Brush Up Your Deer Hunting Know How Before Season Starts

August 26, 2010 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

One day soon, you’ll wake up and before you know it, it’ll be deer season. Hunters numbers have increased recently, mainly due to the economy. People are realizing that a few deer in the freezer can really help out on the grocery bill. If you haven’t guessed it already, putting a tag on a deer and the act of deer hunting are two totally different things. Beginners will soon see that there is a lot that goes into being a successful deer hunter. By having some patience and following these tips, you may be successful this year. You will soon realize that deer hunting is a rewarding sport.

For beginners, you need to proficient with whatever weapon you’ll be using. Sadly, many animals are missed or wounded each year because of poor shots. You’ll want to become proficient with any weapon you choose to use. This is what any ethical hunter would want.

Okay, now you’ll need to find some data for your State and find some maps. Topo maps are a good tool for finding where the deer might be. I also use data from my Wildlife Department. Contact you state to see if they have harvest data from previous years. This will help you locate areas with a high deer density. It can also mean that hunting pressure is greater in those areas. I always look for the hunter success rate. This will tell you how successful the deer hunters in a particular area are.

Let’s find you some deer. Scouting for deer and knowing what to look for when scouting are probably the two biggest factors that will determine whether or not you’ll take a deer home. Every year loads of fair weather hunters head off into the wood having never scouted their hunting area. They don’t know anything about the area they’re hunting in, yet expect to have a deer on the ground by breakfast! Take scouting serious. It’s directly related to your success. Never start you scouting a day or so before the season. You’ll spook the deer and it will take them a while to settle back down.

Proper scouting is more than just walking around the woods looking for a deer track. You need to know the difference between an old and fresh track and old and fresh poop. Look for bedding areas, feeding areas. The trails between the two are excellent places to harvest a deer. Just be careful of the wind direction when choosing a place to set up a blind or treestand. I keep a watch out for deer funnels such as bottlenecks. Learn how to find these.

If I could only give you one tip, it would be to get away from other hunters. I can hear you asking ‘But what am I looking for’? For starters, you want to look for area with fewer hunters. Deer hunting surveys in the past have shown that most hunters only go a hundred yards or so from their trucks. Get out early and get further back in the woods than the other hunters. Let them push the deer to you! Who knows, if you work hard, you may find pockets of deer that haven’t been hunted. As the old saying goes, there’s no guarantee when you hunt deer!

Brush Up Your Deer Hunting Know How Before Season Starts

August 10, 2010 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

One day soon, you’ll wake up and before you know it, it’ll be deer season. Hunters numbers have increased recently, mainly due to the economy. People are realizing that a few deer in the freezer can really help out on the grocery bill. If you haven’t guessed it already, putting a tag on a deer and the act of deer hunting are two totally different things. Beginners will soon see that there is a lot that goes into being a successful deer hunter. By having some patience and following these tips, you may be successful this year. You will soon realize that deer hunting is a rewarding sport.

For beginners, you need to proficient with whatever weapon you’ll be using. Sadly, many animals are missed or wounded each year because of poor shots. You’ll want to become proficient with any weapon you choose to use. This is what any ethical hunter would want.

Okay, now you’ll need to find some data for your State and find some maps. Topo maps are a good tool for finding where the deer might be. I also use data from my Wildlife Department. Contact you state to see if they have harvest data from previous years. This will help you locate areas with a high deer density. It can also mean that hunting pressure is greater in those areas. I always look for the hunter success rate. This will tell you how successful the deer hunters in a particular area are.

Let’s find you some deer. Scouting for deer and knowing what to look for when scouting are probably the two biggest factors that will determine whether or not you’ll take a deer home. Every year loads of fair weather hunters head off into the wood having never scouted their hunting area. They don’t know anything about the area they’re hunting in, yet expect to have a deer on the ground by breakfast! Take scouting serious. It’s directly related to your success. Never start you scouting a day or so before the season. You’ll spook the deer and it will take them a while to settle back down.

Proper scouting is more than just walking around the woods looking for a deer track. You need to know the difference between an old and fresh track and old and fresh poop. Look for bedding areas, feeding areas. The trails between the two are excellent places to harvest a deer. Just be careful of the wind direction when choosing a place to set up a blind or treestand. I keep a watch out for deer funnels such as bottlenecks. Learn how to find these.

