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Wtb
by 270 guru. 04/06/25 12:21 PM
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1432849
08/28/15 03:07 PM
08/28/15 03:07 PM
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Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 55,220 Gee's Bend/At The Hog Pen
James
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 55,220
Gee's Bend/At The Hog Pen
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Okay I've have a serious Question. When ur in the Alberta area heading towards Gee's bend the property (Not all) has mainly become pine plantations. Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't they spray the property with a sterilizer? I've seen the planes fly over after an area has been thinned. Doesn't this destroy the soil? I'm just curious Thanks..
Do not regret growing older, it's a privilege denied to many!
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: James]
#1432980
08/28/15 05:35 PM
08/28/15 05:35 PM
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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 27,380 Fayetteville TN Via Selma
jawbone
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 27,380
Fayetteville TN Via Selma
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Okay I've have a serious Question. When ur in the Alberta area heading towards Gee's bend the property (Not all) has mainly become pine plantations. Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't they spray the property with a sterilizer? I've seen the planes fly over after an area has been thinned. Doesn't this destroy the soil? I'm just curious Thanks.. What kind of sterilizer? A general herbicide? If so I guess when stuff starts growing back it a great time for the deer and wildlife like after a burn.
Lord, please help us get our nation straightened out.
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: jawbone]
#1433040
08/28/15 07:34 PM
08/28/15 07:34 PM
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Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 55,220 Gee's Bend/At The Hog Pen
James
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 55,220
Gee's Bend/At The Hog Pen
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Okay I've have a serious Question. When ur in the Alberta area heading towards Gee's bend the property (Not all) has mainly become pine plantations. Correct me if I'm wrong, but don't they spray the property with a sterilizer? I've seen the planes fly over after an area has been thinned. Doesn't this destroy the soil? I'm just curious Thanks.. What kind of sterilizer? A general herbicide? If so I guess when stuff starts growing back it a great time for the deer and wildlife like after a burn. It may just be herbicides jawbone. I know I've hunted previously uncut property( two separate properties before, and my buddy kept the lease after it was cut. But I rejoined several years later and the ground (soil) just never was the same..
Do not regret growing older, it's a privilege denied to many!
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1433058
08/28/15 09:12 PM
08/28/15 09:12 PM
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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 27,380 Fayetteville TN Via Selma
jawbone
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 27,380
Fayetteville TN Via Selma
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if you really want to see the real blackbelt go to Google earth and zoom in enough to see all of MS and AL. You will clearly be able to see the crescent shape of the different soil from N. MS through Central AL.
Lord, please help us get our nation straightened out.
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: jawbone]
#1433059
08/28/15 11:02 PM
08/28/15 11:02 PM
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Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,442 Heart of Dixie
Narrow Gap
12 point
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12 point
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 5,442
Heart of Dixie
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if you really want to see the real blackbelt go to Google earth and zoom in enough to see all of MS and AL. You will clearly be able to see the crescent shape of the different soil from N. MS through Central AL. Yep I have done that plenty of times. It is very distinct where the True Black belt is.
Duty, Honor, Country
Robert E. Lee
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1433438
08/29/15 11:17 AM
08/29/15 11:17 AM
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Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 38,489 N. Bama
257wbymag
Boo Boo Head
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Boo Boo Head
Joined: Jan 2011
Posts: 38,489
N. Bama
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Planes don't spray cutovers they fertilize standing pines. Helicopters spray cutovers. It's not a "sterilant" so to speak. Most forestry herbicides are either woody or herbaceous actives. They look sterilized but it's mostly just residual properties of the herbicides. They do play out as they degrade.
Quietly killing turkeys where youre not!!! My tank full of give a fraks been runnin on empty I'm the paterfamilias
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: 257wbymag]
#1433840
08/29/15 04:58 PM
08/29/15 04:58 PM
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Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 55,220 Gee's Bend/At The Hog Pen
James
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jun 2013
Posts: 55,220
Gee's Bend/At The Hog Pen
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Planes don't spray cutovers they fertilize standing pines. Helicopters spray cutovers. It's not a "sterilant" so to speak. Most forestry herbicides are either woody or herbaceous actives. They look sterilized but it's mostly just residual properties of the herbicides. They do play out as they degrade. Cool..
Do not regret growing older, it's a privilege denied to many!
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: Forrestgump1]
#1433939
08/29/15 07:36 PM
08/29/15 07:36 PM
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Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 11,416 Prattville
Dkhargroves
Booner
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Booner
Joined: Dec 2013
Posts: 11,416
Prattville
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I think it has to do with genetics for certain areas. The origin of some of the deer that were restocked in certain areas make the difference. Sure you could argue that by now they should have spread that gene pool to all the other deer and they should all be the same. But the true black belt today is probably about 75% cow pasture. Row crops are nearly non existent through that area. When we are talking Fitzpatrick vs say hayneville. Heres what I've seen... Huge bodyweights.. That's about the most common thing from harvesting deer through the band of black soil. The antlers from the deer in Fitzpatrick where darker and generally larger if comparing same age to deer in hayneville. The deer in hayneville had generally whiter antlers with good mass. Back in the restocking days they restocked the China grove area with Texas deer. Lowndes county received deer from Clarke county and Michigan I think. I'm not saying this is the truth but this is what I've seen. The deer from south Montgomery on over into bullock county and east seem to grow better racks on average. The deer over in lowndes don't really seem to get impressive head gear until they are 5+ years old. Now what's funny is north of 80 in lowndes around lowndesboro grow some very impressive racks. Same deer only about ten miles apart. Same soil. So it makes you scratch your head a little Good point, the bucks I've seen off the WMA off south road are very very big. But the bucks off Henderson rd, are no where near as big as the swamp bucks off hwy 80 and south rd. they are literally 3-4 miles apart.
