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Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4305774
03/31/25 10:45 AM
03/31/25 10:45 AM
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,414
Awbarn, AL
CNC Offline
Dances With Weeds
CNC  Offline
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,414
Awbarn, AL
Originally Posted by jmj120
Originally Posted by CNC
I believe it just about all has to do with predators and their ups and downs……There’s plenty of places where turkeys exist that don’t have primo habitat…..I went and hunted Cleburne Co this past weekend on land with pitiful habitat but a decent population of birds….Why?.......My guess is the pitiful habitat doesn’t support many predators


Could be. Areas that I hunt haven't been the same since the early 90's. I've got a picture of 21 longbeards and around 50 hens in a hayfield from 1986. Since 2000 I haven't seen or heard a turkey there. Used to hear 4-6 gobblers and chose which one to go to............Now you're lucky to hear a bird.


What has significantly changed since 1986 from a predator standpoint??.....Coyote populations…….…..I believe nesting is probably being significantly disrupted by coyotes compared to back in the 70’s and 80’s when there was none…..They’re likely flushing hens from the nest and causing nest abandonment more so than what used to occur…..also in the last decade or so likely coon populations as well due to the significant amount of baiting that’s occurring....Avian predators are also more prevalent now than back then

Last edited by CNC; 03/31/25 10:46 AM.

“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: CNC] #4305777
03/31/25 10:50 AM
03/31/25 10:50 AM
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,933
Alabama
J
jmj120 Offline OP
12 point
jmj120  Offline OP
12 point
J
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,933
Alabama
Originally Posted by CNC
Originally Posted by jmj120
Originally Posted by CNC
I believe it just about all has to do with predators and their ups and downs……There’s plenty of places where turkeys exist that don’t have primo habitat…..I went and hunted Cleburne Co this past weekend on land with pitiful habitat but a decent population of birds….Why?.......My guess is the pitiful habitat doesn’t support many predators


Could be. Areas that I hunt haven't been the same since the early 90's. I've got a picture of 21 longbeards and around 50 hens in a hayfield from 1986. Since 2000 I haven't seen or heard a turkey there. Used to hear 4-6 gobblers and chose which one to go to............Now you're lucky to hear a bird.


What has significantly changed since 1986 from a predator standpoint??.....Coyote populations…….…..I believe nesting is probably being significantly disrupted by coyotes compared to back in the 70’s and 80’s when there was none…..They’re likely flushing hens from the nest and causing nest abandonment more so than what used to occur…..also in the last decade or so likely coon populations as well due to the significant amount of baiting that’s occurring....Avian predators are also more prevalent now than back then

I agree.. We trapped a lot in the late 70s and 80s. Never thought about a coyote or armadillo. Didn't bait deer, dog hunted. There were huge blocks of hardwoods then, and in the late 80s they started getting cut.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4305785
03/31/25 11:06 AM
03/31/25 11:06 AM
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,414
Awbarn, AL
CNC Offline
Dances With Weeds
CNC  Offline
Dances With Weeds
Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 25,414
Awbarn, AL
Originally Posted by jmj120
I agree.. We trapped a lot in the late 70s and 80s. Never thought about a coyote or armadillo. Didn't bait deer, dog hunted. There were huge blocks of hardwoods then, and in the late 80s they started getting cut.


Take away predators and turkeys are generalists that can survive in just about any habitat....I would bet that it wasnt so much the huge blocks of hardwoods directly benefiting the turkeys as much as it was those huge blocks of hardwoods not supporting predators and then the new habitat that replaced them (pines) did

Last edited by CNC; 03/31/25 11:10 AM.

