MinnesotaHunter
Well-known member
I am interested to hear if anyone on HT has experience with larger scale seedling planting.
We (@ewludwig and I) just ordered 700 trees to plant around our hunting area in north central MN. In April we will be getting 100 x 8-16" White Spruce, 100 x 6-16" White Cedar, and 500 5-12" White Spruce. Went with these as they are native to the area, make good ground level cover, and have a good growth rate.
The goal is to create some better tree diversity in the habitat, and build up some pockets of thermal cover for deer. The forest we hunt has gone through multiple cycles of logging and has largely regenerated in aspen, red oak, maple, ironwood, and not much for conifers, so there isn't much diversity in cover. There is a real mature pine plantation north of our area about a mile and some other jack pine areas up there too, and in the winter the deer get really concentrated, making them much easier pickings for predators.
My current thought is to find a handful of areas to thin the existing 40-60 year old aspen/maple/ironwood and fill in with the bigger spruce in the higher ground and cedars around the swamps to build pockets of cover. There are also a couple of 5-6 year old clear cuts that have regenerated in aspen and red osier dogwood that have some patches that have remained clear and we are planning on filling those openings with the 5-12" spruce to create some better diversity there too.
Does my plan sound solid? Anyone have any tips/tricks to make planting easier or get better survival?
We (@ewludwig and I) just ordered 700 trees to plant around our hunting area in north central MN. In April we will be getting 100 x 8-16" White Spruce, 100 x 6-16" White Cedar, and 500 5-12" White Spruce. Went with these as they are native to the area, make good ground level cover, and have a good growth rate.
The goal is to create some better tree diversity in the habitat, and build up some pockets of thermal cover for deer. The forest we hunt has gone through multiple cycles of logging and has largely regenerated in aspen, red oak, maple, ironwood, and not much for conifers, so there isn't much diversity in cover. There is a real mature pine plantation north of our area about a mile and some other jack pine areas up there too, and in the winter the deer get really concentrated, making them much easier pickings for predators.
My current thought is to find a handful of areas to thin the existing 40-60 year old aspen/maple/ironwood and fill in with the bigger spruce in the higher ground and cedars around the swamps to build pockets of cover. There are also a couple of 5-6 year old clear cuts that have regenerated in aspen and red osier dogwood that have some patches that have remained clear and we are planning on filling those openings with the 5-12" spruce to create some better diversity there too.
Does my plan sound solid? Anyone have any tips/tricks to make planting easier or get better survival?