birds in the last five years than I could have ever imagined...and some of the hunting has taken a back seat. I still like to deer hunt (but it's buck only now) and I love to bunny hunt (but I only take a few)...our family has lots of other places to hunt this place is for relaxing and enjoying gods creation!

I was really looking the pasture over hard yesterday and of all the things we have done and planted the native grasses and pollinators have had some of the biggest impact on the place. It took about three years for the grasses to really start looking like something, this year it is really on. We planted Indian/switch/big&little bluestem and have had a few others just come on their own. Our soil is a little loamy and a lot of hard clay, the native grasses throw roots over ten feet deep and create a sub surface biomass that is literally incredible. Whatever good things are going on above ground what is happening below is tenfold.
I like the diversity, did not want a monoculture of anything, if down the road it starts leaning that way we will reassess and do a little disking and replanting. For now the plan is to do some conservative mowing every few years.

Here are a some pics from yesterday;

The top of the spoil pile from the front pond, grasses are thickest there almost to thick, the pheasants really like to dive into this area to hide.

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Some of the grasses further back in the pasture;

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Trails in thin spots with partridge pea - clover and weeds;

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And the grass gives the quail some good places to hide from Darcy;

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A picture perfect point

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And my favorite way to see the native grasses, over a bird dog with a quail flushing!

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