“Buy the ticket, take the ride...And if it occasionally gets a little heavier than what you had in mind….well, maybe chalk it up to forced consciousness expansion…..Tune in, freak out, get beaten”....Hunter S. Thompson
Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4305790
03/31/25 11:21 AM
03/31/25 11:21 AM
Joined: Jan 2022
Posts: 319
Hardwoods
B
Bankheadhunter Offline
4 point
Bankheadhunter  Offline
4 point
B
Joined: Jan 2022
Posts: 319
Hardwoods
I'd say cell cameras plus bait is a severe issue.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: Mbrock] #4305863
03/31/25 02:36 PM
03/31/25 02:36 PM
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,933
Alabama
J
jmj120 Offline OP
12 point
jmj120  Offline OP
12 point
J
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,933
Alabama
Originally Posted by Mbrock
Originally Posted by jmj120
Originally Posted by Mbrock
Originally Posted by GomerPyle

Can they not just do the burns earlier, before nesting?

Burning isn’t always that easy. You are completely at the mercy of the weather and local conditions. Burn practitioners don’t have the luxury of scheduling burns to specific days or even weeks in most cases. You get them done when you can. For a private landowner with the ability to burn themselves, sure. They don’t have as much to do. For someone with 25-30 burns on the schedule for a burn season, no. It gets done when it gets done.


And, timing of burns helps achieve other objectives too. Turkeys are not always the forefront of those decisions. For deer browse and hardwood control, growing season fires are the best. Dormant season fires really don’t accomplish much for wildlife. They reduce fuels. Growing season fires however, promote herbaceous growth and help control unwanted species. I’ve NEVER once seen turkey populations suffer from growing season fires on the landscape, unless it was an uncontrolled intense fire that destroyed everything living over a vast amount of acreage.


So why are populations decreasing? I’m not blaming burning at all, but I’d like to hear your thoughts.

Do you have any evidence turkeys are declining? They’re not declining anywhere I’m familiar with. Have they cycled up and down over the last 20 years? Yes indeed, including some lean years. However, they have seemingly done very well in areas the perceived declines were occurring. I think we had several years of bad hatches and ppl jumped the gun on what was happening.

Turkeys are doing fine in areas with proper habitat management. There’s a lot of areas in this state with terribly managed forests. Overstocked, lack of understory vegetation, no fire, no predator management, etc.


Do you think Chuck has evidence that populations are declining? What’s your opinion on why he’s got us hunting in shorts and a t shirt?

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4305877
03/31/25 03:11 PM
03/31/25 03:11 PM
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 9,629
Right behind you
Mbrock Offline
Fancy
Mbrock  Offline
Fancy
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 9,629
Right behind you
Because he bought into Chamberlain’s “theory”, which has basically been thrown out after a couple of conclusive studies. The most recent one in TN. They were looking for excuses to lower the limit and push the season back before Chamberlain’s theory because of some modeling baloney that suggested it would increase turkey numbers. They set up a flawed study in AL that never produced an ounce of actual conclusive data because it was a bad design to begin with. It showed absolutely nothing. They couldn’t even hit the target number of birds to sample in the study due to inadequate capture techniques. But they plowed ahead anyway due to pressure. The amount of predators wild turkeys face today is hundreds of times more than the late 1900s and early 2000s. Avian predator populations have increased, nest predator populations have increased. Large predator populations have increased. All at the same time this has occurred land use patterns have changed and active management has decreased. Now add the instant gratification crowd that thinks it’s cool to turkey hunt, not because they love the wild turkey or the game, but because social media has made it the thing to do and popularized it. They should’ve placed more focus on educating the public on predator control and habitat management workshops instead of forcing bag limit and season changes. Wildlife populations flourish when landowners buy in to what they need to thrive.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: Mbrock] #4305892
03/31/25 03:31 PM
03/31/25 03:31 PM
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,933
Alabama
J
jmj120 Offline OP
12 point
jmj120  Offline OP
12 point
J
Joined: Nov 2005
Posts: 4,933
Alabama
Originally Posted by Mbrock
Because he bought into Chamberlain’s “theory”, which has basically been thrown out after a couple of conclusive studies. The most recent one in TN. They were looking for excuses to lower the limit and push the season back before Chamberlain’s theory because of some modeling baloney that suggested it would increase turkey numbers. They set up a flawed study in AL that never produced an ounce of actual conclusive data because it was a bad design to begin with. It showed absolutely nothing. They couldn’t even hit the target number of birds to sample in the study due to inadequate capture techniques. But they plowed ahead anyway due to pressure. The amount of predators wild turkeys face today is hundreds of times more than the late 1900s and early 2000s. Avian predator populations have increased, nest predator populations have increased. Large predator populations have increased. All at the same time this has occurred land use patterns have changed and active management has decreased. Now add the instant gratification crowd that thinks it’s cool to turkey hunt, not because they love the wild turkey or the game, but because social media has made it the thing to do and popularized it. They should’ve placed more focus on educating the public on predator control and habitat management workshops instead of forcing bag limit and season changes. Wildlife populations flourish when landowners buy in to what they need to thrive.


