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Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: moleman on October 09, 2012, 09:29:00 PM

Title: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: moleman on October 09, 2012, 09:29:00 PM
My normal stomping grounds consist of a patchwork quilt of crops and woods which makes patterning deer movement fairly easy, but as of late ive had the opportunity to hunt some huge state and national forest areas.
My question is this, with the awsome mast crop we have had this yr., and forage everywhere, where does a guy start when trying to figure out deer patterns in these huge expanses of timber with no crops for miles?
Being one who has always hunted farmland, im a little out of my element here and could use some suggestions.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: threeunder on October 09, 2012, 09:57:00 PM
Here in Virginia, we call it "big woods" hunting as opposed to "woodlot" hunting.
There's no doubt hunting big woods is a much harder game.  Lots of acorns makes it even tougher.
Scouting will find the acorns that the deer are actually eating.  If your mast crop is that good, there will be acorns (like white oak acorns) that they will key on first, and then proceed to the less desirable ones.
Assuming I can find where they are currently feeding, I then try to look at the woods as fields.
Here's what I'm talking about.  If you will consider big, mature timber as a field (ie somewhere you wouldn't normally find a deer bedding during the day) you will have half your work done through elimination.  By eliminating the really open woods and concentrating on geographic features (funnels, rivers, cliffs) and thick undergrowth (laurel thickets, ivy thickets, storm/blowdown damage) you should be able to come up with a reasonable idea of #1 where they are bedding, #2 where they are eating, and #3 their travel routes.
Now with those areas/routes in mind and remembering where your "fields" are...focus on the edges within the big woods.  Whitetails relate to edges a tremendous amount.
If you look at the woods as a whole you see nothing but trees and trees and trees.  But picturing the big woods as your own little wood lot with adjacent fields helps you focus on where you need to be.
Big woods hunting isn't easy.  I hunt with a guy who all but loses it when he steps foot into this type of hunting.  It can be very, very intimidating.
But, I truly believe, using this line of thought, you'll end up putting the pieces of the puzzle together.
Sorry to be so lengthy.  This is actually a topic my buddies and I have discussed dozens of times.  We all pretty well agree that this helps in finding the deer.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Bud B. on October 09, 2012, 10:00:00 PM
Good post threeunder!
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: ron w on October 09, 2012, 10:12:00 PM
Big woods, even in vast expanses of forest look for edge.....not like field and woods, but pine to hardwood, briers to pines. Deer will relate to these " edges" just as they do to the ones your are familiar with. Combine that with saddles and creeks and you will see funnels start to appear. Do some scouting, look at a top map and you will find what you are looking for.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: wooddamon1 on October 09, 2012, 10:20:00 PM
Nothing to add here, great posts so far. I'm learning myself...   :thumbsup:
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: gregg dudley on October 09, 2012, 10:31:00 PM
Good advice.  I'll add:  Play the wind and play the people. Big woods deer tolerate less human scent than farm country or woodlot deer do.  Watch what other people are doing and see how you can use that to your advantage.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Scott J. Williams on October 09, 2012, 10:51:00 PM
I have often been challenged with the task of unraveling the "Big Woods" puzzle. The first thing I do is get a topo map. This gives me a better idea of the lay of the land, structure is what I am looking for.  Naturally I begin by looking for changes in elevation, and wet and dry creek beds or water ways. These natural occurrences are natural travel routes.  

I find that locating these areas are far more important to do before I attempt to locate food sources. This allows me to spend my time with boots on the ground in the more likely areas.  

I deliberately avoid areas that get a lot of attention from the easy access type hunters.  Once I have located changes in elevation, these can be very subtle, I then move to a stereoscope with aerial photos, or Google maps.  In most cases, the Google maps feature provides photos that are in some cases twenty years old or older. The use of topo and Google can give you an idea of the lay of the land in some cases before they have grown up with brush and trees. One of the best resources is logging operations.  Logging operations that have been in an area within the last two years are always on the top of my list, due to the second growth cover and food have proven to be a gold mine, and have not failed me often. Old strip mining operations are much the same, providing cover, food, and structure.