If I could only give you one tip, it would be to get away from other hunters. I can hear you asking ‘But what am I looking for’? For starters, you want to look for area with fewer hunters. Deer hunting surveys in the past have shown that most hunters only go a hundred yards or so from their trucks. Get out early and get further back in the woods than the other hunters. Let them push the deer to you! Who knows, if you work hard, you may find pockets of deer that haven’t been hunted. As the old saying goes, there’s no guarantee when you hunt deer!

Select the Ideal Deer Hunting Rifle

December 20, 2009 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

When you go hunting, there’s nothing more important than picking the right deer hunting rifle
. Selecting a firearm which has the ballistics, design, action, sighting and size to accommodate your hunting area and personal capability is the basis of achieving your goal once your prey is hunted and located. Whether or not you make the kill is largely reliant on whether or not your deer hunting rifle matches up best with the criteria above.

Where Will You Be Hunting?

When you go deer hunting, you’ll typically either hunt in open range country or dense brush country, like deep woods. There are certain places that are a little bit of both. Every hunting environment has different styles of shooting and require rifles with different characteristics.

Deer Hunting Rifles For Dense Brush and Deep Woods

Deer hunting rifles with short to medium range shooting characteristics are needed for situations when you’re in the woods. Typically, you’ll be shooting anything from 25 to 200 yards at deer in this environment, so this range is important. You will be best served if your deep woods deer hunting rifle is relatively light, less than nine pounds including scope, and short, with a barrel length of less than twenty-two inches. It’s important to be able to move quickly and easily through densely wooded areas. Deer hunting rifles which can be reloaded quickly, such as automatics and lever actions, are suggested in rough country deer hunting since fast follow up shots are frequently needed. Heavy bulleted cartridges to penetrate brush are required, I recommend .270 or larger caliber and at least a 120 grain bullet. In order to prevent the bullet from getting deflected by brush, don’t get too fast of a cartridge, more than 2,200 feet/second is not needed. I would recommend a scope that goes down to three power with variable power, and you may prefer an open sight if you can only shoot within fifty years of your position, Practice at the rifle range to determine if you can become comfortable with open site shooting.

Deer Hunting Rifles for the Open Range

If you’re planning on hunting in a more open area, get a deer hunting rifle that can shoot accurately at least three hundred yards. Rifle portability is of less importance than accuracy and velocity in long shot environments, rifles tend to be heavier and of longer barrel length than deep woods rifles. The best calibers and cartridges for open range deer hunting, are flat shooting, and high velocity. 6MM (.243) calibers or higher will work well, and bullets from 100 grains or heavier will be best. When shooting larger caliber rifles, heavier bullets are generally best for accurate shooting. Typically, you’ll need at least a 6×9 variable power scope in order to shoot accurately.

Personal Preferences

When choosing a deer hunting rifle, follow the recommendations above as they best suit your hunting situation and consider your degree of comfort in using high caliber or magnum powered rifles. Do you really want to have almost twelve pounds of rifle to carry around when hunting?

You can probably go to your local hunting rifle dealer and try out a variety of different deer  hunting rifles, and get a better feel for what you want and what “fits” you.. You may also want to consider asking any successful hunters that you’re friends with what kinds of rifles they use, and their reasons for using them. Ask friends to permit you to hold and handle their rifles and find out what you like and dislike about it.

You can learn a lot more about deer hunting rifles and other advanced deer hunting tips by visiting our website here www.Deer-HuntingTips.com. And you can learn about choosing the best deer hunting rifle here: www.Deer-HuntingTips.com/DeerHuntingRifle
.

Do you have what it takes to Bag a Monster Buck?

December 17, 2009 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

Are you deer hunting to take that once-in-a-lifetime deer with the giant rack? If you are aspiring to harvest the kind of buck which most folks only dream of, I can help, but you will probably need to alter your thinking and tactics and assume the diligence and devotion required to bring home a massive trophy buck. Here are some valuable advanced deer hunting tips to help you understand the effort required to successfully hunt monster bucks.
Although random luck can play a part, hunting down that monster deer is a long term project that requires a lot of analysis and is likely to take months or years to be successful. There have been single bucks which I have scouted, chased, hunted, and fantasized about for years before I eventually saw the chance to make the kill. You’ll typically find that the biggest bucks are really good at eluding hunters and being just out of sight. There is a reason that the giants are giants, and they appear to have a sixth sense regarding evading hunters.

