north alabama. seeing a lot of single fawns (not twins) and trying to figure out if:
1. our supplemental feeding programs are working... meaning first year does have reached weight and are being breed
2. our supplemental feeding program is a flop... and the land just doesn't have the carrying capacity for most does to have twins
3. we need to get more after the coyotes.
regarding #2, in past years i had seen mostly twins. the mast crop was adequate last year. we are in about the third (?) year of being allowed to hunt over bait, meaning there was a lot of corn on the ground last fall. corn not being nutritionally complete that somehow harmed the herd.
off season we feed mostly a combo of protein pellets, cotton seed meal, rice bran, wheat mids, and sweet feed. plenty of deer specific mineral licks scattered around. the deer are hitting the volunteer ladino clover hard while the grain fields are being replanted.
any thoughts? thanks.
1. our supplemental feeding programs are working... meaning first year does have reached weight and are being breed
2. our supplemental feeding program is a flop... and the land just doesn't have the carrying capacity for most does to have twins
3. we need to get more after the coyotes.
regarding #2, in past years i had seen mostly twins. the mast crop was adequate last year. we are in about the third (?) year of being allowed to hunt over bait, meaning there was a lot of corn on the ground last fall. corn not being nutritionally complete that somehow harmed the herd.
off season we feed mostly a combo of protein pellets, cotton seed meal, rice bran, wheat mids, and sweet feed. plenty of deer specific mineral licks scattered around. the deer are hitting the volunteer ladino clover hard while the grain fields are being replanted.
any thoughts? thanks.