Felicia recently spoke to a group of teachers at Auburn University. She spoke about private forestland owners and how their forest management benefits all of us. This was the Teachers Conservation Workshop sponsored by Alabama Forestry Association.
Dewberry Lands is a family owned operation located in Lineville, Alabama. The property is managed for timber production, recreation, wildlife, and asthetics. This Blog is to share information about management, care, and use of the property that GOD has allowed us to own during our lifetime! Our goal is to make it better for the next generation. This site is COPYRIGHT PROTECTED.
A controlled burn
Tuesday, July 23, 2019
Wednesday, July 3, 2019
Hot Summer In Alabama
Some of the native wildflowers that are loving this hot, humid Alabama summer weather.
Chufa field being planted for the wild turkeys
It is nice having help from you daughter and two of your grandchildren but they got hot so they had to make a quick trip to the stream to cool off.
Very refreshing!
This is one of our larger fields where we planted sunn hemp for the deer. In less than a month fawns will start to drop and this high protein plant will be a welcomed food to the diet of the lactating does.
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
Busy Spring
May was a busy month dealing with things required of me by organizations I belong to. One week in May, Alabama had auditors for the Tree Farm audit which required visiting 49 Tree Farms in the state that were randomly chosen for visits to make sure Tree Farm was in compliance with the third part audit. Felicia and I started in Huntsville and helped with the North Alabama visits.
Since I am the Chairperson for the Alabama Tree Farm Committee I helped transport auditors to various properties and have since had conference calls with the national Tree Farm office about this audit. Alabama had no BMP (Best Management Practices) problems. This spoke well of our state. It was good to see other Tree Farms and how they were being managed.
My grandson learned how to plow as some of our summer food plots are planted with more to go.
I took one day off with my grandchildren to visit Cheaha where we enjoyed a cool June day. My grandson had worked hard that week and that day was his reward.
We have had vandals on our property setting fires. This has happened twice and the Clay County Sheriff is looking into this problem. This was not planned for.
In the last issue of Forest Magazine I wrote an article and one of my granddaughter had said she wanted to be in a magazine so I was able to meet her wish in talking about getting children outdoors.
She was so happy to be in the article.
Wednesday, March 6, 2019
Work Day
Yesterday was a very busy work day. At one time two bulldozers were working at one time on our property: one was clearing two wildlife openings and building a road while the other was pushing firebreaks for a prescribed burn.
We burned fifteen acres of two year old longleaf seedlings after the firebreaks were installed.
Tuesday, January 29, 2019
Next Generation Forest
Today we planted 20,050 more longleaf seedlings. These seedlings were planted on a tract of land we harvested in the winter of 2018. It was a mature stand of hardwood that had started to die and there were some pines mixed in the tract. We had one native longleaf pine growing on the property that we left. It was a 12" diameter tree.
These guys that plant the trees are the hardest working people I have ever been around. I enjoy trying to communicate with them. Two in the crew planted longleaf for me two years ago and they were glad to see the results of their labor as they came into our property. Most of the time they don't get to see where they had planted trees in previous years and it gave them motivation to do a good job seeing the results of their previous labor.
This tree is off to a good start with all of this wet weather we are having. 30 years from now this seedling will be a part of beautiful longleaf pine forest. My family will be able to walk through it and hear the special music the needles make when the breeze blows through them.
Sunday, December 23, 2018
A Wet Fall and Early winter
As 2018 comes to a close it has been really wet. The hunting has been lousy. Roads are too wet to travel and prescribed burning is nearly at a stand still. I did get one of the main roads worked last week and just over a week ago we got a burn in under 12 year old longleaf pines.
All this rain and wet weather has been good for mushrooms though. I just inoculated some oak logs with shiitake spores for mushrooms in 2019. Got to go with the flow!
Monday, November 26, 2018
2018 Alabama Treasure Forest Association President
I recently completed my term as President of the Alabama Treasure Forest Association. I conducted the business at our final state business meeting for 2018 in Pratville at the Alabama Landowners Conference. This was such an honor for me to be in a line of great presidents that have guided our organization down through the years. Our next president, Gary Cole, will be a great president for our organization.
People usually serve two annual terms in this position but I agreed to serve only one because in November I became the State Chairman for the Alabama Tree Farm Committee. I had already made this commitment to Tree Farm early and had been serving as vice-chair for the past four years.
These are two great organizations for forest landowners having different objectives but both do great work for those they represent!
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