The giant old deer manifest certain tendencies which require the hunter to be constantly thinking ahead in order to revise his own tactics for success. These older bucks should almost be hunted as a completely different animal because their behavioral patterns vary greatly from other deer. Together with their being older and bigger, they are smarter, more skittish, and much more considered in their behavior. If a trophy deer has lived to the age of six, that fact alone is self defining as a statement of his survival instincts that have allowed him to elude capture. A huge buck generally will not flee at the least bit of danger but will instead remain hidden until the coast is clear. I have personally witnessed bucks remain in seclusion using their natural gifts of stealth and camouflage, and then when the time is right slink away from the perceived danger, outwitting some extremely seasoned hunters in the process.

In order to have success with these big boys you will have to deploy different tactics. In the same way that a law enforcement investigator must carry out an interminable amount of routine legwork in order to make an important arrest, you must plot a specific long term strategy to outsmart that deer.

You can discover more deer hunting tips, tricks, and tactics at deer-hunting tips.com, and I invite you to pick up our free eBook entitled “Secrets of Finding the Monster Bucks Exposed” at Secrets of Finding Monster Bucks Exposed

.

Deer Hunting Tips – The Giant-Racked Deer : Rare And Elusive

December 17, 2009 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

No matter how satisfied you may be now with the size of the bucks you get from hunting, you’ll want to snag the big ones at some point. Let me share some deer hunting tips about the differences between hunting regular deer and true monster bucks.

When you want to move up to getting the monster bucks, it takes quite a bit more learning, but you can read more to learn the deer hunting tips you need to succeed. The things most hunters do to get average sized deer don’t always work when you want to move on to bigger game. As the years passed, and through a lot of experimentation, I figured out many secret tips necessary to bring down the huge deer.

Does your hunting area have large bucks? Most of the larger bucks are excellent at hiding and aren’t discovered. However, don’t just give up on an area simply because other people haven’t seen big bucks there, as they may be missing something. Deer with the large racks that you’re looking for tend to stay in similar types of areas. If you want to have better odds for hunting a rare, giant deer, you need to know where they are. It’s often frustrating to learn that many areas won’t have any big bucks at all, least of all one you can find. There are particular circumstances that result in a higher number of large bucks in any given area.

The first thing you should do to find out if there are large bucks around is to ask local hunters. Ask around with all the career hunters and game wardens in your area; even ranchers and farmers can help you, as can feed store owners, to tell you where sightings of big deer have been made, so you may know where to go. Even the local coffee shop or diner can be a place to find information on local deer population. Your objective is to see if there are any large bucks locally, and where most of them have been sighted. Just ask about the sightings of extremely large bucks instead of overall population count. Your goal is not to find lots of small deer, of course. What we’re looking for is that monster buck. You have some freedom if you haven’t already leased an area, but if you have, learn what areas are best for stands, and where the biggest bucks have been harvested in that area, finding the locations where the largest bucks are seen most often throughout the years. This is a good place to begin. Be cautious : just like fishermen, deer hunters may want to exaggerate their hunts, so double check your stories.

We are hoping that you use these deer hunting tips to find true monster bucks during the upcoming deer hunting season.

Please visit deer-hunting tips.com to find out additional deer hunting tips, techniques and tricks. You can also download an eBook completely free : “Secrets of Finding the Monster Bucks Revealed” at Secrets of Finding Monster Bucks Revealed
.

Simple, Effective Deer Hunting Tips for Success

November 23, 2009 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

If you are a long time hunter you may find these deer hunting tips a bit obvious, but they are basics that can be reviewed, and some things beginners need to learn before they go out. A successful hunt requires far more involvement than simply walking through the woods for a time and shooting that trophy winning deer. You need to preform a lot of preparation work, follow safety precautions, and be disciplined. You can increase your chances of a successful and have an enjoyable hunt by following the hunting tips discussed here.

1. Essential Safety Tips:

· Do not consume alcohol before or during any hunting trip.

· You should always practice caution when handling any firearm; always expect the gun to be loaded, and never rely solely on the safety.

· Never under any circumstance jump a ditch, climb a stand or a tree or cross a fence with any loaded gun.

· Be completely sure your target is a deer and is legal prior to pulling the trigger.

2. Tips on How to Successfully Hunt A Deer:

· Get An Early Start – Many hunters like to spend the entire day in the woods, but the most likely times to bag a deer are sunrise and sunset. The fact is deer will come out to feed in the early mornings or the later hours just before dusk. With this in mind, you need to be in your deer stand or blind well before daylight begins in the mornings and well before it starts to get dark at night. This will allow you the time you need to get set-up and ready before the deer begin to move around. There’s nothing that will be more disappointing for you than getting to your blind or stand late, scaring away a magnificent buck in the process, and then not spotting any other deer for the remainder of the hunt.

