Just 2 or 3 for family consumption. How will that play into the deer habitat.My recommendations would be have them home on a high spot that's close to existing utilities ( unless you don't want to be by your neighbors) A topography map would be needed to determine where to bulldoze to try and make pasture. How many cattle were you planning on keeping?
My goal is to turn some into pasture. How much would I need to run 3 cows with rotational grazing and food plot for deer?Cattle are notoriously poor forest managers. We usually recommend fencing cattle out of the woods, anymore, as they do more damage than any monetary benefit you may derive from them running in the woods. I've seen figures suggesting that typical eastern woodland requires 40 acres to provide enough forage for one cow-calf pair.
It'll cost you more to fence it than it's worth as cattle pasture.
my vote is for timber stand and wildlife habitat improvement.
If you want cattle, you probably need to buy or lease pasture elsewhere.
Thankfully my neighbor are my in-laws. I guess I'm thankful LOLMy recommendations would be have them home on a high spot that's close to existing utilities ( unless you don't want to be by your neighbors) A topography map would be needed to determine where to bulldoze to try and make pasture. How many cattle were you planning on keeping?
I'm in south Alabamawhere are you located?
we did management-intensive grazing for 25 years here in southern west-central KY. With well-established forage base, adequate water, and sufficient fertilization, you can probably run one cow-calf pair per 2 acres...but you'd still be looking at purchasing hay and grain to feed through the winter...feeding period typically ran from early Nov. to May 1 here.
Back in the old days, once deer season was over, we opened gates and let the cows graze off the food plots...but in those days(and, yes, we ran cows in the woods back then), we were only planting food plots to draw deer in to shoot them in season, not really looking at year-round wildlife use.
Yes feeding is legal but you have to buy a permit to hunt over it.If you are legal to bait deer in Alabama then you could have some mighty fine hunting on a property that size and still have cattle. I'm not here to argue the ethics of baiting but its undeniable that a feeder on a small property can rival the biggest most well managed deer property in the area.