Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008616
12/01/23 10:35 AM
12/01/23 10:35 AM
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Joined: Oct 2009
western mn
bucksnbears
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
western mn
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I've killed deer just about every way you can. (Not with dogs though), and everyone has been fun.
swampgas chili and schmidt beer makes for a deadly combo
You have to remember that 1 out of 3 Democratic Voters is just as dumb as the other two.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008627
12/01/23 10:47 AM
12/01/23 10:47 AM
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Joined: Apr 2009
South Ga - Almost Florida
Swamp Wolf
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2009
South Ga - Almost Florida
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I use cameras to survey what bucks I have available to harvest. Georgia limits the private land buck harvest to two bucks per season and one of those has antler restrictions. Im looking to harvest two of the best bucks I can annually, not just the first deer that walks by. I've killed a lot of whitetails and have been selective harvest-minded for a couple decades. I don’t own any hunting land, but lease three tracts that total about 2300 acres. I dont have any family land or even private land where I've hunted free without harvest restrictions.
With all that said, why would anyone that invests $$ in owning/long term leasing hunting property not be interested in some version of deer management? Food plots, cameras, feeders, etc are aspects of deer management...not necessarily hunting. I know landowners that do all these things, but don't even hunt.
Those of you that live near/have access to tracts of public land have no reason to be concerned with deer management. You don't have anything invested in the land, other than buying your licenses/permits. Your deer hunting plans are not in the same league as those that own a tractor and implements & plant plots (to give back to the wildlife, instead of just taking). Most public land hunters have the mindset to shoot him b4 the other guy does. That's OK if that satisfies your deer hunting appetite. For me, the deer management aspect is much more self-fulfilling that just killing a deer. It is a great feeling to get on my tractor and mow openings or disk plots, and plant them. But, it is even a better feeling to put up those cameras and take pics of nice bucks and gobblers browsing in those plots I planted.
I'm not knocking any public land hunter. Everyone doesn't/won't have access to land where they can conduct management activities. Plus, it is very expensive. I too hunt public land at times, usually quota hunts in various areas of the state (quality buck areas and unique habitats like the Atlantic coastal islands). We all have different setups, different scenarios, different land access, different interests, different $$, and live in different parts of the country with vastly different habitat conditions and deer populations.
I'm almost 60 and my dream of owning my own hunting property likely won't happen. But, if it did, there would be food plots in every available opening, feeders all over the property, and several cameras taking photos of the game I'm giving back to.
I'm off my stump...
That's fine and I'm not at all opposed to that. I see pics of the bucks you harvest and they are dandies. What I'm wondering is if hunting in an area that has the genetics, natural browse,and mature deer do today's hunters still have the ability to find, pattern, and kill mature deer simply by the sign that deer leaves? No cameras or "artificial " feed to aid in sizing or patterning deer? Gotcha. I, for one, still have to scout, find, and hunt natural travel ways and patterns to kill older bucks. I have taken a few in plots, but most have been taken on natural travel corridors...once I figured out where they were and how they used them. Both bucks I was blessed with taking this fall were killed on travel corridors...no bait. But, cameras on scrapes in those areas showed me there were mature bucks travelling thru there...which was the decision maker for me to hunt there when the conditions got right.
Last edited by Swamp Wolf; 12/01/23 10:52 AM.
Thank God For Your Blessings! Never Half-Arse Anything!
Resource Protection Service
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008648
12/01/23 11:23 AM
12/01/23 11:23 AM
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J Staton
OP
Unregistered
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J Staton
OP
Unregistered
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Providence it's good to know you taught your kids to be hunters not just shooters. Have a couple grandkids coming of age. A couple of years of squirrel hunting and learning sign and it will be time for deer.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: jbyrd63]
#8008662
12/01/23 11:38 AM
12/01/23 11:38 AM
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Joined: Dec 2020
Wisconsin
Scott__aR
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2020
Wisconsin
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Hunted that way for years . As you get older and more broken down you try things that turn the odds in your favor Lol. Is it hunting when you get all dressed up in orange, load up the rifle and walk in 1/2 a mile to get away from people. Sit down with your back against a tree on a seat built from sticks off the ground just like your dad showed ya. Sitting there, getting up and moving around when ya get cold and stiff ... here's many a seat built over the years. Only to see deer on the hill side and in the draws below feeding on acorns. Pulling the gun to your shoulder and never taking a shot; knowing the real work would begin cause it's a 1/2 mile of up and down hills dragging a caress back out behind ya. Sure, you could hunt closer to a road, but what would be the fun in that!
