What helped you harvest a deer?
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- nchunterkw
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
Was blessed to harvest 6 this year. Probably the things that helped me most were:
- willingness to hike in to where others won't
- willingness to put in lots of time, specifically hunt other than the weekends
- flexibility - by sitting on the ground in a ghille suit and being able to adjust to what the deer were doing
FWIW baiting wasn't the ticket. Sure I sat over bait, but I did not shoot one over bait this year. They always came in late or were super spooky around it. I much prefer setting up on good sign and being super stealthy.
Best hunts of the year were when I was able to be with 3 different guys when they shot their first ever deer with a bow. Helped each one track them and find them in the dark. I think I was more excited for them than they were.
- willingness to hike in to where others won't
- willingness to put in lots of time, specifically hunt other than the weekends
- flexibility - by sitting on the ground in a ghille suit and being able to adjust to what the deer were doing
FWIW baiting wasn't the ticket. Sure I sat over bait, but I did not shoot one over bait this year. They always came in late or were super spooky around it. I much prefer setting up on good sign and being super stealthy.
Best hunts of the year were when I was able to be with 3 different guys when they shot their first ever deer with a bow. Helped each one track them and find them in the dark. I think I was more excited for them than they were.
Keith
Stand by the roads and look, and ask for the ancient paths; where the good way is,
and walk in it and find rest for your souls. - Jer 6:16
Micro 335 & 355
deerboyarchery.wixsite.com/trinitystrings
[email protected]
<{{{><
Stand by the roads and look, and ask for the ancient paths; where the good way is,
and walk in it and find rest for your souls. - Jer 6:16
Micro 335 & 355
deerboyarchery.wixsite.com/trinitystrings
[email protected]
<{{{><
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
405 + FOC + RangeFinder / Luck = Deer Hunting Success
Actually I would say all the stuff pre season is the most important. Scouting, trimming lanes, practicing range & angles, and more scouting.
Actually I would say all the stuff pre season is the most important. Scouting, trimming lanes, practicing range & angles, and more scouting.
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
Keith, I'm betting that the willingness to go where others think it's too far to walk was your biggest asset.
Some people just like stepping on rakes
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
bait/food plots and deer smoke screen cover scent
IN GOD WE TRUST
Jeff
animals are killed, crops are harvesteD
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Jeff
animals are killed, crops are harvesteD
REVX
matrix 355
BE executioners and zombies, w/110 brass
SWAT BROADHEADS
Boo string
Dagriz knife
- nchunterkw
- Posts: 2905
- Joined: Sat Dec 24, 2011 11:21 am
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
Agreed - and it is a magical experience. The walk in is really far, and if you harvest a deer something magical happens that makes the walk back out 3 times as far.Boo wrote:Keith, I'm betting that the willingness to go where others think it's too far to walk was your biggest asset.
Keith
Stand by the roads and look, and ask for the ancient paths; where the good way is,
and walk in it and find rest for your souls. - Jer 6:16
Micro 335 & 355
deerboyarchery.wixsite.com/trinitystrings
[email protected]
<{{{><
Stand by the roads and look, and ask for the ancient paths; where the good way is,
and walk in it and find rest for your souls. - Jer 6:16
Micro 335 & 355
deerboyarchery.wixsite.com/trinitystrings
[email protected]
<{{{><
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- Joined: Sun Nov 24, 2013 11:32 pm
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
I have to say for me it was my Leupold VX-R with the ballistic Firedot reticle. I shot my buck at forty yards at absolute last light. I never could have taken the shot without the illuminated firedot. Love it!
You're only paranoid if everyone isn't out to get you.
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My enemy's friend is also my enemy.
Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
My enemy's friend is also my enemy.
- Starvin' Hillbilly
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
I'd say this year we didn't stay locked down like have been . . . we'd hunt 2 mornings and one evening and if it didn't produce that 2'nd evening we were out trying to figure them out. we did good . . .got 7 and my new 355 2 of those. reading these forums and asking questions brought a lot of tricks to the trade.
going from rifle/ muzzleloader to xbow . . . i can't be as carefree as i have been in the past, so set up can be challenging where i hunt. hunted out of a climber for xbow and blind for muzzleloader and rifle.
-ken
going from rifle/ muzzleloader to xbow . . . i can't be as carefree as i have been in the past, so set up can be challenging where i hunt. hunted out of a climber for xbow and blind for muzzleloader and rifle.
-ken
You see, in this world there's two kinds of people, my friend: Those with loaded guns and those who dig. You dig.-Blondie,
The good, the bad, the ugly
The good, the bad, the ugly
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
Summit Viper Elite Climbing Stand. 17 pounds of pure goodness, along with Third Hand Archery accessories.
I was able to hunt 14+ different trees on public land....lost count after a while.
Shot 3 deer with a bow.
NEVER done that in 22 years of bowhunting. It's going to be on like donkey kong next year with the crossbow!
I was able to hunt 14+ different trees on public land....lost count after a while.
Shot 3 deer with a bow.
NEVER done that in 22 years of bowhunting. It's going to be on like donkey kong next year with the crossbow!
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
Without a doubt, the rut was my friend this year. Right place at the right time and letting the HOT doe walk. Love is a glorious thing.
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
This year I can chalk up my success to my son having his first legal year in the woods. It was textbook hunting with times, moon, wind, and enthusiasm. Deer don't have the same books though.
I got to lay this all out in front of him because I am lucky enough to hunt with some of the best the country has to offer. Repetition has taught me the ropes, 20 years of handling animals for a living helped too.
This year I got to combine my passion for the woods with a healthy dose of "please don't look like an ass in front of your son."