· Eliminate Scents – It is important to remember that deer can smell scents very easily, so do what is necessary to eliminate any human or unnatural odors. Things that would smell good to a human are usually signs of danger for a deer. Shower before you go, then no deodorant, scented/deodorant soaps, perfume, after shave, or colognes. Be sure you wash whatever clothes you plan to wear with unscented laundry soap or just plain water before going on a hunt. Due to how sensitive a deer sense of smell is, they will be frightened off by the slightest scent.

· Remain Still – While in a blind or stand, refrain from moving and do so very carefully when you must move. One of the toughest things for me to learn was the ability to keep looking SLOWLY from side to side, hours at a time, as I sat freezing in a deer stand. Any type of sudden motion can set a deer on the run.

· Be Silent – Being absolutely quiet is the key to having a successful deer hunt. Personally, I have been stunned by the sheer sensitivity of hearing that deer possess. Deer are always on alert to a human voice or any sounds that seem unnatural to them. If you are involved in a hunting party and need to communicate, do so very quietly, substituting hand signals if you can. You also have to be careful not to hit you gun or binoculars or your metal stand or clang the two together.

The aforementioned tips are really simple basics, and while there is a great deal more out there, if you follow these basic deer hunting tips, you’ll find your chances of success are dramatically increased.

If you really want to learn what it takes to be a master deer hunter, keep these deer hunting tips in mind when your next hunt comes up.

And please check out www.Deer-HuntingTips.com for even more advanced deer hunting tips.

Deer Hunting Tips – What Influences the Size of Antlers?

November 20, 2009 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

Proper management of the deer herd are usually the most effect deer hunting tips. To prize hunters, the goal is to harvest a deer with big antlers. Every hunter dreams of bagging a deer with a humongous rack. All of us hear about and tell each other tales of huge antlers; points, spread, diameter, length of tine… The question is, how can you increase the chances that the deer you are hunting will have large antlers?

There are three main factors that decide the overall size of a buck’s antlers.

1. Genetics

2. What The Deer Has To Eat

3. The Age of the Deer

The genetics of a deer help to determine how big the antlers have the “potential” to get. In other words maximum antler size is a trait that is inherited. This is a fact that experienced deer hunters and game managers know and that science has proven. Leases are often managed in a way to produce the biggest bucks by limiting the size of the antlers that are permitted to be harvested. By restricting the number of genetically superior kills, the inferior herd is culled and the gene pool is allowed to “antler up” as a result. Although there is some doubt regarding the benefit of these practices (effective killing of inferior antlered deer is sometimes impossible given the harvest rates to population in general), it has a genuinely good motive.

Nutrition is the next contributor to antler size. Regardless of a deer’s genetic potential, it won’t reach it’s optimum level if it doesn’t eat the right diet.  Most experienced hunters have hunted through seasons where drought has affected the food sources for the deer and the large antlered deer just weren’t there. In order for the deer population to realize it’s complete antler producing potential, it has to eat a proper diet all year long. Summer and spring diets are the most vital since the majority of antler growth really happens during those seasons. Inferior foliage growth during these months can greatly limit antler growth. Good habitat management will help promote healthy nutritional options. There are many times that supplemental feeding is needed.

The last major factor to consider is age, but the age of a mature buck (3 or more years old) isn’t as relevant to antler size as is diet or heredity. Usually antler size potential increases throughout the first few years of life. It continues to increase some during the fourth through sixth year. However, the actual growth rate and size depend on the breed of deer and the deers genetics. It’s not recommended to kill bucks that haven’t yet reached four years old. I can still hear my father complain when the people on the farm next door shot a two year old buck. My dad would always state with frustration that “That deer still had milk on its breath.” It’s best to allow the young bucks to mature and only harvest them afterward. If you are at a point where you need venison, but can’t seem to get a mature buck, then you should harvest a doe. The next season’s hunt will be better for it.

If you really want to learn what it takes to be a master deer hunter, keep these deer hunting tips in mind when your next hunt comes up.

And please visit us at www.Deer-HuntingTips.com to learn more secrets and advanced deer hunting tips.

