I would say it varies depending on the property. Our state differentiates the difference between supplemental feed - feeding outside of hunting - and baiting during hunting season. I could provide much anecdotal opinion to supplemental summertime feeding improving body weights - at a time when southern deer generally experience a stress period. Without a doubt, defensive baiting - especially in poor mast crop years - keeps more deer on my place and fewer on my neighbor’s.
And while you did qualify your statement by excluding largely pine ground - there are millions of acres of commercial pine lands across the south. Our G&F did not stop baiting when cwd hit AR based upon their desire to reduce deer density - with them knowing more deer would be killed over bait than not. I have read Howboutthemdawgs exclaim a number of times about his outfitter neighbor pulling many of the younger deer to their land with bait and killing them before they mature
I do a lot of baiting and supplemental feeding - and every property is different. My home 350 acres borders 14 other adjacent property owners who supply feed in one form or another. But none provide feed during the summer - except me - and they all know my property holds the most deer - because they all put their feeders within sight of my property line. I hold a lot of deer and my fawn recruitment is higher than state average - as is the live weight of deer taken off my land.
I have another 62 acres that borders 850 acres of growing up fields. It is a buck mecca early bow season - but I lose almost all my bucks when the ten neighboring lease hunters start putting out bait. I can not compete with the ten of them by myself - even with my six acres of food plots and them with none
I am in an 800 acre lease of prime deer habitat. It is bordered on three sides by folks who feed protein year round. They grow some great bucks. We can not compete with them because we dont start baiting until just before deer season. We have not killed a deer off the 800 acres with intermittent hunting in three years.
I would think Baker might agree that a good supplemental feed program has its benefits. I do believe there is some science to baiting - I dont think you can just go out and put up a big feeder in the middle of your property, fill it with food, and expect it to provide much advantage.
It would suit me if baiting was banned in my area tomorrow - with the caveat that folks would actually stop doing it. No one else around me could compete with my food plots
Below is a rather lengthy article - but intersting to me - on the benefits of supplemental feeding wild bobwhites.
And while you did qualify your statement by excluding largely pine ground - there are millions of acres of commercial pine lands across the south. Our G&F did not stop baiting when cwd hit AR based upon their desire to reduce deer density - with them knowing more deer would be killed over bait than not. I have read Howboutthemdawgs exclaim a number of times about his outfitter neighbor pulling many of the younger deer to their land with bait and killing them before they mature
I do a lot of baiting and supplemental feeding - and every property is different. My home 350 acres borders 14 other adjacent property owners who supply feed in one form or another. But none provide feed during the summer - except me - and they all know my property holds the most deer - because they all put their feeders within sight of my property line. I hold a lot of deer and my fawn recruitment is higher than state average - as is the live weight of deer taken off my land.
I have another 62 acres that borders 850 acres of growing up fields. It is a buck mecca early bow season - but I lose almost all my bucks when the ten neighboring lease hunters start putting out bait. I can not compete with the ten of them by myself - even with my six acres of food plots and them with none
I am in an 800 acre lease of prime deer habitat. It is bordered on three sides by folks who feed protein year round. They grow some great bucks. We can not compete with them because we dont start baiting until just before deer season. We have not killed a deer off the 800 acres with intermittent hunting in three years.
I would think Baker might agree that a good supplemental feed program has its benefits. I do believe there is some science to baiting - I dont think you can just go out and put up a big feeder in the middle of your property, fill it with food, and expect it to provide much advantage.
It would suit me if baiting was banned in my area tomorrow - with the caveat that folks would actually stop doing it. No one else around me could compete with my food plots
Below is a rather lengthy article - but intersting to me - on the benefits of supplemental feeding wild bobwhites.