Next is to spend time on the ground, marking likely spots with GPS.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Benjy on October 09, 2012, 11:11:00 PM
QuoteOriginally posted by Bud B.:
Good post threeunder!
Great suggestion! It's already starting to click for me on some of the property that I hunt!
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: cahaba on October 09, 2012, 11:50:00 PM
Great suggestions. Also one thing I look for is pinch points or funnels ,anywhere that narrows down in the landscape or a creek that makes a sharp bend. One of my favorite pinch points is an opening 20 yards wide with a bluff on each side that opens up into an acorn flat. The bluff on one side levels out about 25 ft. high so I just set up on top with my DB chair i.e. no treestand needed. Due to the travel time to get there I have only hunted it twice and seen deer both times. I missed an 8 point the first time I hunted it. I found this area on google maps without ever scouting the place.. Good huntin...Dave
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: wetfeathers on October 10, 2012, 01:16:00 AM
I think that was the best way I've ever heard it explained. Thank you threeunder.  Great advice.    :thumbsup:
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Pheonixarcher on October 10, 2012, 01:39:00 AM
This is all excellent advice!  I'll throw in my two cents if you don't mind. There are three basic needs to every living thing. Food, water, and cover. It is seldom that you will find a habitat anywhere that has an abundance of all three. There will always be a limiting factor. Find out which of these three it is, and go to that place!  Also, look for alternative food sources. Deer prefer and require a diversity of food. Just because there is an abundance of acorns, does not mean that they are not hitting a specific type of browse or other forbes as well. Find that alternative food source, and you'll find the deer. Good luck, and let us know how you do. We are all still learning our selves.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Pheonixarcher on October 10, 2012, 02:44:00 AM
This is all excellent advice!  I'll throw in my two cents if you don't mind. There are three basic needs to every living thing. Food, water, and cover. It is seldom that you will find a habitat anywhere that has an abundance of all three. There will always be a limiting factor. Find out which of these three it is, and go to that place!  Also, look for alternative food sources. Deer prefer and require a diversity of food. Just because there is an abundance of acorns, does not mean that they are not hitting a specific type of browse or other forbes as well. Find that alternative food source, and you'll find the deer. Good luck, and let us know how you do. We are all still learning our selves.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Pheonixarcher on October 10, 2012, 02:46:00 AM
This little browser glitch is getting annoying. Sorry for the double post!
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Easykeeper on October 10, 2012, 07:31:00 AM
In a big woods area I try to find a narrow strip of solid ground between two swamps, basically the classic funnel.  I look for a place where if a deer wants to get from this big block of woods to that other big block of woods, he has to go through here.  Within that funnel or strip of land there is usually another pinch point where you can predict that he will come through here and   right past there.  Hopefully there is a tree or blind spot where you want it...lol.  Works great for all deer, but especially for bucks when they start cruising.

Food sources are good, but the problem is they can eat anywhere and I've found they will bed in relatively open areas, not just in the really thick stuff where we expect them.  One of the favorite bedding areas in the big woods around here is a sunny, relatively open south facing slope with quick and easy access to one of the many sloughs or swamps.  They are basically bedding right next to where they are eating.

Big woods hunting is tough, especially when the acorns are plentiful and the rut is far off.  Last week of October and the first week of November (in Minnesota), find a nice funnel and watch the parade...    ;)
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: NBK on October 10, 2012, 07:47:00 AM
QuoteOriginally posted by Easykeeper:
In a big woods area I try to find a narrow strip of solid ground between two swamps, basically the classic funnel.  I look for a place where if a deer wants to get from this big block of woods to that other big block of woods, he has to go through here.  Within that funnel or strip of land there is usually another pinch point where you can predict that he will come through here and   right past there.  Hopefully there is a tree or blind spot where you want it...lol.  Works great for all deer, but especially for bucks when they start cruising.

