New Hope Creek Home

Last night I took one of our granddaughters on a tour of the property. I was pleased to see a variety of natives, including goldenrod, common and giant ragweed, bluestem, milkweed and gamagrass along with lots of forbs and native blackberry. Seven years ago this was overrun with red cedar. I am still not seeing many turkey, but they are using the property more today than in 2017 when we moved here.

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This box turtle has fond a nice swimming hole in one of the water holes.
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This past weekend I was also able to do a little work at the cabin property (13 acres, SW Missouri Ozarks). The 1/4 acre hidey hole plot has clover from frost seeding into last year's drought-failed fall plot. As the county is not in a CWD zone, I continue to provide minerals at what has become a community scrape. Later this summer I'll be adding a new blind to the SW of the hidey hole to provide a new access to help issues of swirling winds and thermals that are caused by the topography of the property.

While I have a SpyPoint cellular on the scrape, I am still using some old Moultrie cameras circa 2014 on this property. I get 10 months out of a set of batteries on those old workhorses. In the May photo some of the fall plot that failed provided early season browse. I mainly hunt this property early season (bow) and late season (muzzleloader). Historically, the neighbors who own 5 acres next door "take over" the area for the week of firearms season. Fortunately, they are only opening week hunters and go back to fishing after opening week.

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Great pics! You've got a lot going on. Love the mulberrys.
 
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I am finally getting around to a project I had planned on doing during the winter--assembling some new deer blinds. This is the second five-panel "OuttaSite" blind. What is a one hour job with two people took four hours by myself, but I was working at a slow, steady pace. The next step will be building the 5' platform using 4x4's and plywood. After getting the blind assembled I gorged myself on some fresh mulberries, a delightful treat this time of year.
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The next project will be assembling the platform blind with pop-up at the cabin property. Tomorrow, my granddaughter will be joining us at the cabin and helping to identify the proper placement to ensure she gets a "big buck."
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That’s a huge mulberry!


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This is the first picture of two turkey together on the property. When we moved here in 2017, there was no sign of turkey on the farm. We began habitat work to restore turkey and quail in 2018, with the first major project in 2020. That year I had my first camera confirmation of a hen on the property. Although Clinton county (MO) ranks low in turkey harvest (109 of 114), pictures like these provide hope for the future. Our plans to convert 55 acres of row crops into NWSG & forbs CRP program next year should greatly enhance turkey habitat, as will an upcoming TSI program on 12 acres of timber. A few hours after this picture, a target bucks was checking a popular scrape made by tying down a branch. This is just one frame of the video of himIMG_1428.jpeg

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I got a little better picture of Dangles, the 3 year old with an antler that grows into his face. Last year when he shed he pulled the hide off on the right side of his head. I am surprised he survived this long. This will be a target buck if he makes it through to the season. Last year he was a loner in velvet, this year he seems to have joined a young bachelor group, and is clearly the largest of the four.

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My project today was getting the Game Winner (Academy Sports store brand) 5’ metal stand put together. With a heat index over 100, I didn’t hurry, and despite the instructions stating the install would take four people, I was able to put the stand together in a few hours by myself. My plan is to put a pop-up on this stand near a natural funnel.

While I am not a fan of trap door stands, the location I will be placing this blind in lends itself to a trap door as access. Now it's time to prep the site for the blind. I am hoping my granddaughter (who will be eight during her third season of hunting) can get her first "big buck" with a crossbow from this blind setup.

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I checked the water holes and “topped ‘em off” this evening. Despite being in a drought, it only took 20 gallons each to fill them to the top. This doe was enjoying the soybeans, and stayed around until I was about 50 yards away.
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This print dwarfed several that were nearby. Historically this trail was in a bedding area for does and smaller bucks.

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I’ve been approved for an EQIP Timber Stand Improvement program that should take this “biological desert” (above photos) into some habitat similar to this area I thinned two years ago (below).
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This was a popular community scrape before the licking tree fell over in a recent storm.
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