He knows I am an ass, and that is a problem. But he also knows that nobody understands animals better then me, so he listened anyways.
That faith got him his first deer, in his first legal hunt, in the first 10 seconds of our hunt.
Success, like anything else, is in the eye of the beholder. My first deer meant the world to me, always will, but it is pale in comparison to how I felt when I heard my sons bow "twang" as his first meaningful arrow left on a destination to a life of an outdoorsman.
He won't break a rule, a law, or his own newfound ethics. He has a heart of a hunter and got to put it through the tests. I loose my breath in the presence of deer, and I love every second of it. He sits calm, motivated, goalset.
After a hunt I can't help but wonder if the kid is even awake, but on the ride home, his pictures tell me he didn't miss a thing.
Motivation? Key to success? It is about the memories, never the kill.
Now at dinner, which is almost always game, he has no issues telling us his stories on how it went from an animal in the woods to his plate. At 13 he cleans his own game, tans the hides and cooks the food.
I wouldn't care if I never shot another animal for as long as I lived (total lie, don't believe that part), I just care that he or anyone else gets to experience that "moment", that moment when you know something is going to die (or get a sore spot in my case), and you make a decision, to put the heart aside for the 10th of a second it takes to tug a trigger, because you know in the end that you did the right thing.
To answer the question, my success is based on my friends (one in particular) and positive parenting. Success comes in many flavors, they all taste sweet.
I got to lay this all out in front of him because I am lucky enough to hunt with some of the best the country has to offer. Repetition has taught me the ropes, 20 years of handling animals for a living helped too.
This year I got to combine my passion for the woods with a healthy dose of "please don't look like an ass in front of your son."
He knows I am an ass, and that is a problem. But he also knows that nobody understands animals better then me, so he listened anyways.
That faith got him his first deer, in his first legal hunt, in the first 10 seconds of our hunt.
Success, like anything else, is in the eye of the beholder. My first deer meant the world to me, always will, but it is pale in comparison to how I felt when I heard my sons bow "twang" as his first meaningful arrow left on a destination to a life of an outdoorsman.
He won't break a rule, a law, or his own newfound ethics. He has a heart of a hunter and got to put it through the tests. I loose my breath in the presence of deer, and I love every second of it. He sits calm, motivated, goalset.
After a hunt I can't help but wonder if the kid is even awake, but on the ride home, his pictures tell me he didn't miss a thing.
Motivation? Key to success? It is about the memories, never the kill.
Now at dinner, which is almost always game, he has no issues telling us his stories on how it went from an animal in the woods to his plate. At 13 he cleans his own game, tans the hides and cooks the food.
I wouldn't care if I never shot another animal for as long as I lived (total lie, don't believe that part), I just care that he or anyone else gets to experience that "moment", that moment when you know something is going to die (or get a sore spot in my case), and you make a decision, to put the heart aside for the 10th of a second it takes to tug a trigger, because you know in the end that you did the right thing.
To answer the question, my success is based on my friends (one in particular) and positive parenting. Success comes in many flavors, they all taste sweet.
If you are not willing to learn, nobody can help you, if you are willing, nobody can stop you.
A bowhunter with a passion for shooting firearms.
WMU 91
Boo string
A bowhunter with a passion for shooting firearms.
WMU 91
Boo string
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
I tried Ozonic's for scent control. Not one blow me off and even downwind. They would look a little but no blow. It is worth carting around.
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
That was heavy,Congrats to you and yours this season Pyd, Hunting with your son. I can relate with you, with my son, my grandson,and my grand dauther. And being with two of them when they harvested there first deer. There an'nt nothing can compare to that. Only possibly the memories its all good.......
Matrix, 355. Hawke Xb-30 Pro. Ibex, Nikon Bolt. Strings By Boo, Nchunter, Zombies & Spynal Tapps From South Shore Archery,Now Built By My Son, N.A.P. Spitfire XXX and Magnus Black Hornets. (Fight Hard..Love Fast.. Die Young..)
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Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
I tried out Buck Bomb this year and killed a doe and a buck while using the doe P scent. I think I was also using young buck scent when I killed the buck.
Phoenix
Matrix 380 Xtra
Exomax
Matrix G340
Klingons do not hunt because they need food. The hunt is a ritual that reminds us of where we come from. - Lieutenant Worf
Matrix 380 Xtra
Exomax
Matrix G340
Klingons do not hunt because they need food. The hunt is a ritual that reminds us of where we come from. - Lieutenant Worf
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
The biggest contributor to success for me is Patience
Patience while pre-season scouting to find the ideal place, Patience to pattern the deer and learn their habits
Patience to wait for them to show up
Patience to not shoot until the perfect opportunity present it’s self
The list for patience goes on and on!
Definitely the highest contributor to success is PATIENCE
Patience while pre-season scouting to find the ideal place, Patience to pattern the deer and learn their habits
Patience to wait for them to show up
Patience to not shoot until the perfect opportunity present it’s self
The list for patience goes on and on!
Definitely the highest contributor to success is PATIENCE
You sure you can skin griz, pilgrim??
Life is too short to carry an UGLY knife!
Life is too short to carry an UGLY knife!
Re: What helped you harvest a deer?
This year I can contribute my success to experience and hunting in a target rich environment. I bagged 8 in what turned out to be a banner year. I only bagged that many because I was no longer sharing the small patch of woods with my kids who are now out of the house. This year my daughter was skunked, so she has advised me she will be accompanying me again next season. My personal success for next year looks to take a dive but I couldn't be happier.
DuckHunt
DuckHunt
Micro Wolverine/Matrix 350 SE
Recovering Excalaholic
Recovering Excalaholic