Food sources are good, but the problem is they can eat anywhere and I've found they will bed in relatively open areas, not just in the really thick stuff where we expect them.  One of the favorite bedding areas in the big woods around here is a sunny, relatively open south facing slope with quick and easy access to one of the many sloughs or swamps.  They are basically bedding right next to where they are eating.

Big woods hunting is tough, especially when the acorns are plentiful and the rut is far off.  Last week of October and the first week of November (in Minnesota), find a nice funnel and watch the parade...     ;)  
X2.  Same here.  I had a post a week or so ago about bedding areas in big woods.  Last Wednesday I spent 6 hours just covering ground looking for beds.  I bumped deer out of beds on the grassy edge of a creek, at the top of a hill overlooking the creek and again up tight to the blacktop road as I was getting ready to leave. They can bed anywhere.  My money is on funnels in and around swamps/creeks etc.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: German Dog on October 10, 2012, 08:01:00 AM
QuoteOriginally posted by threeunder:
Here in Virginia, we call it "big woods" hunting as opposed to "woodlot" hunting.
There's no doubt hunting big woods is a much harder game.  Lots of acorns makes it even tougher.
Scouting will find the acorns that the deer are actually eating.  If your mast crop is that good, there will be acorns (like white oak acorns) that they will key on first, and then proceed to the less desirable ones.
Assuming I can find where they are currently feeding, I then try to look at the woods as fields.
Here's what I'm talking about.  If you will consider big, mature timber as a field (ie somewhere you wouldn't normally find a deer bedding during the day) you will have half your work done through elimination.  By eliminating the really open woods and concentrating on geographic features (funnels, rivers, cliffs) and thick undergrowth (laurel thickets, ivy thickets, storm/blowdown damage) you should be able to come up with a reasonable idea of #1 where they are bedding, #2 where they are eating, and #3 their travel routes.
Now with those areas/routes in mind and remembering where your "fields" are...focus on the edges within the big woods.  Whitetails relate to edges a tremendous amount.
If you look at the woods as a whole you see nothing but trees and trees and trees.  But picturing the big woods as your own little wood lot with adjacent fields helps you focus on where you need to be.
Big woods hunting isn't easy.  I hunt with a guy who all but loses it when he steps foot into this type of hunting.  It can be very, very intimidating.
But, I truly believe, using this line of thought, you'll end up putting the pieces of the puzzle together.
Sorry to be so lengthy.  This is actually a topic my buddies and I have discussed dozens of times.  We all pretty well agree that this helps in finding the deer.
Great post!   I had the same problems when I started hunting "big woods", where does one hunt?  Take the above advice as really great info and will cut years off your learning curve.  I gathered alot on info from Reading Greg Millers books about hunting big woods but like I said read the above post will get ya the same results. Another thing is that if you hunt woods where they clear cut take some time and hunt the edge of a clear cut where you can see a good distance. This will seem foolish at first over looking such  big area but it will give you an idea of where the deer  are entering the clearcut(think food) and then you can start working back from there to help pin point travel routes and bedding areas.

but again, read threeunder's post.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: awbowman on October 10, 2012, 08:47:00 AM
All pretty good info.  It's harder hunting big woods, but you will soon learn that not all "woods" is created equal.  I have a buddy that swears that 90% of the deer are killed in 10% of the woods (I'd say more like 20% of the woods).  The great thing about hunting big woods is that as a group we can form sanctuaries within the lease to hold the deer on the property.

Don't let the size of the woods worry you, when you find the right spots you will know.  After that it's just a matter of keying in on the right trees dropping the best acorns in that area.

We hunt on 3,500 acres of 20,000 contiguous acres of unbroken woods and if I plotted the stand locations you would see what I'm talking about.

