Last night I was fortunate enough to help out with a DeerHunting101 Seminar put together by the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission in partnership with The Quality Deer Management Association.
When I pulled into the parking lot it was apparent a good turn out was in store and, upon entering the room, I was surprised to see several repeat attendees from last year. Mr.Deet James & Mr. Tom Padgett with the NCWRC did their thing and, as a volunteer for the Land of the Pines Branch of The QDMA, I did mine. We did the best we could to engage the participants and provide them with useful information that would get them one step closer to the deer woods for the first time or maybe one step closer to reinvigorating their drive to hunt.
At the end of the night, on my hour and twenty-minute ride home, I reflected on the stories I heard and the folks I heard them from; the questions I was asked and the answers I provided. I couldn’t help but feel very fortunate compared to some of the hunters in the room. It became even more clear that my hunting heritage had been handed to me on a silver platter by my friend Jody and his family – not everyone is blessed with such a mentor and friend or prime hunting grounds on which to chase their dreams.
In a world where the lines outside of the woods are so blurred and the troubles we face ever-increasing – hunting matters; mentorship matters. For me, the pursuit of the White-tailed Deer and all that it provides is part of the anchor that keeps me grounded; part of the oar that stirs my soul. For me, Hunting Matters.
If you find yourself with the opportunity to attend one of the many hunting related seminars being offered – don’t pass it up. They’re as much about connecting hunters with hunters as they are about providing information. As a mentor, the positive impact you stand to make in the life of another is life-changing for you too. Your selflessness won’t go un-noticed or unrewarded. To someone you haven’t yet met – Hunting Matters. To someone you haven’t yet taken into the deer woods – Hunting Matters. To the homeless man headed to the soup kitchen – Hunting Matters….
As an aside, today marks 34 years since my Mom suffered through the pains of labor and deposited me into the hands of a midwife at Chatham Hospital in Siler City, NC. She was 19 and just a kid herself – Thank you Mama. How I managed to get here, playing in the dirt of North Carolina in an effort to create edge habitat for wildlife – only God knows that I guess.

First and Foremost, I must give credit where credit is due – That said, I’m much appreciative for landowners who afford me the privilege to be a steward of their property; for the discretion to implement such habitat creation initiatives so long as not to degrade the valuable timber resources that abound throughout.
So, what is Functional Edge Habitat? What is Edge Habitat for that matter? Quite simply, edge habitat is where two differing types of habitat meet – Functional Edge habitat is more than that – It’s a place that can be readily used for hunting, observing, and evaluating deer, turkey, or other game species. It’s where wildlife populations are censused, where our hunting heritage is strengthened and passed on to the next generation of hunters, and for me at least – it’s memories and photographs in the making.

Sometimes, edge habitat isn’t the limiting factor affecting the diversity of your property. It’s something else, like the lack of a perennial water source or the absence of cover. Functional Edge isn’t necessarily a wildlife food plot where animals feed. It could be a geographic spot on the map where an early stage of succession with grasses and forbs meets a later stage with small trees and shrubs. Such an edge is “functional” to any wildlife manager in the sense that it provides an opportunity to observe wildlife so long as the earlier stages of forest succession are maintained.
The limiting factor on most of the properties I am involved with isn’t cover or water – it’s food and the type of habitat that breeds great nesting grounds for wild turkeys. As such, I create areas where supplemental food sources can be planted or where an earlier stage of succession can be generated and maintained. Once an understory crosses a certain threshold in the small trees and shrub stage, it’s just about impossible to accomplish to reclaim it with a tractor and a bush hog. Enter the bulldozer – And, within a few hours time, you have set back succession and created what I refer to as functional edge habitat.
