Free: Contests & Raffles.
I have to disagree with some of the assertions about plant regrowth after spraying. I have a background in botany and forestry, too. To say the same plants grow back after spraying vs. burning is incorrect. Site prep spraying suppresses the seed bed, but some plants are less effected and some are immune. That is why so much moss grows back after spraying, and sword fern often survives. These primitive plants have different biology and don't use seeds.We have all seen forage changes when forestry changed from burning to spraying. The first plants back after spraying now are moss/fern, ragweed, thistles, foxglove, and other non-native or invasive. Good forage shrubs like maples are hit again with spray to 'release' the young conifers. As a person involved in forestry, I know that a lot of this spraying is unnecessary and promoted by specific companies selling chemicals. These companies put on seminars and promote their products. I recently logged near my house and did not site-prep spray and the seedlings are doing just fine. It didn't look as nice and neat with only trees growing for the first years, but tree survival and growth was good.Forestry needs to Keep the spray for hard-to-control invasives (scotch broom/knotweed etc) and specific cases, and get away from the total vegetation control model touted by companies like Weyerhaeuser. The DNR is spraying huckleberry at high elevation only because they have bought into this sales pitch because it is completely illogical from a forestry perspective. All of my criticism of spraying assumes there is no inherent toxicity in the spray (which is a big assumption).
First off youre presuming a lot and your random google earth image is proving nothing. You seem to be claiming they kill all the vegetation for one year and that itll be all good the next year. Then what is the point of spraying in the first place? I havent seen anyone saying the game starves, they just go somewhere else. As the practice continues there wont be anywhere to go. I spend time in these areas and they arent full of browse for many years and even then the diversity of plantlife is greatly reduced. They spray to kill all the underbrush to increase the rate which evergreen trees grow which provide no food for ungulates on the west side. This practice has not been happening for very long and there will be long term consequences. Nearly everyone I speak with who hunts areas being sprayed has seen significant reductions in animal use of sprayed clearcuts and roadsides, which in the past were game magnets due to available browse.
I have to agree It seems that it takes a few years before any green up happens.Hancock has bought a lot of land on east side too so it's happening here as well .I don't like clear cuts period.But I do like logging ,if there was x-number of seed trees left no need to plant , no need to spray.That's how state land does it.