QDMA Articles :
The Game Trails Challenge: Part II
By: QDMA Staff
Would you like to be the person who
gets to sort through and categorize the photos from a deer camera
survey on Thompson/Centers 12,000-acre Kentucky lease known
as Game Trails? Before you jump at the chance to see
what these cameras revealed, you first should know the scope of
your task when its over, its likely to be the
largest deer camera survey ever conducted. So far, the folks conducting
the survey have sorted through and filed nearly 20,000 digital
images and that set represents only half of the property!
An accurate deer camera survey was
among the tasks that QDMAs management team prescribed for
the property when they were asked earlier this year to help install
a top-notch QDM program. The invitation came from Gregg Ritz,
President and CEO of Thompson/Center Arms Co. Since the first
property visit back in April (which we covered in the June issue
of Quality Whitetails), QDMA and the Game Trails on-site management
team, headed by Dirk MacTavish, have been busy implementing the
recommendations aimed at reaching several of Greggs goals
for the 12,000-acre lease owned by Kimball International. Heres
a brief update of the efforts.
World Record Camera Survey?
Conducting an accurate survey of deer using infrared-triggered
cameras on a 12,000-acre property is a monumental task, but the
information will give Gregg and Dirk valuable guidance for their
deer population management efforts. It will also give them a clear
idea of bucks that currently exist on the land, which will help
them offer realistic harvest guidelines to the clients who hunt
the property. In order to accomplish the survey, QDMA Heartland
Regional Director and wildlife biologist Chris Pevey, who lives
just across the Ohio River in Illinois, helped Dirk and his crew
set up and run the survey this summer. Chris is now in the process
of working with survey results.
It was a huge task for Dirk
and his team, said Chris. We ran a 10-day survey with
40 cameras on half the property, and then we moved the cameras
to the other half and ran another 10-day survey. Each site was
pre-baited with corn, Trophy Rock mineral blocks and Wildgame
Innovations mineral/attractant mix. Plus, five days into it we
had to switch out the digital image cards because we were getting
so many photos. They worked their tails off to do this, but they
did a heck of a job setting the cameras up in well-lighted areas,
oriented north to south so you didnt get sunflare.
Each digital camera was set with a
10-minute time delay between photos, yet each camera still averaged
425 to 450 pictures over the course of 10 days. There were
deer in front of the cameras pretty much 24/7, said Chris.
After buying a new external hard-drive to hold all the images,
Chris began sorting through the first batch while Dirks
team began baiting and setting up cameras for the second batch.
Chris is using BuckSpy Advanced software to sort and categorize
the images and produce the final data, but first he must judge
each deer as to sex, age and, for bucks, antler size.
Gregg and Dirk wanted to know
about their shooter bucks, because they had clients coming in
for early bow season, said Chris. So, I pulled all
the images of bucks that were definitely 41?2 or older, or 140-class
or better, or both. I would pull the best buck off of each camera
meeting these criteria, and that gave us 26 individual bucks.
But some of the cameras had as many as three individuals meeting
the criteria, so there were at least 35 individual shooters in
that first batch, from just half the property.
Dirk used the photos Chris gave him
to put together a most wanted list to show to clients.
He also produced a dont shoot album of younger
bucks with great potential. The album will hopefully help avoid
problems in the past with clients taking bucks that did not meet
harvest criteria.
Meanwhile, in September, Chris was getting ready to tackle the
second batch of images. In the middle of his long nights of work
on the first batch, Chris got an unexpected call from David Aurbeck,
a QDMA member and a junior at Illinois College in environmental
science. David was looking for part-time work related to wildlife
management.
Do you like looking at pictures of deer?, Chris asked
David.
Chris has an assistant now.
Ive just glanced through
the second batch briefly, said Chris, and I saw some
even better bucks in the second batch. Thats the side of
the property with more agriculture.
When the camera survey is complete, the BuckSpy software will
calculate sex ratios and other population characteristics. But
Chris said his impression from looking at the photos is that Game
Trails has a very healthy deer herd, and also that there is work
to be done to achieve an appropriate doe harvest.
Were starting to see some
neat genetic trends in the buck photos, said Chris. The
coolest thing is G-2s with matching kickers off the back
you see that in probably 30 percent of the bucks. Also, Ive
noticed that the older bucks seem to show up on different cameras
more than the younger bucks. That's kind of sparking my interest.
