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creating a sanctuary

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Old 12-24-2007 | 06:52 PM
  #11  
Nontypical Buck
 
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Default RE: creating a sanctuary

I personally think you should just take out a big, fat loan and buy some property like say,fifty acres with tons of cover, a 2:1 buck to doe ratio, and the rules are only bucks that are older than four years can be shot!!!!!!!!!!!!

Oh yeah, don't forget the cabin that needs to be built on it with a continuos flow of cold sauce androlls of skoal and copenhagen black (cake!) to have atour disposal. Also, you might as well add the walk in freezer we can put somewhere close to the cabin so we hang our deer and let them age so they are nice and tender and just begging for Wye River Blackand butter.

Thank you

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Old 12-25-2007 | 04:30 PM
  #12  
Fork Horn
 
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Default RE: creating a sanctuary

ORIGINAL: Dan O.

Slackdaddy; are you kidding about bamboo? It's grows like crazy as an orimental but do the deer eat it?

Dan O.
Do not plant bamboo...anyone!
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Old 12-25-2007 | 04:34 PM
  #13  
Fork Horn
 
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Default RE: creating a sanctuary

ORIGINAL: Mossy_71

ORIGINAL: Dan O.

Slackdaddy; are you kidding about bamboo? It's grows like crazy as an orimental but do the deer eat it?

Dan O.
Original question was regarding plantings to provide cover for whitetails, not food source.
There's no reason why the cover cannot...or should not...provide a food source though. Providing cover alone is short-sided...plus it has the potential to be extremely invasive.
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Old 12-25-2007 | 04:36 PM
  #14  
Fork Horn
 
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Default RE: creating a sanctuary

ORIGINAL: archer1967

I live in central maryland.The property i hunt doesnt have good cover.Looking for advise on what would be some good plants to provide some cover in this area
What can you tell us about the site? Is it upland, bottomland, clayey, sandy, etc.? ...and what kinds of vegetation are there growing in surrounding areas?
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Old 01-09-2008 | 02:02 PM
  #15  
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From: Darrtown, OH
Default RE: creating a sanctuary

well i hate it but honey suckle is real good cover but it takes over!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Old 01-09-2008 | 04:21 PM
  #16  
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From: Southwest Ohio
Default RE: creating a sanctuary

A mixture of pines, young hardwood trees (would have to be cut every so often to keep them growing up), brush, and warm season grasses would be about perfect. You want to keep the pines properly spaced so that the bottom branches do not fall off and you can occassionaly cut them or 1/2 cut them so they fall over but don't die. It is work even once it is planted to maintain it.
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Old 01-09-2008 | 07:56 PM
  #17  
 
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From: Millville, Ohio
Default RE: creating a sanctuary

i heard that honeysuckle was very sparse here about 15 years ago now its all over there is a honeysuckle bush that is 7 feet in diameter on our property. i was clearing a field with it in it and it is h*** getting rid of that junk. it gets all tangled up in other good trees and in other honeysuckle and it kills other trees. i hate honeysucle
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Old 01-10-2008 | 07:07 AM
  #18  
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From: Illinois
Default RE: creating a sanctuary

I'm entering my second year of creating a sanctuary on the family farm. After it is complete, it will be approximately 3 acres. Not huge, but the neighbor cattle farmer is cramping my style. He has a large portion of the abandoned pasture I've been working in. Fortunately I have some room to work.

The 3 acres is in a large cirlce and divided in half be a branch of a creek. I'm planting 2.5 acres of switchgrass and outlining it with low growing shrubs such as buttonbush and red-osier dogwoods. I have 1 acre of the sanctuary done. I'm doing everything by hand, and planting the switchgrass with the use of a tiller. It's very time consuming, but will be rewarding some day.

When choosing your are, make sure you located it near the center of the property. A sanctuary is a place deer will hopefully feel safe and spend a considerable amount of time. There is no sense locating this near a property line and letting the neighbor benefit from it. I always think of a sanctuary as being thick and narly. To create this I would plant some NWSG and low growing shrubs along with some conifers.
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