Steve Bartylla
Member
Btaylor, I'm afraid I don't see myself as being qualified to address resetting genetics based on doe removal. I've somewhat recently heard theories that if one has the best possible range and wipes out a large % of deer that the genetics of those that replace them are better than the genetics of the ones removed. I just can't pretend that I've connected those dots. In fact, when an EDH & BT combo wipes the properties I've managed (no different than shooting a bunch of deer, is it?), it seems the replacements are actually not as good as the standing stock it's replacing was. That said, one can also argue that's because I'd actively worked on shaping the standing stock. Still, there's just not the stud 2.5s & 3.5s that make your jaws drop and a lot of "iky" young bucks. Long way of saying, I haven't seen that, but don't pretend to know if it's because of other factors at play.
Outside of that, I look at does in 2 ways.
1 is from a simply "mouths to feed" aspect. If my habitat isn't able to sustain the deer numbers and still be "healthy" in my mind, one must shoot does to balance the deer numbers and habitat health.
The 2nd is purely a selfish view. I want as many doe groups that are doing what I want (have daylight core areas on the ground I manage) that the property can support in what I see as a healthy manner. When I need to shoot does to try to strike that balance, the first does I'm always going to target are those that bed on the neighbors and feed on me (doesn't happen much in reverse, as I am a big believer in offering a surplus of food). If that's not enough (and it often isn't), I'm shooting the younger does that bed on the ground I manage. The Alpha's that live there are doing what I want already (bedding and feeding on the ground I manage, giving Mr. Big does to dog on my ground that are less likely to lead him over the fence). So, I don't want to risk throwing that into chaos by killing the Alpha.
The other thing I think is important for free range buck management is keeping the buck:doe ratio in the 1:2-2.5 range. From a buck management stand point, I don't want it tighter than that, as tighter is a big buck stressor in my mind (forcing them to work harder and get in more out right brawls to score breeding opportunities...I see that as a MAJOR buck stressor that negatively impacts buck health far more than we tend to realize). For a thrilling hunt, tighter is better, but it comes at the costs of more dead (from fights and rut strain) and heavily stressed bucks than a looser ratio. Getting it much more skewed than 1:2.5 and the doe numbers make up too high a % of the population and taking more food than I feel it's worth. Not saying I'm right or wrong, just the balance I strive to hit/seems to work best for me.
My thoughts in a nutshell.
Outside of that, I look at does in 2 ways.
1 is from a simply "mouths to feed" aspect. If my habitat isn't able to sustain the deer numbers and still be "healthy" in my mind, one must shoot does to balance the deer numbers and habitat health.
The 2nd is purely a selfish view. I want as many doe groups that are doing what I want (have daylight core areas on the ground I manage) that the property can support in what I see as a healthy manner. When I need to shoot does to try to strike that balance, the first does I'm always going to target are those that bed on the neighbors and feed on me (doesn't happen much in reverse, as I am a big believer in offering a surplus of food). If that's not enough (and it often isn't), I'm shooting the younger does that bed on the ground I manage. The Alpha's that live there are doing what I want already (bedding and feeding on the ground I manage, giving Mr. Big does to dog on my ground that are less likely to lead him over the fence). So, I don't want to risk throwing that into chaos by killing the Alpha.
The other thing I think is important for free range buck management is keeping the buck:doe ratio in the 1:2-2.5 range. From a buck management stand point, I don't want it tighter than that, as tighter is a big buck stressor in my mind (forcing them to work harder and get in more out right brawls to score breeding opportunities...I see that as a MAJOR buck stressor that negatively impacts buck health far more than we tend to realize). For a thrilling hunt, tighter is better, but it comes at the costs of more dead (from fights and rut strain) and heavily stressed bucks than a looser ratio. Getting it much more skewed than 1:2.5 and the doe numbers make up too high a % of the population and taking more food than I feel it's worth. Not saying I'm right or wrong, just the balance I strive to hit/seems to work best for me.
My thoughts in a nutshell.