Time can get away from a land manager and parts of a farm can get overtaken with undesirables. Which is exactly the case on this Alabama farm. A low lying area has been overtaken by pines and sweet gum trees. Being low lying, moisture often prohibits the ability to get the Vail equipment or a bush hog in there. To fix the problem, we had Taft Drone Services come in to spray the area. A fall spraying is optimum to get rid of the woody undesirables versus mowing that would likely lead to a regeneration next spring. An aerial application of herbicide is the perfect method for hard to reach locations, low lying areas, and for a guy without the equipment to cover a large area. Next spring, this chunk of the farm will be void of invasives and full of natives that are beneficial to all wildlife.
Drones vs. Invasive Trees: The Future of Forest Management
How to Increase Acorn Production on Your Farm
How Much Is a White Oak Worth? - Timber Harvest For Wildlife
Aerial Food Plots With a Drone Part 2 - The Management Advantage
Fall Food Plot Planting With A Drone - The Management Advantage
SUBSCRIBE
Signup to receive our latest videos and sponsor offers.
Related Posts
(Visited 30 times, 8 visits today)
Popular
Recent
Comments
Tags
Alabama deer hunting
aoudad
bow hunting
brassicas
clover
controlled burning
coyotes
coyote trapping
deer
deer hunting
deer management
doe management
duck hunting
ducks
food plot planting
food plots
FTA
golden millet
herbicide
hog hunting
Indiana deer hunting
land management
mature whitetails
mule deer
Native Warm Season Grasses
opossums
pennington
pine plantations
planting food plots
planting trees
predator management
predator removal
predators
predator trapping
prescribed burning
raccons
switchgrass
trail cameras
trapping
trees for deer
trophy radishes
turkey
turkey hunting
whitetail
wildlife management