Makes sense. I don’t understand why he wants to push season back. I don’t understand a lot of things Chuck does.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: Mbrock] #4305916
03/31/25 04:53 PM
03/31/25 04:53 PM
Joined: Feb 2020
Posts: 45
Covington County
D
Double Down Offline
spike
Double Down  Offline
spike
D
Joined: Feb 2020
Posts: 45
Covington County
The landowners with the largest tracts in my neck of the woods are timber companies. Would providing some kind of assistance or incentives at a state level be something possible to make controlled burning worth considering as an option? I thought from a timber management perspective, there was many benefits for them to burn as well. Am I wrong or are the benefits if any not worth the risk? I lease a good bit of timber land for hunting and if they would allow, I would pay the forestry service myself to have it burned.

Last edited by Double Down; 03/31/25 04:54 PM.
Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4305947
03/31/25 06:51 PM
03/31/25 06:51 PM
Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 1,412
Georgia
howl Offline
8 point
howl  Offline
8 point
Joined: Oct 2017
Posts: 1,412
Georgia
A burnt nest is a burnt nest. No guarantee they will renest. Anyone who claims to be a scientist while representing as fact something they cannot measure is talking out of their backside. People need to understand biologists tout results whether or not they can provide them just like stock brokers.

The late burning started with Dei hiring. A wildlife refuge I hunt was about out of turkeys until they finally stopped burning nests. Now they have turkeys while the neighboring lands which did not take a hard line on late burning have not caught up.

It only decreases if you call them out on their nonsense. The forestry people and the biologists cover for each other. They get their checks from the same source and it ain't you.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: Double Down] #4305968
03/31/25 07:49 PM
03/31/25 07:49 PM
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 5,042
LASW
turkey247 Offline
12 point
turkey247  Offline
12 point
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 5,042
LASW
Originally Posted by Double Down
The landowners with the largest tracts in my neck of the woods are timber companies. Would providing some kind of assistance or incentives at a state level be something possible to make controlled burning worth considering as an option? I thought from a timber management perspective, there was many benefits for them to burn as well. Am I wrong or are the benefits if any not worth the risk? I lease a good bit of timber land for hunting and if they would allow, I would pay the forestry service myself to have it burned.


Burning at any stage of a rotation has very little impact on industrial timberland productivity with modern rotation ages, combined with the silvicutural practices available currently. And it can carry risk and cause negative productivity. So, y’all do the math on whether that will ever be something that will be a widespread option.

Good news - turkey can exist and in certain areas - thrive - without it. Obviously, fire frequency can add to success, as another tool in the toolbox. But don’t get trapped into thinking it’s the magic answer all the time, at every location.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: howl] #4305982
03/31/25 08:22 PM
03/31/25 08:22 PM
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 9,629
Right behind you
Mbrock Offline
Fancy
Mbrock  Offline
Fancy
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 9,629
Right behind you
Originally Posted by howl
A burnt nest is a burnt nest. No guarantee they will renest. Anyone who claims to be a scientist while representing as fact something they cannot measure is talking out of their backside. People need to understand biologists tout results whether or not they can provide them just like stock brokers.