Megapredator ... top of the food chain! Member of WTA Member of U.P. Trappers Member of NTA Member of FTA
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008701
12/01/23 12:15 PM
12/01/23 12:15 PM
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Joined: Feb 2020
Indiana
Providence Farm
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Feb 2020
Indiana
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Providence it's good to know you taught your kids to be hunters not just shooters. Have a couple grandkids coming of age. A couple of years of squirrel hunting and learning sign and it will be time for deer. I started them out shooting .22s and they tagged along for squirrel and deer when they were about 3 and they could walk well enough. When they could shoot ok I packed their guns and sat behind them when they would shoot squirrel. Once they were not missing them at 25 yards I started them on deer. It's been so much fun. I don't care if I ever kill a deer again but hunting with th kids is what I live for. There was nothing like watching a 9 year old let deer walk when they hang out under them from 5 to 40 yards for 30 min when I know wgrown men that can't do that. Watching them go from its a buck its shot to letting a lot of them walk was another step. What sucks is I don't have a lot of first left with them. My 13 year old had killed 18 deer with compound bow, x bow, and a variety of guns from 357 mag carbine, 300 black out pistol, 243, 7mm08. My 11 year old has killed 15 but addd in 350 legand and remove the compound bow. Get those grand kids out. Make the trips short and fun to match their attention span. If they get antsy and want to leave early plan for that possibility. I alway got snacks like beef jerkey, sun flower seeds, and trail mix. Took drinks also. Took a propane heater and blanket to the ground blind and even coloring books to help keep them from getting cold and board so they would stay out longer when small. Now the youth deer season is great for kids with warmer Temps and less or unpressured deer still on summer patterns. I got a Caldwell field pod shooting rest for the ground blind so they could make accurate shots when very small. Wish I had known about those field pods when my daughter was getting started.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008707
12/01/23 12:25 PM
12/01/23 12:25 PM
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Joined: Jan 2017
Marion Kansas
Yes sir
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2017
Marion Kansas
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Like I said I have nothing against food plots, game cams, etc. but have such things effected ones ability to hunt. In other words, giving the right genetics and age in deer, are folks still able to read sign, determine natural food sources, etc. and harvest a mature whitetail (buck or doe) minus technology or artificial food sources? I'd say yes to a degree. Some of Those that have never hunted without the cameras and feeders and really high populations would struggle without. But so goes any advancement in hunting. I'd struggle without a compound and sites. Imagine bowhuners hunting whitetails with out a stand or blind.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008718
12/01/23 12:33 PM
12/01/23 12:33 PM
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Posco
OP
Unregistered
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Posco
OP
Unregistered
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I can look at a track and get pretty good idea of the deer that left it behind. The track doesn't tell me a thing about its antlers. The deer I have on camera in September have long abandoned that area by November. Cameras give me an idea of what's lurking out there, it doesn't help me kill them.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008726
12/01/23 12:45 PM
12/01/23 12:45 PM
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J Staton
OP
Unregistered
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J Staton
OP
Unregistered
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I can look at a track and get pretty good idea of the deer that left it behind. The track doesn't tell me a thing about its antlers. The deer I have on camera in September have long abandoned that area by November. Cameras give me an idea of what's lurking out there, it doesn't help me kill them. It helps you know to wait. What did a hunter do in 1980 to know whether to stay in that area or go? Not succeeding is just as an important to the development of a hunter as is success. It teaches perseverance.
Last edited by J Staton; 12/01/23 12:47 PM.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: ]
#8008743
12/01/23 01:28 PM
12/01/23 01:28 PM
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Joined: May 2018
SW Georgia
Wanna Be
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2018
SW Georgia
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I use cameras to survey what bucks I have available to harvest. Georgia limits the private land buck harvest to two bucks per season and one of those has antler restrictions. Im looking to harvest two of the best bucks I can annually, not just the first deer that walks by. I've killed a lot of whitetails and have been selective harvest-minded for a couple decades. I don’t own any hunting land, but lease three tracts that total about 2300 acres. I dont have any family land or even private land where I've hunted free without harvest restrictions.
With all that said, why would anyone that invests $$ in owning/long term leasing hunting property not be interested in some version of deer management? Food plots, cameras, feeders, etc are aspects of deer management...not necessarily hunting. I know landowners that do all these things, but don't even hunt.
Those of you that live near/have access to tracts of public land have no reason to be concerned with deer management. You don't have anything invested in the land, other than buying your licenses/permits. Your deer hunting plans are not in the same league as those that own a tractor and implements & plant plots (to give back to the wildlife, instead of just taking). Most public land hunters have the mindset to shoot him b4 the other guy does. That's OK if that satisfies your deer hunting appetite. For me, the deer management aspect is much more self-fulfilling that just killing a deer. It is a great feeling to get on my tractor and mow openings or disk plots, and plant them. But, it is even a better feeling to put up those cameras and take pics of nice bucks and gobblers browsing in those plots I planted.
