No sir. I did watch him try to circle downwind of me. Not sure if the 3 inch turkey loads would've killed him, but I was gonna find out if needed.
6 doe came in. Pie bald stayed about 50 yards out. That would have been the only one I would of shot right now. Wait to shot some more does later in the season Sent from my SM-G990U using Bowhunting.com Forums mobile app
Yes it is, wish I could post the video it took after this picture. One of the huge bucks on this property chasing her, then gets ready to breed her in front of the cam
Nothing more for us. Good activity only heard a couple shots. Back at it tomorrow afternoon. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Sure is my caneras were active mid day today and had a nice buck i dont think ive ever seen before walking the same path big gnarly walked yesterday. Hard to see him. I thought it was the big 8pt that was hanging out earlier in the year but its not the buck below i dont believe.
Day 2 of the 4 day work stretch. Man there is a bright disco ball in the sky. Might be better off sleeping in and slipping out around 9am but good luck any of you getting after it this am and good luck getting in clean!
Mornings always have potential, even during a full moon, but right now 10:00 am to 2:00 pm is the time to be on stand to kill a buck. Once again, I know a lot of folks have zero faith in moon phases, but when the full moon is overhead at night it’s underfoot in the middle of the day and that’s a major movement period. They might not move where YOU are but they’ll move. Couple that with a little rut activity and you’d be better off to sleep in, get on stand about 9:00 am and sit until 2:00 pm.
I’m up and waiting to head out. Since I don’t have a buck tag my hope is that I’ll get lucky enough to catch a doe heading back to bed this morning. I know I’d probably have a better chance of seeing deer mid-day, but I’m getting a little worn out and don’t feel like sitting 8 hours. Then again, I might do it. It’s funny how I tend to get more motivated after first light.
All set up. It’s a beautiful morning. 29 degrees, frost on the leaves, no wind and the full moon shining. 40 minutes until first light.