Deer & Deer Hunting

OVERCOMING EARLY-SEASON STRATEGIES

It was early evening a couple days before the opening of the South Dakota archery season. My good friend and full-time videographer, Matt Tande, and I were slowly cruising a gravel back road that snakes through the large ranch where we’d be hunting. Just as we were cresting a small hill, a half-dozen deer bolted from a thick shelterbelt to our right and ran across the road directly in front of my truck. As we quickly discovered, their destination was a large and very lush hay field located just across the road from the shelterbelt.

Rather than continue our “ride around,” Matt and I decided to drive down the road a quarter-mile, park the truck and then watch to see what else came out of the shelterbelt. It proved to be a very wise move, as we ended up seeing dozens of deer, including several shooter-size bucks.

Midmorning the next day found us back near the shelterbelt, attempting to get a better handle on things. From what we were able to determine, the deer were coming out of some thick river bottom cover and crossing a large, open pasture before entering the shelterbelt. They’d then hang out in the shelterbelt for a while before continuing on, eventually crossing the gravel road and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Deer & Deer Hunting

Deer & Deer Hunting3 min read
Planning The Perfect Plot
Fall food plots are game changers for many hunters. Creating the ideal staging plot or destination food source can literally transform the hunting on a property at best, and make the ground hunt poorer at worst. What follows is how to stack the odds
Deer & Deer Hunting5 min read
Last Stand AT A HILLSIDE HAVEN
Distance has always been more of a friend than a foe to me when it comes to deer hunting, so it is not surprising I wound up finding this spot I want to tell you about that exists on a scrubby sidehill the better part of two miles away. For thirty-so
Deer & Deer Hunting1 min read
Wolf Numbers Are Increasing
Stunning new findings from a nonpartisan citizen group indicate gray wolves are roaming nearly two-thirds of a state that was once considered marginal home range for North America’s apex predator. In data released earlier this year, Wisconsin Citizen

Related Books & Audiobooks