It was hard to draw the lines evenly with a mouse, but the eastern curved border is actually the center of the creek bed.
It appears that the deer cross the creek in one spot, a heavily traveled worn down trail that crosses in a slight bend in the creek, its in one of the deeper portions, but also one of the most narrow. They are able to jump across without touching water, and there is a little bit of a clearing/path that cuts across the stream. The rest of the creek bed is thick tag alders that are very difficult to navigate. We have a camera set up at this location and have gotten lots of doe pictures. This is the best funnel on the property.
There is no access through the eastern farm fields. However, there is an old logging road that runs along the west side of the creek at the edge of the creek bed along the high ground.
The air photo doesnt show this, but the neighboring lands are mostly hardwoods or lower tag alder areas. This property has the most pine tree cover in the area aside from the field with the teardrop shaped plantation pine plantings at the south end of the west neighbors 80. There are also a few areas along his eastern border (our western border) of mature plantation pines, although they provide no ground cover, only a canopy.
The low/younger pines are to our advantage as its part of unique habitat in the immediate area. There are also some pockets of poplar that we hope to release with the logging of the larger pines that have been shading them out.
we have ordered 12 apple trees for planting this spring from Woodstock Nursery in Neillsville. A mixture of apples for humans, deer, and crabapples. We havent picked a location yet for the orchard(s) as we want to keep as much of the field tillable as possible, and we are tentative to put anything along the west side of the small field near the creek as the deer may then use the neighbors creek bed as a travel corridor.
There is a ridge running from the northwest corner of the property, running south/southeast until it flattens out around where the property turns into an "L". The small field in the north-central portion ends with its western border being that ridge. The field is "visible" from the road along the north border only in the sense that you can tell there is a field there, but you cant see into it. there are already a couple piles of dirt there from long ago forming a berm, and a fair amount of growth blocking the view. we plan to transplant some of the pines that need to be moved along the north edge for a screen/windbreak.
Our idea is to make the 'sanctuary' a 15-20 acre portion of the property, in the middle area, running more north/south than east/west. It will be composed of a lot of the existing smaller pine trees and portions of poplar thickets. The old logging road lies east of this area, between the bedding cover and the large fields and will be our stand access. Along the ridge, we plan to plant oak saplings and acorns.
We are hoping/planning to take advantage of the large amount of agricultural fields surrounding the property as a steady healthy food source for the deer population while creating the best cover in the area for them to bed down in. We realize that the deer will utilize more land that what he owns, however, we hope that by making his are the best shelter/bedding area we can keep the deer closeby.
i will try to get a map of the proposed plan up as soon as i can