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Re: Salt blocks for deer
[Re: charles]
#8566022
Yesterday at 07:14 PM
Yesterday at 07:14 PM
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Joined: Jan 2018
MN
Donnersurvivor
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2018
MN
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I don't know the anwser to all your questions but the deer absolutely jump into my cattle pasture to eat salt and mineral. Livestock salt is super cheap so I wouldn't bother with watersoftner salt. We feed loose salt and mineral, I feel the deer are likely able to eat that easier, we just have it in plastic tubs, I would assume a stump would be fine.
I don't know half of you half as well as I should like, & I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve
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Re: Salt blocks for deer
[Re: GUNNLEG]
#8566144
Yesterday at 10:55 PM
Yesterday at 10:55 PM
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Joined: Apr 2007
venango county,pennslyvania
minklessinpa
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2007
venango county,pennslyvania
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i pour mine on old stumps. i just put out 10lbs yesterday. I mix one part stock salt (regular white granular salt), 1 part Dicalcium sulfate and 2 parts trace mineral salt. I can make 200 lbs (4 bags above at 50 lbs each) for around $60. From my experience, they’re only on it from Spring green up through early September. I’ve got a friend 25 mins away that keeps deer on his all year long. Not sure why there’s a difference other than his doe to buck ratio is way outta whack whereas we see a 2:1 ratio around me and we have a lot of ag in the area.
life member Pennsylvania trappers life member vfw member fta
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Re: Salt blocks for deer
[Re: charles]
#8566158
18 hours ago
18 hours ago
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Joined: Mar 2011
Vernal, Utah, USA
Dan Barnhurst
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2011
Vernal, Utah, USA
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Thanks for the suggestions.
I once hunted a farm that had a small wooded building in a pasture. At some time it must have contained a lot of salt. Deer, or something, had chewed the threshold under the door to enjoy the salty flavor of the wood. Probably porcupine. They love salt.
Each day is a gift. LIVE IT with gratitude.
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Re: Salt blocks for deer
[Re: charles]
#8566222
11 hours ago
11 hours ago
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Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
jabNE
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Aug 2013
Louisville, Nebraska
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Deer are not as interested in salt here for some reason. Got small salt blocks at several locations with cameras and the blocks, aside from erosion to rain, etc have very few pics of deer licking them. I’ve ran lots of locations with all kinds of attractors and here is my non-scientific opinion. Salt blocks don’t work well, but salt soaked into the ground was better. Weird. Same with the quote “deer food blocks” those in block form were more interesting to coon and birds than any deer in the jillions of pics I’ve gone through over those. Once the blocks completely broke down and what was left melted into the dirt, THEN they got some deer licking pics but hardly ever as solid blocks stage. Mix your salt or blocks with water and pour it on the ground to soak in, if that is your goal. Seems to work better for me. I quit buying the deer food blocks a couple years ago. Jillions of pics later told me they were gimmicks and a waste of my money. I also did a lot of side by side comparisons over game cameras with straight whole field corn vs that quote “deer corn” that is often flavored with crap like apple or other scents and flavors. Straight field corn wins that hands down over time too. The pictures didn’t lie. And that was true of any animals visiting the food piles except coon which just eat anything I put out. If you want your food pile to last longer, put the “deer corn” out but there’s a reason it lasts longer. Cattle feed blocks and mineral blocks I’ve tried a lot of those too. They got a few deer licks but those too were very attractive more to birds and raccoons than any of the pics with deer on them. Deer seem more paranoid of block shapes I believe. But if melted in or broken down and soaked in over time, they worked well.
In late winter, a couple bales of green alfalfa busted up were very attractive to deer while not to coon. That got me to thinking maybe the “rabbit” feed alfalfa pellets would be good for deer too? So I tried several hundred pounds of those bags of pelleted alfalfa over the years too with cameras over them and yes that is a winner for deer while avoiding coon. I did try other “hay” bales like brome, etc and no those weren’t attractive but alfalfa was a winner. If you have access to apples, not apple scent or flavor but whole apples, that is always a winner too. Maybe consider planting a few apple trees if you want a natural attractor on site.
