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The Land Guide

seven turkeys

Ten Tips For More Turkeys

Ron & Tes Jolly It’s just like “turkey math,” if you take habitat, plus food, plus water…that equals, more turkeys. Wild turkeys spend their lives in a home range. When poults first hatch, their home range can be as small as 100 acres. As they grow older and larger the hen leads them where they

Mature Whitetail Bucks

Mature Whitetail Bucks: Why Don’t I See More?

Bob Humphrey First, let’s be clear what we’re talking about. Maturity is that point at which growth of an organism ceases. Annual plants grow, mature, go to seed and then die in a single season. Others, like aspen trees may grow for years, even decades before growth ceases. Still others, like oaks may continue to

Dear Land guy Water rights

Dear Land Guy: Water Rights

As a professional real estate agent, I frequently get calls from consumers asking questions about real estate and the buying and selling of it.  I have listed below some of these questions. The answers I have written are general and brief and as I have suggested, you will need to consult a legal expert for more

Dear Land Guy CRP Exclusive Listing

Dear Land Guy: CRP Land and Exclusive Listing

As a professional real estate agent, I frequently get calls from consumers asking questions about real estate and the buying and selling of it. I have listed below some of these questions. The answers I have written are general and brief and as I have suggested, you will need to consult a legal expert for more detailed information.

tractor plowing

Mixing It Up- Buying A Diverse Property

Chris Hawley, Mossy Oak Properties Back when I first began my career in the rural and recreational land market in the mid-1980s, most of the parcels of land I dealt with were best described as “one-dimensional,” in that there was typically only one primary use for that property. Many agricultural tracts were not properly set

moist soil management

Strategies For Proper Moist Soil Management

Kevin Keen | Originally published in GameKeepers: Farming for Wildlife Magazine. To subscribe, click here. Typically a slow drawdown of water anywhere from mid-March through mid-June is the best option to get the most native seed production from your moist soil units. Stretching out this drying period also continues to provide wildlife habitat well into the spring. So

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