The late burning started with Dei hiring. A wildlife refuge I hunt was about out of turkeys until they finally stopped burning nests. Now they have turkeys while the neighboring lands which did not take a hard line on late burning have not caught up.

It only decreases if you call them out on their nonsense. The forestry people and the biologists cover for each other. They get their checks from the same source and it ain't you.

Sorry bud, but you’re wrong. Biologists in both the private sector and government use data, research and science to base their decisions. I’ll choose to trust ppl who actually manage habitat over those who simply talk about it. There’s plenty of science out there. Some good. Some bad.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4306016
03/31/25 10:06 PM
03/31/25 10:06 PM
Joined: Dec 2014
Posts: 8,463
Boaz,AL
CarbonClimber1 Offline
14 point
CarbonClimber1  Offline
14 point
Joined: Dec 2014
Posts: 8,463
Boaz,AL
Not this chit again slap


"I dont quit.. And ill fight alone if i have to"
Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: Mbrock] #4306266
04/01/25 07:36 PM
04/01/25 07:36 PM
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 22,236
colbert county
cartervj Offline
Freak of Nature
cartervj  Offline
Freak of Nature
Joined: Feb 2007
Posts: 22,236
colbert county
Originally Posted by Mbrock
Originally Posted by howl
A burnt nest is a burnt nest. No guarantee they will renest. Anyone who claims to be a scientist while representing as fact something they cannot measure is talking out of their backside. People need to understand biologists tout results whether or not they can provide them just like stock brokers.

The late burning started with Dei hiring. A wildlife refuge I hunt was about out of turkeys until they finally stopped burning nests. Now they have turkeys while the neighboring lands which did not take a hard line on late burning have not caught up.

It only decreases if you call them out on their nonsense. The forestry people and the biologists cover for each other. They get their checks from the same source and it ain't you.

Sorry bud, but you’re wrong. Biologists in both the private sector and government use data, research and science to base their decisions. I’ll choose to trust ppl who actually manage habitat over those who simply talk about it. There’s plenty of science out there. Some good. Some bad.



Poult survival to me is the the biggest factor
Some things I’ve read reinforce that thought.

Poorcountrypreacher always talks about his centipede lawn being an attractant for young poults.


They have to be able to navigate habitat and spring burns create that habitat. Doesn’t matter how many nest if they poults get killed early on.


I’ve always contended that turkeys cycle like grouse. Have no proof etc…. Just a gut feeling lol.
Like last year being such a strong hatch thruout the south it seemed.

Predators matter but we don’t do any predator control yet we had poults all over the pace last year.

In my opinion the those flying predators take out more poults than all others combined.

All of that is worth the nickel in my pocket.

I have finally concluded what we experienced on the creek was just an abnormality
It was awesome for some time though.


“Socialism only works in two places: Heaven where they don't need it and hell where they already have it.” ― Ronald Reagan
Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4306280
04/01/25 08:47 PM
04/01/25 08:47 PM
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 626
montgomery
W
woodleyrd Offline
4 point
woodleyrd  Offline
4 point
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Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 626
montgomery
What do you think of this idea? It seems to make some sense as a contributing factor?

https://m.facebook.com/groups/650219898384203/permalink/29096493673330112/?

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: cartervj] #4306410
04/02/25 09:58 AM
04/02/25 09:58 AM
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 3,124
Pike Road, Al
M
Mully Offline
10 point
Mully  Offline
10 point
M
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 3,124
Pike Road, Al
Originally Posted by cartervj
Originally Posted by Mbrock
Originally Posted by howl
A burnt nest is a burnt nest. No guarantee they will renest. Anyone who claims to be a scientist while representing as fact something they cannot measure is talking out of their backside. People need to understand biologists tout results whether or not they can provide them just like stock brokers.

