chummer
5 year old buck +

That is good news. The relator, who was a logger for 15 years, pointed out several trees that would be over the 1k per tree. He said hard maple is the best right now but there is a lot of both.Chummer,
My wife's uncle lived in upstate NY. A few years ago he had his 5 acres logged due to ice damage. He never knew he was sitting on a gold mine. The cherries were so good they were sold for veneer logs he got $1000 per tree from them. They were told that NY cherry makes the best veneer logs and is valuable. I hope your cherry trees are that good.
Yes only access is NW corner. It is impossible to hunt the winds here. On any given day they blow from all directions at once. The only thing I have found that somewhat works is being up 25' or more. On paper the prevailing wind is west. My plan is to have it logged ASAP and then spend one season watching and marking, then start hinging and planting year two.Will your only access be from the NW? What are the prevailing winds during deer season?
I would walk as much of the property as you can this spring and diagram rubs and deer beds. Look along both sides of the stream. Also look at the Sw corner fo the bend in the stream and also the NE corner of that swamp on the south side. Potential pinch points.
I wish I was closer as I would like to walk that property with you.
I agree to hutn it oen year before making major changes.
I plan on having them clear the plots so i do need to decided where they are going before logging. I will be having them leave the tops too. After that everything else is available to be hinged. I only plan on having this logged once in my lifetime.I see fromt he other thread that you are having it logged. that is a good time to plan for foodplots.
Could the logger arrange tree tops to make a funnel or leave a few trees for stands at the heads of the two draws that I mentioned above.
My thought with the sanctuary is it will play bigger than the actual size. With the ravine and the elevation it should keep any scent from blowing in there. It is also protected by an even bigger ravine just off the map on the other side. I plan on hinging the north line and making it as thick as possible as it is the highest probability for any trespassing. Food is a huge concern here. I saw very few trees less than 6" and virtually no browse. Browse will be the easiest fix, a lot of soft maple to hinge.You want to start right and have a plan. Possibly take a year to make a plan and see how the deer and you could use the property. Find all corners and mark and post the entire perimeter well. To me it looks like you're lacking food so laying out some plots keeping in mind year round food. Also I would make more of the property sanctuary. I am sure this thread will go on for years and it will be interesting watching the progress.
I am sure my apple obsession will take over and I will be putting them every where.The area that Whip highlighted in green that looks like a baby-bottle nipple in the SE corner and the black " sidewalk " from that little ravine up to your food plot are just what I was talking about in post #3. Whatever path you construct for the deer - or they make for themselves - I'd have a stand downwind of it in that area. I think Whip saw the same thing there. And like Buckly said, apples are as good as corn in fall. My camp has both and the deer come RUNNING to pick up dropped apples FIRST and then go the clover, oats, corn. Sometimes it's comical to watch the race to the apples. So I'd stick a few apples at the plots like Buckly suggested, if I were laying it out.
The ravine coming in from the north ( to the left of the " sanctuary " tag ) would be another area I'd be looking at for travel. Whip " greened " that section as well. I look at topo lines to give me a predictable, probable idea of deer travel. Some of my very best deer stands have been picked just by looking at topo maps. Not joking. I think it has to do with air currents / thermals in ravines or intersections of ravines / hollows. Like the other gents said - I'd walk it, hunt it, scout for sign ( both new AND old ) and see what the deer are doing in those areas. If the deer favor some pattern, you can always improve on it with plantings, hinging, etc. Letting tops lay is primo. You can place those where you want them.