Managing cedars
Anyone ever run into spots they hunt where the cedars get too thick that deer don't use them? I'm curious how others manage the cedars on their farms, share if you have some ideas.
I love cedars, they make great bedding and wildlife cover but when they get too thick, they're junk in my eyes. We've got a few spots like that on our farm and I did some cedar management this weekend.
The situation here is we've got some big, tall old cedars that have (had...
) lots of dead branches on the bottom half.
They're tallll
Those dead branches make the timber almost impassable. So I'd go up to each tree and cut off every dead branch I could reach and open up the area so deer could at least walk through here... and ideally we hope this makes some good bedding for them
A cleaned up cedar. After cutting the branches I'd drag them all away and make brush piles for the wildlife and something for the deer to bed behind
Some cedars on the open ridge top, after I cut down the branches but before I drug them away...
And after dragging the branches away.
Now this spot is accessible for the deer and seems like a great spot for a big buck to lay down. He's got over head cover, a brush line at his back made up of the branches I cut from the cedars, and a great look out at any danger coming his way. In this picture you can see the pile of brush I made towards the back (left)
And here's the view looking out of this "bed"
Another spot near by that from the outside, you can see the thick screen of cedars that was nearly impossible to walk through
but I cut a hole into the thicket...
And then once inside I started cleaning up the bottom dead branches
This spot had WAY too many cedars so I went ahead and cut some off completely and they just hung there, stuck in the canopy of the rest of the cedars
This is what one tree looked like before I cut it... can you imagine what this entire hillside looked like before I cut!? It was nuts how thick it was. Virtually a waste land for deer, they never stepped foot in here
Ideally we'd like to see some more grass or other plants get growing under the cedars but we may have to girdle and kill some more cedars inorder to get enough light to the ground to achieve that
With the cut dead limbs I'd make some big brush piles, which are also great for wildlife
And the last pictures for today; on the left side of this ridge I hadn't done any cutting yet...
Compare the above picture of the left, uncut side of this ridge top to the below picture which is on the right side of the ridge and I did cut. You can actually see into the timber and easy get around. Deer aren't up for a challenge when it comes to finding a place to bed, they'd rather take the path of least resistance to get to their destination. By cutting the bottom dead branches we didn't loose the thermal cover the cedars provide but did allow the deer to get into, and under the cedars to lay down