I'm not knocking any public land hunter. Everyone doesn't/won't have access to land where they can conduct management activities. Plus, it is very expensive. I too hunt public land at times, usually quota hunts in various areas of the state (quality buck areas and unique habitats like the Atlantic coastal islands). We all have different setups, different scenarios, different land access, different interests, different $$, and live in different parts of the country with vastly different habitat conditions and deer populations.
I'm almost 60 and my dream of owning my own hunting property likely won't happen. But, if it did, there would be food plots in every available opening, feeders all over the property, and several cameras taking photos of the game I'm giving back to.
I'm off my stump...
That's fine and I'm not at all opposed to that. I see pics of the bucks you harvest and they are dandies. What I'm wondering is if hunting in an area that has the genetics, natural browse,and mature deer do today's hunters still have the ability to find, pattern, and kill mature deer simply by the sign that deer leaves? No cameras or "artificial " feed to aid in sizing or patterning deer? J, how do you think we know where to set cameras? I guess the first question should be, have you ever hunted the South? Can you walk 50yds and in any direction and see 3-4 different trails deer use? Have you ever spotted a buck in late July and see the possible potential and break out OnX or maps or even start putting boot leather down and figure out why is he in this area? Where does he bed, where does he go? What route/trail is he actually using? Actually what about after deer season in February when all the leaves are gone and most vegetation is dead, do you walk the trails and finding intersections and see where they lead, whether it’s cover or bedding areas. Are you paying attention to wind in these places and using a compass do keep a reminder of your predominant wind during deer season and why these trails and areas are used. Do you find sheds that tell you a certain buck survived? Do you actively put in days to look for a particular set of sheds? Have you followed that deer into August and see that that’s the deer you want to pursue this season? Or maybe he’s not “the one” but you still want to keep track of him. Maybe you don’t actually have a “shooter” this year, so you decide to learn about this one deer so when he is mature, you have a better chance of taking him. As I referenced before, how would “you” determine that? What trail are you going to sit and watch? Actually that brings up what do you consider mature deer sign? What do you look for in August and early September? A large tree that’s been rubbed? A truck hood type scrape? Do you just sit over that? If so, how many days? Have you determined his bedding area and the wind and know when you can hunt or sit to figure this buck out? Too much pressure and he’s gone…got to play your cards right, after all he is mature or becoming mature and “you” don’t want to be the reason he matures faster than necessary. And just for reference I have videos of a rub on a tree the size of my leg that a spike spent 10min on giving it everything he had. Did he make that initial rub? Highly doubtful, but how many sits will it take to wait for a mature buck, or the buck you’re after before you see him in range and get that shot? How many scrapes and rubs have you seen in July and August? Yeah, there’s community scrapes and when the rut hits they’re everywhere, but early season what do you “know” to be mature sign? There are 3 constants in a deers life, mature or not, water/food/sex. Down here water isn’t an issue. Food is abundant as well, but I can capitalize on that food by supplemental feeding where he’s likely to be based on cameras and scouting. That supplemental feeding will keep the does around, which in time should keep him around. Cameras also show me, if I don’t have a particular buck, what other mature deer are around and that if I know them by sight, I’ll take when they come through. Also want to throw in the fact that supplemental feeding takes place year round. Think Swamp has posted before about the mortality rate of mature bucks after the rut. Well, we try and eliminate that with supplemental feed…in my case it’s peanuts. My feed is in cover with natural food sources. When the acorns are gone and the beauty berry has lost all its leaves, they don’t have to roam looking for feed or go to the open fields, the peanuts are there. So yeah, I’m pretty sure today’s hunters that utilize cameras and supplemental feed are more than capable of finding and harvesting mature deer. We’re in the woods over 320 days a year learning their behavior and patterns. Filling a freezer with does down here could be done within a weekend. Actually taking our 10 does and 2 bucks with one needing 4pts on one side could be done in 2 full days of hunting, but why? That’s just shooting in my book. I want to find that ONE buck and pursue him or take a mature deer that needs taken.
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Re: Does Anyone Just Deer Hunt?
[Re: Keystonekiller]
#8008769
12/01/23 02:03 PM
12/01/23 02:03 PM
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Joined: May 2018
SW Georgia
Wanna Be
trapper
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trapper
Joined: May 2018
SW Georgia
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Guys that say they are giving back to the animals isn't that what mother nature does naturally seems like a waste of time ...I don't know about out west but here in the east the deer will be just fine there's no need to waste your time an money on corn an food plots for them So when Mother Nature takes, what then? Stewards of the land…look it up.
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