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This episode of Huntin' Land Podcast takes a hard look at one of the most misunderstood ideas in land management: sometimes the best way to grow more wildlife is to have fewer trees. Dr. Richard Cristan of Auburn University College of Forestry Wildlife and Environment breaks down timber stand improvement in plain terms, showing how thinning, clear cuts, and targeted tree removal can dramatically increase habitat quality without sacrificing long-term timber value.
The conversation challenges that gut reaction a lot of landowners have—walking into a thick, beautiful stand of timber and thinking it’s perfect as-is. In reality, those closed-canopy woods are often biological deserts, with little food or cover for wildlife. Cristan explains how sunlight is the real driver of habitat, and how practices like thinning and crop tree release create the kind of understory that deer, turkeys, and other species actually need.
Along the way, the episode gets practical. There’s a clear breakdown of what timber stand improvement actually is, how it differs from commercial thinning, and how landowners can start making decisions without overcomplicating things. They dig into real-world tactics like hack-and-squirt, herbicide selection, and managing hardwood stands without wrecking future value. The big takeaway is that timber and wildlife goals don’t have to compete—you just have to manage with intention instead of assumption.
SPONSORS
First South Farm Credit
Deep South Cranes
Dixie Supply/Baker Metalworks
Chemical Warehouse
Texas Hunter
Black Buffalo
National Land Realty
By Great Days Outdoors5
5252 ratings
This episode of Huntin' Land Podcast takes a hard look at one of the most misunderstood ideas in land management: sometimes the best way to grow more wildlife is to have fewer trees. Dr. Richard Cristan of Auburn University College of Forestry Wildlife and Environment breaks down timber stand improvement in plain terms, showing how thinning, clear cuts, and targeted tree removal can dramatically increase habitat quality without sacrificing long-term timber value.
The conversation challenges that gut reaction a lot of landowners have—walking into a thick, beautiful stand of timber and thinking it’s perfect as-is. In reality, those closed-canopy woods are often biological deserts, with little food or cover for wildlife. Cristan explains how sunlight is the real driver of habitat, and how practices like thinning and crop tree release create the kind of understory that deer, turkeys, and other species actually need.
Along the way, the episode gets practical. There’s a clear breakdown of what timber stand improvement actually is, how it differs from commercial thinning, and how landowners can start making decisions without overcomplicating things. They dig into real-world tactics like hack-and-squirt, herbicide selection, and managing hardwood stands without wrecking future value. The big takeaway is that timber and wildlife goals don’t have to compete—you just have to manage with intention instead of assumption.
SPONSORS
First South Farm Credit
Deep South Cranes
Dixie Supply/Baker Metalworks
Chemical Warehouse
Texas Hunter
Black Buffalo
National Land Realty

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