Seasonal Property Planner
Month-by-month task calendar for everything on your property. Food plots, timber, equipment, wildlife, infrastructure — organized by when it needs to happen.
Coming Spring 2026
The Complete Land Management Calendar (Coming Soon)
Every task, every month, organized by category. Print it, tape it to your shop wall, and stop guessing what you should be doing on your property right now.
Seasonal Guides
The right task at the right time. Timing is the difference between productive management and wasted weekends.
Winter (December - February)
Winter Property Tasks
TSI and hinge cutting, equipment maintenance, aerial imagery analysis, fence repair, and planning for the year ahead. Winter is when the real work gets done.
Spring (March - May)
Spring Property Tasks
Prescribed burns, spring food plots, tree planting, road grading, trail camera deployment, and soil testing. The busiest season on any rural property.
Summer (June - August)
Summer Property Tasks
Food plot maintenance, bush hogging, pond management, fall plot preparation, stand maintenance, and the never-ending battle against weeds and brush.
Fall (September - November)
Fall Property Tasks
Fall food plot planting, hunting season preparation, camera strategy for pre-rut, road and fence winterization, and equipment service before cold weather.
Frequently Asked Questions
In late winter and early spring: prescribed burns, TSI work, equipment maintenance, road grading, fence repair, tree planting, and food plot soil testing. This is the most productive window because you can see terrain without leaves and the ground is workable.
Spring plots (clover, chicory) go in April through May. Fall plots (brassicas, cereal grains) go in August through September. Perennial clover can be frost-seeded in February or March for the easiest establishment. Check our food plot guides for complete planting instructions.
January through March. Leaves are off so you can see tree form, snakes are dormant, and herbicide on cut stumps is still effective. Hinge cutting is best in winter when you can see how cuts relate to travel corridors and food sources. The right safety gear is essential for this work.
Start With What Matters Most
Not sure where to begin? Our habitat and food plot guides help you prioritize the work that makes the biggest impact.
Habitat Guides →