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Owned by TALS

Real-world land management and mineral education focused on year-round whitetail health, habitat strategy, and practical results.

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190.5k members • Free

5 contributions to TALS MINERALS Education Vault
START HERE BEFORE ANYTHING ELSE
If you are new to the TALS MINERALS Education Vault, this is where you begin. This Vault is built on education, realism, and long-term thinking — not hype or shortcuts. Before jumping into minerals, feed, trail cams, or seasonal strategy, read this first so you understand: • What this Vault is • What it is not • How to use it correctly Skip this and you will miss the point. Start here: ➡️ Start Here –https://www.skool.com/tals-minerals-llc-9080/classroom/9b0ef9d7?md=4487d16befe5421f99632cd8df9990d4
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ANNOUNCEMENT: TALS EDUCATION VAULT TRANSITION
Starting March 1st, this community will officially transition into the TALS MINERALS LLC – Education Vault. This Vault is being built as a private education hub focused on: • Whitetail nutrition fundamentals • Mineral programs and realistic expectations • Seasonal decision making • Feed vs habitat strategy • Long term herd health and land stewardship This is not a hype group. There will be no trophy promises, shortcuts, or miracle claims. The goal of this Vault is simple: Clear explanations, honest expectations, and education that helps you make better decisions for your land and herd. Most content will be written so it can be referenced, revisited, and applied in the field without needing video. PRICING STANDARD Free access. Includes introductory education, mindset foundations, and select Vault content. PREMIUM $20 per month or $149 per year Premium members gain access to structured education covering seasonal strategy, feed vs habitat, mineral foundations, and trail cam & site interpretation. VIP $50 per month or $499 per year VIP members receive access to advanced decision breakdowns, real world scenarios, and higher level decision making content that goes beyond basic education. FOUNDING MEMBERS There are currently 8 founding members in this group. As a thank you for being here early and helping shape this Vault, all founding members will retain full access at no cost. This is our way of recognizing early support and keeping faith with those who believed in this before it was built out. WHAT TO EXPECT NEXT Between now and March 1st: • The Classroom will continue to be structured into education sections • Foundational written lessons will continue to be added • Premium and VIP content will be built out and clearly defined If you are here to learn the why behind nutrition and land decisions, you are in the right place. Thank you for being here early and helping build this the right way. — Tyson TALS MINERALS LLC
Quick check in
What time of year do you feel like your property struggles the most? Late winter Spring green up Summer pressure Early season Rut Late season If you want, add why.
Question for the group
What’s one thing you’re currently struggling with on your property? Minerals, pressure, deer movement, cameras, timing drop it below.
0 likes • Dec '25
@Nolan Hagan That tells me you’re doing a lot right already. If they’re bedding throughout the entire sanctuary, the worst thing you can do is over improve it. At that point, your goal isn’t to add more bedding inside it, it’s to protect it and shape movement around it. I would leave the core exactly how it is and focus any hinge cutting, tops, or planted structure on the outer third of that sanctuary. Think of it as tightening the edges, not rebuilding the center. That edge structure helps define where deer exit based on wind and daylight without pushing them to relocate completely. You already have security. Now it’s about control and predictability, not more cover. If you had to guess, which side of that sanctuary do you see the most daylight movement out of based on prevailing winds?
0 likes • Dec '25
@Nolan Hagan That makes sense, and your instincts are mostly right. If the far side from the hay field is where you’re seeing the most consistent movement, that tells me deer already feel more secure on that edge and are exiting there naturally. I would not try to change that too aggressively. I like the idea of cedars and miscanthus, but I would be very intentional with placement. I would avoid planting them deep inside the brush you circled. Instead, focus them just off the edge of that area, staggered, so you create defined exits, not a wall. Think of the sanctuary as something you shape from the outside in, not something you pack tighter in the middle. Too much structure inside can actually scatter bedding instead of improving it. The olives and existing trees at the X are already doing a lot of work for you. I would let that area remain your core security and use plantings to influence how deer leave it based on wind. And you’re right, maps only go so far. Boots on the ground always tell the full story. I’d be curious to see how elevation and prevailing wind are working together there.
Welcome to TALS Land & Mineral Education
I created this community because I kept seeing the same questions, confusion, and bad information around land management and deer minerals. This is not a hype group and it is not about selling products. This is real world education built from years in the woods. What worked, what didn’t, and why deer actually do what they do. Inside this group we will cover Land management basics Mineral use for year round whitetail health Common mistakes hunters make Why sites go cold How pressure, timing, and setup change everything Ask questions. Learn. Share experiences. This community is about getting better, not showing off. Glad to have you here. Tyson
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@tyson-croniser-1119
Founder of TALS Minerals LLC. Real-world mineral education focused on year-round whitetail health, not hype.

Active 2d ago
Joined Dec 18, 2025