Acorn & mast crop

Vermont mast crop reports.

2025Good

Vermont's northern hardwoods rely on red oak (limited southern range) and beechnut mast. Beech bark disease has reduced beechnut production in many areas, increasing the relative importance of oak mast — particularly in the southern Champlain Valley and Connecticut River drainage.

  • Red Oak
  • Beech
  • White Oak

Multi-year trend

Year over year.

Categorical ratings per year. Overall is solid; white oak and red oak series are dashed.

YearOverallWhite oakRed oak
2022FairFairFair
2023PoorPoorPoor
2024FairFairFair
2025GoodGoodGood

Yearly reports

Most recent first.

Click through to a year-specific page for a permanent reference link.

Annual mast report

2025

Good

White oak

Good

Red oak

Good

Other mast

Good

Regional notes

Preliminary reports indicate solid southern oak production.

Hunter implication

Mast is plentiful enough to pull deer off plots and ag fields. Find the productive oaks and set up tight; expect deer to be less predictable on traditional stand sites built for travel routes.

Annual mast report

2024

Fair

White oak

Fair

Red oak

Fair

Other mast

Fair

Regional notes

Mixed recovery.

Hunter implication

Mixed conditions — some areas with productive oaks, others without. Scout for the pockets that produced and hunt the travel routes between bedding and mast. Plots and ag fields still hold deer where mast failed.

Annual mast report

2023

Poor

White oak

Poor

Red oak

Poor

Other mast

Poor

Regional notes

Northeast mast failure year.

Hunter implication

Concentrate on remaining food sources. Food plots, ag fields, persimmons, and isolated mast pockets become high-traffic stand sites. Expect competition from other hunters who notice the same thing.

Annual mast report

2022

Fair

White oak

Fair

Red oak

Fair

Other mast

Fair

Regional notes

Beech-disease-influenced; oak limited to southern range.

Hunter implication

Mixed conditions — some areas with productive oaks, others without. Scout for the pockets that produced and hunt the travel routes between bedding and mast. Plots and ag fields still hold deer where mast failed.

Hunter strategy

How to hunt a good mast year in Vermont.

Locate specific white oak flats with active drop, hunt tight to the trees, and expect deer to be less predictable on traditional travel-corridor stand sites. With food everywhere, generic stand placement loses to oak-specific scouting.

Primary source

Vermont Department of Forests, Parks and Recreation

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Open report

Always cross-reference with the most current published agency report before basing planning decisions on this page.

Scout mast locations on your map.

State-wide mast surveys are a starting point. Bield: Hunt lets you pin the specific oaks producing on your property, track drop year over year, and find the stands those trees pull deer to.

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