Bedding can be ONE FALLEN TREE. So what is that, 1/10,000th of an acre?
It’s generally a terrain change. Without that, then you’re talking wide open flat timber - why that is about the worst scenario.
I’ll put this simply…. If you have wide open timber with a few terrain changes on say “40 acres of timber” - u might have 3-4 more sought after areas for bedding. With proper Tsi…. Fallen trees, new growth, new thermal cover, visual barriers, a bit of hinge, etc etc - you can have “20-30 sought after bedding areas”. Areas deer want to bed. Allows higher deer density/holding capacity, more thick “safety cover” as long as they aren’t constantly disturbed. Browse for deer is an additional side benefit. But- when you have bucks fighting over secure safe bedding with 2-3 locations, when it’s now “20-30” - a farm can clearly hold far more mature bucks. You can get in out far easier as well.
But starting out…. I’d look for thickest areas of course. Terrain changes. Bucks often bed just down the shelf of a hill. So they can see a long ways. Or say 50-100 yards inside the timber in many cases. With no enhancements - they have the advantage. Visibility & wind to their advantage. Look for back cover - fallen trees, etc. Only times I get really close to bedding is early am in rut & it’s nice to sit all day. But agree- the term “bedding” is a term thrown out with so many variables that it’s impossible to describe other than “you know it when you see it”. Thick areas and changes in terrain & just inside timber or almost to tops of hills be my answer in 75% of cases.
I’ll take a wild guess that on “average farm” that does offer thick areas…. 40 acres of timber will have more like 5-6 areas that are ideal bedding & that probably constitutes 10 of the 40 acres. Wild guesstimate. Cedars, thick new growth, thick CRP or nasty thick timber will increase this # substantially. Sorry I’m all over the map here & rambling …. Bedding sure is a complicated & loaded word. Great ? !!!
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