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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Management of Cedars... (Updated)
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<blockquote data-quote="Hridge" data-source="post: 5041321" data-attributes="member: 21357"><p>I have dealt with this issue. Lots of great suggestions in these responses! What I think would be appropriate is to thin the cedars to let sunlight hit the ground. If it's truly a cedar stand then I seriously doubt the ground will be tillable due to rock outcroppings. Deer love to bed under a cedar in bad weather situations. If you thin them and let nature do it's thing, sunlight will provide enough sunligh to grow cover. If you can get a disk in the ground then I would say open up large areas in the stand and let the areas grow up naturally. Anything you do is going to be a 3-5 year deal to get it back how you want it. Lots of great information in these responses and I think any of them would work.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hridge, post: 5041321, member: 21357"] I have dealt with this issue. Lots of great suggestions in these responses! What I think would be appropriate is to thin the cedars to let sunlight hit the ground. If it’s truly a cedar stand then I seriously doubt the ground will be tillable due to rock outcroppings. Deer love to bed under a cedar in bad weather situations. If you thin them and let nature do it’s thing, sunlight will provide enough sunligh to grow cover. If you can get a disk in the ground then I would say open up large areas in the stand and let the areas grow up naturally. Anything you do is going to be a 3-5 year deal to get it back how you want it. Lots of great information in these responses and I think any of them would work. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Management of Cedars... (Updated)
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