Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 16, 2022 · Grant Woods Just Sold the “Proving Grounds.”. Here’s What He Learned from Building One of the Most Famous Whitetail Properties in America. The renowned whitetail biologist discusses native species restoration, prescribed fire, and why herbicides are like root canals. Woods built 1,500 acres of bliss for Missouri wildlife.

    • Dr. Mickey Hellickson
    • Dr. Bronson Strickland
    • Marrett Grund
    • Rod Cumberland
    • Dr. Karl v. Miller
    • Kip Adams
    • Dr. Grant Woods

    The chief wildlife biologist at the King Ranch in Texas points to his own doctoral research on buck movements, as well as graduate studies conducted by Stephen Webb at Texas A&M-Kingsville, as having the greatest impact on his own hunting decisions. These studies helped convince me to stick with my stand choices when hunting because of the general ...

    The biggest change I have made regarding deer hunting in recent years is using age to drive all my buck harvest decisions, said Dr. Strickland, assistant extension professor at Mississippi State University. Strickland has been directly involved in studies that analyze antler quality by age class. This is really not late-breaking research news, but ...

    The farmland deer biologist for the Minnesota DNR, Grund said the ever-improving science of trail-camera surveys has had the biggest impact on his hunting by allowing him to map deer demographics across a landscape — even on the public landhe hunts. I'm involved in a trail-camera survey on a 50-square-mile study area located in big woods habitat in...

    A deer biologist for the Canadian province of New Brunswick, which borders the state of Maine, Cumberland has applied new knowledge about deer vision to his bowhunting decisions. A lot has come out lately about vision, and that has changed how I hunt quite a bit, Cumberland said. For example, we know a deer's effective vision is in a 300-degree arc...

    One of the things I probably changed my mind about more than anything is the idea of hunting over scrapes, said Miller, a professor of wildlife ecology and management at the University of Georgia. At one time we thought a scrape was the hotspot to kill a buck, and the science at the time indicated it was. More recently we've learned scrapes are mor...

    QDMA's Director of Outreach and Education said his hunting has changed in two major areas: how he interprets trail-camera information relative to buck huntability, and how he manages hunting pressure. A lot of the buck movement data coming out of Chesapeake Farms in Maryland and several Texas studies is suggesting some bucks are wanderers and have ...

    I think the most important thing I've learned from all of the GPS-based movement studies is that each buck is a unique individual, just as humans are, said Woods, who incorporated Woods and Associates, Inc., a wildlife management consulting firm. The only things that seem to be constant are the need to feed and the need to breed. Beyond that, I'm l...

    • Realtree
  2. Jul 6, 2022 · Dr. Grant Woods is a wildlife biologist specializing in deer management and research. He received his Ph.D. from Clemson University. His success at conducting wildlife research, educating hunters about advanced hunting and management techniques, and designing site-specific management plans to improve deer herd quality is well-known throughout the whitetail world.

  3. People also ask

  4. Jan 15, 2021 · The Low Hole. The single easiest way to get started improving a deer property is to identify “the low hole in the bucket” and address it. I first heard about this “low hole in the bucket” idea from Dr. Grant Woods many years ago. The concept was inspired by an agricultural principal known as Liebig’s Law of the Minimum, which states ...

  5. Jun 22, 2020 · Dr. Grant Woods, one of America’s top whitetail biologists and habitat specialists, says that many hunters make deer management out to be way too complicated, like it is Advanced Trig or something. “It’s simple math,” he says. “If you plant some food and make some improvements to your land, you can go from having maybe 50 percent deer that live on your property and 50 percent that ...

  1. People also search for