Progress!

   / Progress! #101  
The turkey issue has a lot of layers to it. There are no turkeys where I live, and there hasn't been any for decades. The demise of wild turkeys is blamed on farming, chemicals and fire ants. The state has been working on ways to reintroduce turkeys to East Texas for a very long time with total failure. About ten years ago, the tried a new method of mass release of birds in an area of ten square miles or more. First they find an area with habitat that they feel will support turkeys. Then they get all the landowners in that area to agree to allow them to monitor and track the turkeys on their land. Basically allowing them onto their land whenever they want to observe them. Once they block in that 6,400 acres or more, then they will release a hundred birds at a time, over several years. Predators take out quite a few of them right away. Then fire ants are blamed for killing chicks when they first hatch. Those that survive are increasing in numbers, but there is a huge drop from the initial release.
Once an area that has been cleared is left alone, it becomes overgrown with trees right on top of each other. Inches apart, and so thick that it is impossible to get through them. Slowly, as they grow, some of those areas will open up a little, but still too thick for an understory to develop. It is not uncommon to have thousands of trees growing on a single acre. I don't know what the ideal number of trees per acre is for wildlife, or what it was hundreds of years ago, but I'm guessing it should be in the dozens of trees per acre instead of thousands.

Wild Hogs do best in super thick woods. Deer struggle and tend to be at the edge of it, where possible. Deer numbers here vary from one per 40 acres in the thicker areas, to four times that many in more open areas, or even more. On my land, I'm creating open pastures of several acres, with wooded areas that open between the bigger trees with small pockets of thick areas. Since doing this, my deer numbers have increased dramatically. I have two pet turkeys and I've thought about getting more and letting them free roam over my place once I get it fenced. I would love to see flocks of turkeys, and in all reality, the only way it's going to happen is if I make it happen.
Yeah, they are completely "reintroduced" here. Not shy about coming up to the house when wife feeds the birds. 😁
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   / Progress! #102  
Did you build that fence? The older I get, the more I admire a really nice fence!!!
 
   / Progress! #103  
@Torvy Can you tell us what is going on here? I am late to this thread and do not want to read it all.
So you are developing land? Where? How much?
Looks great so far!
 
   / Progress!
  • Thread Starter
#105  
@Torvy Can you tell us what is going on here? I am late to this thread and do not want to read it all.
So you are developing land? Where? How much?
Looks great so far!
We bought our ~20 acres of heaven here in NE Texas about 2 years ago...its been our retirement plan for 20+ years. Unfortunately, it coincided with the virus... The framing is the shop, 40x30x16. They will start on the house tomorrow (foreground). It is 40x50, with a single slope roof. The view is from the tree line looking toward our back porch.

It is mostly Loblolly Pine. We just got back to FtW from there about an hour ago. It is 2.5 hours from here in the city. I should already be retired, but delays are going to make me work until May or so.
 
   / Progress!
  • Thread Starter
#106  
Pictures from Monday. As of today, the garage/shop is done except for garage doors and electrical. They had two crews working, one on each structure.

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   / Progress! #108  
I like your color choices for your shop. How tall are the walls?
 
   / Progress! #110  
A Texas State Biologist told me that if you went back in time a couple hundred years, East Texas would look completely different. A lot less trees, more space between the trees, and less brush. This is the main reason turkeys don't do well here.

When people moved here, they cleared the land, farmed it, then abandoned the farms and let the land grow back up. From your pictures, your land looks like mine. Super thick. It will take a thousand years for Mother Nature to get it back to where it is supposed to be. Wildfires will clear the understory, the big trees with choke out the small trees, and the native grass will cut down on the weeds.

Ideally, you want to remove 75% to 90% of all the trees on your land if you want it to be "natural"
You're exactly right. I've recently seen pictures from early 1920's of a forest in E. Texas where the trees were very large but were not close together and there was almost zero undergrowth. Beautiful!
 

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