Pretty interesting read. What do ya think? Study: One Sit in the Deer Woods Equals Three Days of Pressure for Mature Bucks | Outdoor Life
I think it makes sense, bucks during the rut move, So the 3 days could be that buck making his loop or him getting scared off. This is also assuming the buck always figures out that you are in the stand. I believe you can over hunt an area but I dont think it is as straight forward as one day on 3 days off
I agree I don't think its as straight forward but I do try to aviod hunting the same stand two sits in a row during bow season. I may hunt the same general area but just choose a different stand.
Is there merit to the concept sure...but I can think of countless times where I've had bucks come by my stands more than one day in a row...or multiple times in the same day. I can also think of a handful of guys on this very site very quickly that have seen similar. Each buck is different and who's to say the hunters in the study were using any or all the same scent precautions I take...or that they hunted where I would with the same thermals, pre-dawn winds, pre-vailing winds or countless other situational items.
what a bunch of poppycock, typical drivel. Sorry I know it is difficult to go too far into depth in a 1 page article but the mature bucks going nocturnal and avoiding bait sites based on hunting pressure is not even measured in a meaningful way. I am no noted researcher but I have seen things go a little differently in the real world. I feed the deer year round and have trail cameras out and watch trends. I do not hunt early season and there is no hunting pressure in the area around where I hunt. Every year when the velvet comes off and the buck groups break up the bucks tend to go nocturnal for the most part. As far as a bait pile if just 1 day out of the blue there is food in a spot that has not been there a deer any deer is going to be suspicious, on the other hand if there is food in the same spot it has been for years deer are going to react differently.
I had a big 12pt walk under my stand at 3 yards, look up at me, catch me moving, bolt off into the timber. The next night my buddy shot that same deer out of the same stand with a bow. Deer respond to pressure in different ways in different areas. If I sit the same stand 2 or 3 days in a row on my private parcel the deer will feel the pressure. If I sit it once and get busted, I rarely see much change in deer movement; the next day they are back at it again. .
While I definetly think you can overhunt a stand or area I put very little stock in this study. I've seen too much in the woods that contradicts it.
I only hunt my one piece of property, which is 9 acres. Last year I hunted at least 30-40 times in the same stand and had no problem seeing deer more than half the time. I saw some decent bucks during rut, I just didn't get a shot. So I'm going to continue hunting as much as I can/want because I'd rather "pressure" the deer as the article says, than miss an opportunity because I wasn't in the stand.
Glad you asked. I do not feed during the time frame I hunt. Feeders are removed 10 days prior to hunting. You can still feed on your property and hunt the land and not be breaking the law as well. I would not advise this unless you know a CO and can confirm that you are not breaking the law
I was simply confused then by your statement that you feed year round....that would mean the property has bait on it 100% of the year. My confusion.
You are also changing the behavior of the deer by baiting so your trends that you witness are not accurate for those who do not bait
Considering the article mentioned mature buck behavior at bait piles I would have to say what I am doing and seeing applies to what the article was about
I have to agree with this. I know you can over pressure, but you never know with wildlife. One thing is certain....they are unpredictable most of the time. Especially during the rut. You might scare a couple bucks one night and the next night 5 new bucks come through while the first two are avoiding your stand. I would say the rut throws everything off and you better be in a tree stand while that is happening. If you have the ability to not over hunt an area I would absolutely agree with that if possible. Just isn't always a possibility. If it isn't a possibility then get out there in the stand. Entrance to the stand has a big effect on this too. I would be curious to see the patterns of the deer before season. If mature bucks in the study were easy to pattern or not with no hunters. Interesting article either way.
Depends on area. Where I hunt in the suburbs there are constantly people in the deer woods, so it means absolutely nothing to the deer. Dogs are a completely different story, deer beat it right out of there if chased by loose dogs.
By me the Mature Bucks (5 yrs+) have bait piles figured out. I determined, using cameras, that if you put corn in a pile the big bucks avoid it and will only eat the food plot. If you scatter it around the will eat it.