There is 2 different high fence. 1 small and one big! Mine was free range in the big pen and was not a breeder buck. Why does it have to be twisted around??
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1434186
08/30/15 07:25 AM
08/30/15 07:25 AM
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Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,255 South Alabama
gobbler
12 point
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12 point
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,255
South Alabama
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Interesting subject! I liked and agreed with the MS State study. If you take the age, genetics, and nutrition formula, age is easy to control anywhere in the State regardless of region. I would agree that genetics plays only a small role in the wild population as far as antler size IN FREE-ROAMING DEER, so that doesn't make much difference regionally. That leaves nutrition which would take in soil types, mineral availability, and land use and deer POPULATION. The blackbelt was better in the soybean era but so was most of the rest of the State. I would say the blackbelt had a higher percentage of its ground in beans and that made a big difference. I also think that mineral availability in blackbelt soils makes a difference. Lost of calcium and phosphorus in these soils and I would assume this is transferred to deer through growing vegetation.
Even some counties "outside of the blackbelt" like Elmore and Wilcox have some blackbelt dirt so, IMO, any of these counties have as good a chance of producing high end bucks as any other. No real difference in Dallas, Lowndes and Wilcox, for instance. However, I would rather have land in the blackbelt than anywhere south, and the TN river valley is probably just as good, again, due to soil quality.
Quantity and quality of plants make a difference also. Large acreage of beans will provide a lot more opportunity for the "right" deer to find high protein diet through most of it's life. A couple 10 acre lab-lab fields WONT. A 2,000 acre, well-managed, burned, quail plantation full of native browse, legumes, and fawning cover (and, yes, pine trees!) provides the same kind of food quantity and quality. This would reflect land use and landowner size as well, so well managed large landholding in Russel, Bullock and Barbour (edge of blackbelt) get the nod.
Bottom line, it's all about soils and what is growing on them!
I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1435423
08/31/15 02:13 PM
08/31/15 02:13 PM
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Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,255 South Alabama
gobbler
12 point
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12 point
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,255
South Alabama
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There are always "local" variances and anomalies that make certain areas special. It may also be soil related, or terrain, or something we don't even consider, but, while i am particular for the eastern end of the blackbelt, I would say given the same "property" on the blackbelt, it would be pretty close to equal east to west. Obviously, river bottom wouldn't be the same as upland, etc., but make all variables in terrain and wooded vs open, management practices, plantings, burning... etc the same and there shouldnt be much difference east to west.
I swear by my life and my love of it that I will never live for the sake of another man, nor ask another man to live for mine
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1439813
09/04/15 09:30 AM
09/04/15 09:30 AM
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Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 8,363 Montgomery
WmHunter
14 point
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14 point
Joined: Aug 2005
Posts: 8,363
Montgomery
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.... do you see any areas that for some reason just seem to grow more larger antlered bucks (on average)? Or, once you get them all under management for atleast 3+ generations the average mature bucks harvested are all about the same. Thanks I'm a little late to this thread but have to say this: the answer is YES. Some parts of the Black Belt have a local deer herd that grow bigger antlers than other parts. Which is just what you would expect anywhere. The simple fact is that antler traits very from place to place everywhere in North America, and by place to place I mean within about a 3 to 5 mile area. Use an old fashioned compass and draw a circle around an area that goes out 5 miles from the epicenter, and outside that epicenter you will see a near completely different set of antler types and traits. I see totally different types and traits of antlers between south Matthews and north Matthews, for example, and between southwest Montgomery County and southeast part of the county and from the north central part of the county. So this is also true throughout the Black Belt. Some parts of the Black Belt are simply not blessed with impressive antler traits and others are. Some place have more messed up antler traits also. It varies from area to area, and as indicated, go 5 miles from one area and you can see the entire buck herd with completely different antler traits and characteristics. Anyone that has seen photos of bucks from across the Black Belt knows that there is a wide variation between antler traits, characteristics and size. Some places are really lame, others are very impressive.
"The Tree of Liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants." Thomas Jefferson
" Chuck Sykes is a dictator control freak like Vladimir Putin " WmHunter
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Re: Is the Black Belt really created equal after all?
[Re: bowhunt55]
#1439968
09/04/15 12:29 PM
09/04/15 12:29 PM
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Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 27,380 Fayetteville TN Via Selma
jawbone
Freak of Nature
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Freak of Nature
Joined: Jan 2001
Posts: 27,380
Fayetteville TN Via Selma
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Interesting that you see different traits in such a small area(Especially from south Mathews to North Mathews as its not a huge area). What are some of the best areas that you have seen in the blackbelt for producing trophy deer? Not to give a smart alec answer, but it is simple, the best managed areas.
Lord, please help us get our nation straightened out.
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