Golden Hour
Well-known member
To add a bit to what McFarmer said, this land used to be grazed by buffalo and often burned by the Indians, as well as naturally occurring fires. Trust me, as a pheasant hunter, it hurts to see the grasses grazed, burned or mowed, but it does need to happen, particularly the first two. Second, the grasses are great for nesting, brood rearing and hunting, until it snows. But it has little value in the winter. Thermal cover is what is necessary.
I would also add that in NESD, we had a tremendous amount of rain in late summer/early fall. If we can average from here going forward, we will be okay.
Interesting side note, a lot of the larger sloughs and lakes (often public hunting areas) have lost habitat due to increasing water levels. I'd like to see some greater oversight on drain tile. If a farmer wants to consolidate three small sloughs into a large one and increase farmable acres on their land, that's fine. This practice of dumping water into ravines and running it down the line is BS.
I would also add that in NESD, we had a tremendous amount of rain in late summer/early fall. If we can average from here going forward, we will be okay.
Interesting side note, a lot of the larger sloughs and lakes (often public hunting areas) have lost habitat due to increasing water levels. I'd like to see some greater oversight on drain tile. If a farmer wants to consolidate three small sloughs into a large one and increase farmable acres on their land, that's fine. This practice of dumping water into ravines and running it down the line is BS.