Yes he is, let me know if you need some help taking care of him.Day'am, he's a Big'un
Dunstan Chestnuts also have wide soil adaptability, bear nuts every year unlike most oak species which produce every other year, and they provide excellent production of up to 2,000 pounds or more per acre. The sweet taste of chestnuts even sweetens the meat of the animals that eat it.
The Early and Late Drop Grafted American Female Persimmons are recommended for food plots in zones 5 – 9. The Orientals are a little less cold hardy, they recommend Saijo, Sheng and Great Wall up to zone 6 and all other varieties for zones 9 to 7 both for human consumption and tree plots.
That is how a buck becomes old, big, and very wiseThis guy likes to eat out of the cow feeders . [ - he’s completely nocturnal best I can tell , I’ve never seen him in the daylight or got a daylight picture of him.
Yeah,wondering when Ala. was gonna come around. They still make it somewhat complicated though.
Revenue trap ??
With the new,and extremely silly rules,enacted by Fla. this year,the state is gonna clean up on fines also. --- SAWMAN
I wonder if baiting has a role in some of the deer chronic wasting disease. It seems to be associated with farming of deer and elk. Is there any truth to that is a question that I have.But there is two sides to this baiting coin, first it is proven that when you concentrate bait food to a close area there is a significant increase in parasites and disease. Plus with what most of you spend on whatever bait you use I can go buy a lot of really good groceries and still kill as many deer as I need to. Here in Alabama this new bait permit is for sure a new way to generate revenue because most have not read the rule book to realize that even if your kid is 5 years old and is hunting they have to have the permit also. Cha-ching
I don’t have an answer for that question, but I can say that deer have concentrated around every corn field I’ve ever planted. They will eat up your profit in a smaller field in a hurry. Fencing seems to have little effect on keeping them out of corn fields.