The late burning started with Dei hiring. A wildlife refuge I hunt was about out of turkeys until they finally stopped burning nests. Now they have turkeys while the neighboring lands which did not take a hard line on late burning have not caught up.

It only decreases if you call them out on their nonsense. The forestry people and the biologists cover for each other. They get their checks from the same source and it ain't you.

Sorry bud, but you’re wrong. Biologists in both the private sector and government use data, research and science to base their decisions. I’ll choose to trust ppl who actually manage habitat over those who simply talk about it. There’s plenty of science out there. Some good. Some bad.



Poult survival to me is the the biggest factor
Some things I’ve read reinforce that thought.

Poorcountrypreacher always talks about his centipede lawn being an attractant for young poults.


They have to be able to navigate habitat and spring burns create that habitat. Doesn’t matter how many nest if they poults get killed early on.


I’ve always contended that turkeys cycle like grouse. Have no proof etc…. Just a gut feeling lol.
Like last year being such a strong hatch thruout the south it seemed.

Predators matter but we don’t do any predator control yet we had poults all over the pace last year.

In my opinion the those flying predators take out more poults than all others combined.

All of that is worth the nickel in my pocket.

I have finally concluded what we experienced on the creek was just an abnormality
It was awesome for some time though.


I certainly believe that avian predators are hell on poults. Gobbler and others say their large plantation clients are not showing a decrease in turkeys and many are showing an increase. If I was betting as to why that is I'd say 1) fire 2) most plantations are killing a ton of avian predators whether legal or not.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4306445
04/02/25 12:07 PM
04/02/25 12:07 PM
Joined: Jan 2017
Posts: 7,065
Mobile, AL
P
Pwyse Offline
14 point
Pwyse  Offline
14 point
P
Joined: Jan 2017
Posts: 7,065
Mobile, AL
Killing Avian predators???

I heard that’s tough. I also heard that if you have any tips on it PM me.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4306487
04/02/25 02:04 PM
04/02/25 02:04 PM
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 910
Baldwin County
walt4dun Offline
6 point
walt4dun  Offline
6 point
Joined: Mar 2011
Posts: 910
Baldwin County
Years ago i met an old man that had a hawk trap on his property. Think 4x4x4' box with two 2x4' spring hinged one way doors on the top. All wrapped in chicken wire. He would catch a live squirrel or rabbit in a box trap and put it in there. Bird dive bombs threw the top, gets the bait and is stuck in there.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: jmj120] #4306495
04/02/25 02:25 PM
04/02/25 02:25 PM
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,336
Alabama
T
T-town Offline
8 point
T-town  Offline
8 point
T
Joined: Oct 2004
Posts: 1,336
Alabama
Id light more fire tomorrow if the humidity would come down. Have plenty of nesting cover right now but would like to increase the brood cover for this year's poults.

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: T-town] #4306497
04/02/25 02:26 PM
04/02/25 02:26 PM
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 9,629
Right behind you
Mbrock Offline
Fancy
Mbrock  Offline
Fancy
Joined: Feb 2016
Posts: 9,629
Right behind you
Originally Posted by T-town
Id light more fire tomorrow if the humidity would come down. Have plenty of nesting cover right now but would like to increase the brood cover for this year's poults.

👍

Re: Prescribed burns and nesting [Re: walt4dun] #4306584
04/02/25 06:35 PM
04/02/25 06:35 PM
Joined: Jan 2017
Posts: 7,065
Mobile, AL
P
Pwyse Offline
14 point
Pwyse  Offline
14 point
P
Joined: Jan 2017
Posts: 7,065
Mobile, AL
Originally Posted by walt4dun
Years ago i met an old man that had a hawk trap on his property. Think 4x4x4' box with two 2x4' spring hinged one way doors on the top. All wrapped in chicken wire. He would catch a live squirrel or rabbit in a box trap and put it in there. Bird dive bombs threw the top, gets the bait and is stuck in there.


So the doors swung one way into the trap and the bird just tried to dive bomb in the doors?

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