Hey folks,
Well I promised to start up a thread recently, and I got a little behind but here it is!
As you guys may or may not know, part of what I like doing on my property is general habitat "rehab". I say rehab because A/O has taken oven in MANY places, and I'm trying to make my land a much better spot, not just for deer but for all wildlife and specifically pollinators and songbirds. Call me a treehugger if ya wanna, but most of this stuff can be used to make our deer hunting better!
My reasons for doing this are:
1. My Mom LOVES songbirds. She loves coming down and seeing what I've been doing, and is starting to come around to the idea of cutting trees to let other "better" trees grow.
2. I'm surrounded by land that isn't the best for pollinators. State land is to my North, which is mainly old hardwoods. I have 2 crop fields that are sprayed every year. One to my North, and one to my South. While this is great for deer, clean fields certainly don't benefit wildlife as much as dirty ones. Everywhere else that is open, is usually filled with A/O, so there isn't much diversity with regards to bloom times and season long nectar sources.
3. I'm a huge bio nerd, and I loved ecology and entomology, so trying to improve this small scale system is a pretty neat and manageable idea to me!
4. Most of these efforts are also good for deer and turkeys as well.
I'll show you guys what I'm doing, and hopefully get some feedback, or inspire you to work this stuff in. In most cases, what I'm doing is also in line with what I'm doing for "property design" for deer hunting.
In this first installment, I'll focus on hedgerows/fencerows and their benefits.
So my main hedgerow that I'm building is right on/near my lot line with my bad neighbor. He has 100 feet between my other, good, neighbor and I. There is a corn/bean field directly South (down), so the main reason for putting this in is to be a screen for me while walking in. Also, I'm hoping that the deer will travel on mine into my foodplot, rather than crossing right at his blind.
I started last year by planting ~20 ROD red line. These were on sale at Meijer for $1.25. I put up fencing around them (just 4 foot welded wire). This year I put lumite over top of them, since many of them are in an extremely dry area. This year I planted ~40 ninebark (green line). 24 of these were from the GRIN program, and are part of my project. The other were from seed from Prairie Moon Nursery in MN. I've seen some browse on those that are uncaged, but all of those are from Prairie Moon. I also added one Prairie Rose from Hidden Savannah in MI.
Next year I've also transplanted a few spruce that were growing wild on my property. Next year I'll add some more natives to this mix. Elderberry, american plum, hazelnut, shrubby cliquefoil, serviceberry etc...
Here is a line of the ninebark. These are closer to the E (right) end of the green line. These are part of the GRIN project.
Here are some ROD that you can see next to my property line. Some of the leaves look off colored, I'm not sure why. They appeared to survive the lawn fertilizer I put on them! Most of these grew a good 2 feet this year. You can also see the field (facing south) on the right hand side of this picture.
This is an ROD that I started as a cutting this winter. It got a head start in my house this winter, and I then grew it in the garden this summer. It was ~3 feet tall.
This final picture shows one of the ninebark that has recieved browse. The MN ninebark got a bit of a head start on the GRIN ninebark, as I recieved the seed in January. Most of the MN ones are over a foot tall, while the GRIN ones vary in height from 3 inches to 16 inches. I'm not mad about them receiving browse, as it's what I'm planting them for! I might put cages around these just to get them established, and take them off next year. From what I've read, Ninebark does respond well to browse so I might leave them uncaged.
I hope you guys enjoy what I'm doing, and are able to work it in on your own land, OR give me feedback and suggestions! What I"m doing is relatively labor intensive, so it might not be for all of you, but later I'll get into some stuff that isn't nearly this big of a time commitment.
Here are some great links on the benefits and uses of hedge/fencrows, as well as one on habitat fragmentation, and a few just general ones on pollinators and helping them. Some are more sciencey while others are a bit less. Overall just good general info. When I focus on other areas of my property, I'll post links to related to those habitats.
http://www.michigandnr.com/publicat..._guide/Resource_Dir/Acrobat/Field_Borders.PDF
http://ohioline.osu.edu/w-fact/0014.html
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/nrcs144p2_015259.pdf
http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/farming_for_bees_guidelines_xerces_society.pdf
http://efotg.sc.egov.usda.gov/references/public/pa/std422.pdf
http://dnr2.maryland.gov/wildlife/Pages/habitat/wahedgerows.aspx
http://extension.psu.edu/plants/mas...-native-fall-winter-fruiting-hedges-for-birds
http://www.nwtf.org/conservation/article/edible-hedgerows
Well I promised to start up a thread recently, and I got a little behind but here it is!