Anyway, good luck, nothing like being several miles back from the camp just you and your bow.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: gringol on October 10, 2012, 09:32:00 AM
One thing I've noticed is the "pattern" of big woods deer is a pretty loose concept.  All the advice given so far is really good, I would just add that in a lot of cases a "well worn" big woods deer trail may only get used by one or two deer once or twice a week.  That translates into a lot more time in the woods before you bag one.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: jhg on October 10, 2012, 11:09:00 AM
I hunted whitetails in the big woods of Maine  (square miles of forest) for many years.

If you look at it like the farmland you are used to- the big woods are the same- but instead of cropland and plots and obvious edge travel lanes there is the exact same thing going on in the woods but the "crops" are hidden, the travel lanes unmarked by a reference fenceline etc and the boundries are just not there.

Still the deer will act upon that area just like they do where you are used to hunting. The trick is to learn and recognize how the deer are using the area.
The hard part is there are usually no references like property or tract boundries and so its easy to get overwhelmed. You must find a way to segement the area for yourself- whatever works. Use topography and its landmarks or whatever is easy for you to use as benchmarks.
I always kept it simple. Each area had an "entry point" and I would stack references off of that spot(landmark) to build up a mental image of how the area looked as a whole and how the deer used it.
Break down into pieces the area you will be hunting....after you find likely feeding areas.

Finally, its very easy for a deer in the big woods to get "pushed" out. They just go over to the next area until they feel safe to return. So be careful not to make them feel pressured.

Joshua
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: ChuckC on October 10, 2012, 11:38:00 AM
It was stated above.  All places, no matter how big or small, have structure. .  some reason for the deer to follow THIS trail and not just wander about aimlessly.  Try not to get stuck into a mold, keep an open mind and discover what this particular piece has that funnels more deer movement here than there.  Then exploit that.

In my swamp that I hunt,  high ground is like. .  8" higher than the rest,  but it is dry, and the deer use it.  

There are reasons why they use some areas more often than others.  We need to figure out why, then how to exploit that.  Every place is different.
ChuckC
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: Bill Carlsen on October 10, 2012, 12:00:00 PM
When there are lots of acorns one of the biggest problems is that they bed where they eat. If there are as many acorns as you imply then if you jump deer and they run off to another feeding area then they are not likely to return to where you jumped them. Why would they? They can stay where they are and not have to move at all. Some of my worst years hunting have been when there is really a lot of food for them in the woods. They can be anywhere and usually are. I'm not sure patterning them is possible. I would look for fresh sign in and around feeding areas and keep on the ground...try to move with them.
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: John Scifres on October 10, 2012, 12:09:00 PM
Hey Paul,

Here is the area we hunted last weekend.  Trail 10 is in the top right.  Campground in the center left.  See the saddles in the ridges.  That's where I key on.  Deer will definitely use them to move around especially in steep country like this.  The deer in this locale move off the woods about everyday also so it's really not as different as you may think. Take a look on Google Earth if you have it, you'll see what I mean.  The acorns definitely hurt movement this weekend.  Hunt here in the rut and you see a lot more deer moving.  I'll be there opening weekend of gun season and probably at least once more before then.

(http://sticknstring.webs.com/photos/JW-Bowhunt-2010/JW2010-10.jpg)

Here's the story of the pic above.     Darren\\'s Megatrack (http://jdspics.webs.com/darrensmegatrack.htm)
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: moleman on October 10, 2012, 05:56:00 PM
Thanks for the great info. guys, next time i hit the Big Woods, ill be a a little wiser and a lot more aware of what to look for thanks to all the great posts.
Paul
Title: Re: Patterning deer in large expanses of timberlands ?
Post by: buckeye_hunter on October 10, 2012, 09:07:00 PM
I like to look for a big structure the deer have to go around. This can be a sheer drop off, large pond or small lake. Generally the deer will use a well worn trail on one end or the other. I use Google Earth or topos to find these. This method has put me on deer the 1st time I have hunted areas that I had never been to before.