If I’m running straight grains here over my cameras, this is the preferences: Whole straight corn was best (with no additives) Then next was Milo or Wheat And finally soy beans. That order above is definitely the list and order id focus on. Incidentally, when I’m trapping coon or beaver here in farmland Nebraska, that above is my same list. Standing crops first, then picked crops next, beans are always at the bottom.
I’d say with confidence if you are looking at avoiding baiting laws with specific grain or other attractors listed in the laws, consider alfalfa if it’s not in the list,
Anyway, when I want to attract deer for my cameras I know where to spend my money and where it is literally a waste of my time and $.
Some of this I believe is because we have so much corn planted here and after harvest all animals know where the groceries are. Corn is huge for all animals. I’ve got pics of coyotes eating corn off my likes too.
Jim
Last edited by jabNE; 11 hours ago.
Money cannot buy you happiness, but it can buy you a trapping license and that's pretty close.
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Re: Salt blocks for deer
[Re: jabNE]
#8566259
9 hours ago
9 hours ago
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Joined: Oct 2025
Tenn/ky
Treefrog88
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Oct 2025
Tenn/ky
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Deer are not as interested in salt here for some reason. Got small salt blocks at several locations with cameras and the blocks, aside from erosion to rain, etc have very few pics of deer licking them. I’ve ran lots of locations with all kinds of attractors and here is my non-scientific opinion. Salt blocks don’t work well, but salt soaked into the ground was better. Weird. Same with the quote “deer food blocks” those in block form were more interesting to coon and birds than any deer in the jillions of pics I’ve gone through over those. Once the blocks completely broke down and what was left melted into the dirt, THEN they got some deer licking pics but hardly ever as solid blocks stage. Mix your salt or blocks with water and pour it on the ground to soak in, if that is your goal. Seems to work better for me. I quit buying the deer food blocks a couple years ago. Jillions of pics later told me they were gimmicks and a waste of my money. I also did a lot of side by side comparisons over game cameras with straight whole field corn vs that quote “deer corn” that is often flavored with crap like apple or other scents and flavors. Straight field corn wins that hands down over time too. The pictures didn’t lie. And that was true of any animals visiting the food piles except coon which just eat anything I put out. If you want your food pile to last longer, put the “deer corn” out but there’s a reason it lasts longer. Cattle feed blocks and mineral blocks I’ve tried a lot of those too. They got a few deer licks but those too were very attractive more to birds and raccoons than any of the pics with deer on them. Deer seem more paranoid of block shapes I believe. But if melted in or broken down and soaked in over time, they worked well.
In late winter, a couple bales of green alfalfa busted up were very attractive to deer while not to coon. That got me to thinking maybe the “rabbit” feed alfalfa pellets would be good for deer too? So I tried several hundred pounds of those bags of pelleted alfalfa over the years too with cameras over them and yes that is a winner for deer while avoiding coon. I did try other “hay” bales like brome, etc and no those weren’t attractive but alfalfa was a winner. If you have access to apples, not apple scent or flavor but whole apples, that is always a winner too. Maybe consider planting a few apple trees if you want a natural attractor on site.
If I’m running straight grains here over my cameras, this is the preferences: Whole straight corn was best (with no additives) Then next was Milo or Wheat And finally soy beans. That order above is definitely the list and order id focus on. Incidentally, when I’m trapping coon or beaver here in farmland Nebraska, that above is my same list. Standing crops first, then picked crops next, beans are always at the bottom.
I’d say with confidence if you are looking at avoiding baiting laws with specific grain or other attractors listed in the laws, consider alfalfa if it’s not in the list,
Anyway, when I want to attract deer for my cameras I know where to spend my money and where it is literally a waste of my time and $.
Some of this I believe is because we have so much corn planted here and after harvest all animals know where the groceries are. Corn is huge for all animals. I’ve got pics of coyotes eating corn off my likes too.
Jim
I had one farm a regular mineral block didn’t work to attract deer. Put a pail of that jarrasic rock apple spice salt on a stump and deer were in it that night. I put a 20 lb bag in it about every 2 months except during the rut. They don’t touch it. Might not matter but I put out a selleneum block in August to try to help lower chances of ehd
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