BRAINERD, MINN. - Last week, on a warm and sunny afternoon, I used a handheld Global Positioning System (GPS) to determine the exact acreage of a wildlife opening I had cleared earlier this winter on my property.
To accomplish this, I simply picked a starting location on the perimeter of my newly created opening, pressed a few buttons on my GPS, then walked the outskirts of the opening. As I walked along, I watched the screen on my GPS and, like magic, my track was plotted. When I completed the loop, I pushed another button on my GPS and presto, I had the exact acreage of the interior of my route. My kidney bean-shaped opening was .2 acres, about one-third smaller than I had guessed.
This GPS method of area calculation will work no matter the size or shape of the area, and the results can be displayed in just about any format, from square feet to square miles, even metric dimensions. No measuring, no pacing, no mathematics, nothing.
Later, when I returned home, I drew a rough outline of the opening on an aerial photo of my land, named the opening, and then jotted down the acreage on the aerial map so I can refer to this information in the future. I also saved a version of this document in my computer.
Wow! I must be an electronics wizard, right? Wrong. I had my GPS owner's manual in my pocket, and yes, I did refer to it. But actually the process was simple.
Acreage calculation via GPS might not be news to modern farmers, but most recreational landowners I have spoken with are not aware that GPS units feature this time-and-money-saving option.
Why, you might wonder, did I want to know the exact acreage of the opening, and why did I not just make an educated guess?
Ultimately, my plan is to convert the opening to a food plot for deer and other wildlife, and knowing the exact acreage will help me determine the proper amount of lime, fertilizer and seed needed to produce a quality plot. Guessing at the plot size is not a good idea because overestimating the size will waste money on excess chemicals and seed, and underestimating will result in insufficient applications of the same, compromising the quality of the plot.