Hook'N'Bullet
Well-Known Member
Hi All,
I've managed to get myself a new permission as part of a native woodland restoration program.
Its a small holding of about 40 acres. The landowners are sort of "hobby farmers" (the best way I can put it). They have a couple of sheep, a veg garden, orchard, 3 small grazing fields for the sheep and then two young-ish tree plantations. One is Sitka Spruce and the other is native Oak and make up the majority of the ground.
They contacted me through an ecologist friend. I walked the ground last weekend. There wasn't really that much sign of deer. A few dropping here and there and the odd track in the mud. The plantations are in blocks with no lanes or access routes cut. To be honest, they pretty much unshootable. Both are a "hands and knees" type job trying to get through them. Land owner has said he's never walked them because its too hard. He also said there was one person trying to shoot it a few years ago. They got one deer and never came back. I suggested the colder months might be better time to assess as things will die back. I also suggested looking into hiring a forest manager to open areas up to allow shooting which they seemed interested in. At this point in time, the only shoot-able area would be the grazing fields (roughly 100 to 150 meters long) from a high seat. I do know there are a lot of deer in the general area as I had permission close by a couple of years ago (paid lease).
I suppose I'm wondering if anybody has any experience with newly forming, very dense woods and how best to approach as I don't want to be defeated. My other permissions are either mature woods / fields so its a bit of a new one for me.
Kind Regards,
H&B
I've managed to get myself a new permission as part of a native woodland restoration program.

Its a small holding of about 40 acres. The landowners are sort of "hobby farmers" (the best way I can put it). They have a couple of sheep, a veg garden, orchard, 3 small grazing fields for the sheep and then two young-ish tree plantations. One is Sitka Spruce and the other is native Oak and make up the majority of the ground.
They contacted me through an ecologist friend. I walked the ground last weekend. There wasn't really that much sign of deer. A few dropping here and there and the odd track in the mud. The plantations are in blocks with no lanes or access routes cut. To be honest, they pretty much unshootable. Both are a "hands and knees" type job trying to get through them. Land owner has said he's never walked them because its too hard. He also said there was one person trying to shoot it a few years ago. They got one deer and never came back. I suggested the colder months might be better time to assess as things will die back. I also suggested looking into hiring a forest manager to open areas up to allow shooting which they seemed interested in. At this point in time, the only shoot-able area would be the grazing fields (roughly 100 to 150 meters long) from a high seat. I do know there are a lot of deer in the general area as I had permission close by a couple of years ago (paid lease).
I suppose I'm wondering if anybody has any experience with newly forming, very dense woods and how best to approach as I don't want to be defeated. My other permissions are either mature woods / fields so its a bit of a new one for me.
Kind Regards,
H&B