Deer Hunting Tips for Advanced Hunters

November 9, 2009 · Filed Under Hunting · Comment 

As a deer hunter, you’ll only succeed as far as your dedication and knowledge will take you. You might be satisfied with just getting that single deer every couple of years, but if you want better than that for yourself, learn how to get that trophy buck.

The following contains some deer hunting tips that the experts of deer hunting use every day to get the big ones.

1. Scout Your Area Ahead of Time – I don’t mean analyze where you are going to sit when the truck drops you off, I mean really get to know the area you are hunting. Some of my most successful hunting seasons were started months before opening day. Scout all the areas where you plan to hunt, being sure that you have permission to do that first. I would survey all the available hunting sites and “dry hunt.” Act just like I was hunting but not bring a gun (only a camera) to evaluate which areas had the most deer movement, biggest bucks and highest buck to doe ratios. You can walk around the lease in the middle of the day, looking for big buck signs that I could see.

2. Know the Signs of Big Bucks. When you know what you’re looking for, you can zero in on the spots where the trophy deer gather. Keep your eyes open for tracks. Be aware of the size, number of, and the direction of the tracks, which will clue you in on the size, number of and movements of the deer. You also want to look for scrapes.  These are areas where a buck scratches the ground and sometimes urinates to mark their territory and attract does. Bucks usually do this below low hanging tree branches that are located on the border of heavy brush areas during the rut. Another thing you want to look for are rubs. As a buck attempts to get the velvet off their new antlers thy need to rub on trees and posts. They also do this to mark their territory during rutting season. If you find a “rub line,” you will be able to find six or more rubs in a matter of about 100 yards. Bucks usually rub on the side of the tree or post that he is traveling from. With this in mind, if you pay attention to which side of the trees are being rubbed you can have a clue as to which way the deer is moving. Also scout for and note the size of bedding areas. If you don’t see any bedding, there aren’t any bucks!

3. Know How Your Firearm Shoots – Know the ballistics of the caliber and cartridge you are using. Know the distance you will need to shoot and be able to make adjustments for geography; for example, the rise on short shoots and the fall for long shots. Take some time to practice estimating distances. If possible, walk around the likely sighting areas ahead of the hunt, so you’ll know what length of shots you’ll be making and what sort of drop your bullet will make at that distance.

4. Know Where To Place Your Shot – Once you fully understand the aim and ballistics of your deer hunting rifle, you will be able to concentrate on where you are going to place your shot. I am a “neck shooter,” which means I believe a shot well-placed anywhere on the neck will bring your deer down every time. There are many hunters who disagree with me on this preference. If you hit the deer lower on the neck the carotid arteries will be severed. If you hit the deer high on the neck you will break the deer’s spinal column. Finally, if you hit the deer in the center of the neck you will get a combination of both of these effects. If you’re shooting from the side, front, hindquarters, or head-on, the neck is the most effective target, even more so than the traditional “behind the lower shoulder” target. Don’t ever try a full rear shot, unless it’s the only way to get a fantastic trophy buck; you won’t be nearly as effective at bringing down the buck, and it’ll be very uncomfortable to have to clean a butt-shot deer. You want to make smart decisions when you take a shot. The best deer hunters make a fast and efficient kill.

5. Attactants, Calls, and Rattling – While we do not have time to go into a lot of detail, some important deer hunting tips are to use attractants (like natural food plots, salt licks/mineral blocks, feeders, and flavored blocks), deer calls, and rattling methods. The food related attractants require previous preparation. Planting food plots takes time ant attention much as any gardening does. You want the deer to get used to feeding in the area of the food plot weeks or even months prior to hunting season. This is important so you know when and where they will be eating their free meals. Only try rattling for bucks or using calls during rutting season, as that’s the only time it will usually work. It’s been my experience that bucks would approach my rattling cautiously, and only out of curiosity when they weren’t rutting. When it does work during the rut they usually come rushing. There were times when I was nearly run over by bucks when I was rattling in a field. So if you get good at this, be prepared for some quick action. Proficiency is required, and it takes lots of practice. There’s a bit of a learning curve that comes with accurately recreating the sounds of deer fighting, but if you get it right, it’ll be very advantageous.

Every deer hunter wishes he or she could display a trophy buck at some time during their hunting career, some of us are not happy unless we bag at least one monster every season. If you want to be able to regularly bag trophy bucks on a regular basis, you need to know and understand the deer hunting tips explained here.

If you want to learn more about deer hunting and tips that can help you land the large bucks that get you trophy racks, go to http://www.deer-huntingtips.com and have a better hunting season than you’ve had in years.