In addition to managing the camera survey, Chris has visited Game
Trails during scheduled bowhunts. He is helping Dirks team
pull jawbones, show them how to estimate ages, and help them collect
harvest data using QDMA Log Books.
The Food Plot Program
While Dirk and his team were conducting the camera surveys and
getting ready for hunting season, they were also busy implementing
the recommended food plot program. Commercials blends from the
Whitetail Institute, Biologic, Pennington and Tecomate were selected
for use in both the warm- and cool-season plots. The program this
year had two phases. First, the QDMA advisors recommended placing
a number of warm-season food plots in unused corners, pockets
and strips adjacent to commercial corn and soybean fields. Their
purpose was to buffer the agricultural crops from deer damage.
For most of these warm-season plots,
an unexpected problem emerged because many of them were
planted in edges that were out of agricultural production but
had a long history of cultivation, an enormous bank of weed seeds
awaited. As a result, the only warm-season crop that was not engulfed
by weeds was Biologics Biomaxx, a blend of Roundup Ready
corn and soybeans. Contract farmer Kurt Devine was able to spray
these plots twice over the summer with Roundup, reducing the weed
problem.
The Biomaxx was successful,
and it cut down on the agricultural crop damage, but it didnt
stop the damage, said Kent Kammermeyer, QDMAs senior
technical advisor. There was enough forage there to take
some pressure off the crops we were trying to protect. With the
other plots, all of them germinated and began growing well and
attracting deer, but then the weeds caught up with them. There
was a serious weed seed bank in the ground a real bad one
just waiting for conditions to get right.
Kent said the weeds included johnsongrass, foxtail grass, sicklepod,
crabgrass, goosegrass, horsenettle and others.
Were going to have to
put a lot more thought into buffer crops and weed control next
spring, said Kent. But were starting to chip
at the edges of the crop-damage problem. The doe harvest this
season is going to have to be a big part of that.
Meanwhile, more than 60 acres of cool-season
food plots have recently been planted.
In August, we identified brand new plots on the half of
the property that does not have agriculture, said Kent.
The great majority of these plots will be in cool-season
perennial clover blends with a few cool-season annual mixtures.
In some of these plots were going to have to lick the weeds
before we attempt to establish perennials.
These plots will provide cool-season
nutrition, hunting-season attraction, and help move more hunting
pressure onto this half of the property. Previously, almost all
of the hunting occurred on only half of the 12,000-acre lease,
the half with existing agriculture.
If the commercial mix does not
contain a cereal grain, I instructed Dirk and Kurt to mix winter-hardy
oats at 50 lbs./acre. This will help with hunting-season attraction
and will serve as a nurse crop to protect the perennials like
clover and chicory while they become established.
The Hunting Program
In addition to managing and implementing the food plot planting
and camera survey, Game Trails General Manager Dirk MacTavish
has been busy preparing for and hosting the first of the bowhunting
camps at Game Trails. This years camps are designed
to minimize hunting pressure on bucks by spreading hunters across
the property and minimizing total numbers of hunters. Only five
bowhunting camps will be held this year before the muzzleloader
hunts begin later in the season. Each five-day bow camp includes
eight hunters.
Weve split the property
into four sections, one for each guide, said Dirk. Two
hunters are assigned to each guide, and they hunt that guides
specific area, so weve spread the pressure out across the
property.
With a 12,000-acre property, that
means plenty of room for each hunter, and almost limitless potential
stand sites.
Were just finishing up
the second camp right now, and so far all the deer we harvested
fit our specifications (for bowhunters, there is a 130-inch minimum
rule), said Dirk. We had three taken in the first
camp and three more in the second. That included a 154-inch buck
in the first camp, and we took one that went 1511?8 this morning
(September 20).
The camera survey was a tremendous
amount of work, but the education weve gotten is incredible.
Weve used that to show our hunters what were after,
and as a result a lot of hunters have passed 130-inch 8-pointers.
Weve had guys passing up deer that they felt were 21?2 that
would meet the inch requirements. Theyre taking our goals
and efforts very seriously.
Stay tuned for future updates
on the ongoing QDM effort at Game Trails.
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