As you guys may or may not know, part of what I like doing on my property is general habitat "rehab". I say rehab because A/O has taken oven in MANY places, and I'm trying to make my land a much better spot, not just for deer but for all wildlife and specifically pollinators and songbirds. Call me a treehugger if ya wanna, but most of this stuff can be used to make our deer hunting better!
My reasons for doing this are:
1. My Mom LOVES songbirds. She loves coming down and seeing what I've been doing, and is starting to come around to the idea of cutting trees to let other "better" trees grow.
2. I'm surrounded by land that isn't the best for pollinators. State land is to my North, which is mainly old hardwoods. I have 2 crop fields that are sprayed every year. One to my North, and one to my South. While this is great for deer, clean fields certainly don't benefit wildlife as much as dirty ones. Everywhere else that is open, is usually filled with A/O, so there isn't much diversity with regards to bloom times and season long nectar sources.
3. I'm a huge bio nerd, and I loved ecology and entomology, so trying to improve this small scale system is a pretty neat and manageable idea to me!
4. Most of these efforts are also good for deer and turkeys as well.
I'll show you guys what I'm doing, and hopefully get some feedback, or inspire you to work this stuff in. In most cases, what I'm doing is also in line with what I'm doing for "property design" for deer hunting.
In this first installment, I'll focus on hedgerows/fencerows and their benefits.
So my main hedgerow that I'm building is right on/near my lot line with my bad neighbor. He has 100 feet between my other, good, neighbor and I. There is a corn/bean field directly South (down), so the main reason for putting this in is to be a screen for me while walking in. Also, I'm hoping that the deer will travel on mine into my foodplot, rather than crossing right at his blind.
I started last year by planting ~20 ROD red line. These were on sale at Meijer for $1.25. I put up fencing around them (just 4 foot welded wire). This year I put lumite over top of them, since many of them are in an extremely dry area. This year I planted ~40 ninebark (green line). 24 of these were from the GRIN program, and are part of my project. The other were from seed from Prairie Moon Nursery in MN. I've seen some browse on those that are uncaged, but all of those are from Prairie Moon. I also added one Prairie Rose from Hidden Savannah in MI.
Next year I've also transplanted a few spruce that were growing wild on my property. Next year I'll add some more natives to this mix. Elderberry, american plum, hazelnut, shrubby cliquefoil, serviceberry etc...
Here is a line of the ninebark. These are closer to the E (right) end of the green line. These are part of the GRIN project.
Here are some ROD that you can see next to my property line. Some of the leaves look off colored, I'm not sure why. They appeared to survive the lawn fertilizer I put on them! Most of these grew a good 2 feet this year. You can also see the field (facing south) on the right hand side of this picture.
This is an ROD that I started as a cutting this winter. It got a head start in my house this winter, and I then grew it in the garden this summer. It was ~3 feet tall.
This final picture shows one of the ninebark that has recieved browse. The MN ninebark got a bit of a head start on the GRIN ninebark, as I recieved the seed in January. Most of the MN ones are over a foot tall, while the GRIN ones vary in height from 3 inches to 16 inches. I'm not mad about them receiving browse, as it's what I'm planting them for! I might put cages around these just to get them established, and take them off next year. From what I've read, Ninebark does respond well to browse so I might leave them uncaged.
I hope you guys enjoy what I'm doing, and are able to work it in on your own land, OR give me feedback and suggestions! What I"m doing is relatively labor intensive, so it might not be for all of you, but later I'll get into some stuff that isn't nearly this big of a time commitment.
Here are some great links on the benefits and uses of hedge/fencrows, as well as one on habitat fragmentation, and a few just general ones on pollinators and helping them. Some are more sciencey while others are a bit less. Overall just good general info. When I focus on other areas of my property, I'll post links to related to those habitats.
http://www.michigandnr.com/publicat..._guide/Resource_Dir/Acrobat/Field_Borders.PDF
http://ohioline.osu.edu/w-fact/0014.html
http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/nrcs144p2_015259.pdf
http://www.xerces.org/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/farming_for_bees_guidelines_xerces_society.pdf
http://efotg.sc.egov.usda.gov/references/public/pa/std422.pdf
http://dnr2.maryland.gov/wildlife/Pages/habitat/wahedgerows.aspx
http://extension.psu.edu/plants/mas...-native-fall-winter-fruiting-hedges-for-birds
http://www.nwtf.org/conservation/article/edible-hedgerows