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In this bonus Booner School episode of Whitetail Edge, Ben Rising is in the field and breaks down how to improve deer bedding areas without overdoing hinge cuts or turning timber into a jungle no deer wants to use.With snow on the ground, it’s easy to see exactly how deer are bedding, traveling, and staging—and this spot has been a consistent bedding area for years. The problem? It’s starting to thin out, lose structure, and stop holding mature bucks the way it used to.In this video, I explain: • Why I don’t hinge cut entire bedding areas • How to identify “junk trees” that are perfect for bedding structure • The concept of creating small bedding pockets or “hotel rooms” for deer • How structure, wind advantage, and visibility matter to mature bucks • Why thick doesn’t always mean better when it comes to buck bedding • How strategic TSI and chainsaw work can hold deer longer during daylightInstead of laying everything over and hoping deer use it, this approach focuses on intentional structure, sunlight, browse, and security—without blowing out a sanctuary or ruining future timber value.This is real-world habitat work you can do in a few hours with one or two tanks of gas, whether you own the property or are working with permission.If you’re serious about holding more does, keeping bucks bedded longer, and improving daylight movement—this is one of the simplest, most overlooked tools you can use.Let us know in the comments what you’ve seen work on your properties and whether you agree or disagree with this approach.
By Whitetail Edge4.8
6363 ratings
In this bonus Booner School episode of Whitetail Edge, Ben Rising is in the field and breaks down how to improve deer bedding areas without overdoing hinge cuts or turning timber into a jungle no deer wants to use.With snow on the ground, it’s easy to see exactly how deer are bedding, traveling, and staging—and this spot has been a consistent bedding area for years. The problem? It’s starting to thin out, lose structure, and stop holding mature bucks the way it used to.In this video, I explain: • Why I don’t hinge cut entire bedding areas • How to identify “junk trees” that are perfect for bedding structure • The concept of creating small bedding pockets or “hotel rooms” for deer • How structure, wind advantage, and visibility matter to mature bucks • Why thick doesn’t always mean better when it comes to buck bedding • How strategic TSI and chainsaw work can hold deer longer during daylightInstead of laying everything over and hoping deer use it, this approach focuses on intentional structure, sunlight, browse, and security—without blowing out a sanctuary or ruining future timber value.This is real-world habitat work you can do in a few hours with one or two tanks of gas, whether you own the property or are working with permission.If you’re serious about holding more does, keeping bucks bedded longer, and improving daylight movement—this is one of the simplest, most overlooked tools you can use.Let us know in the comments what you’ve seen work on your properties and whether you agree or disagree with this approach.

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