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Hunting Tips, share if you like!

Started by perry f., December 13, 2011, 12:55:00 PM

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Bill Carlsen

Keep as scent free as possible.

Shoot with your hunting set up all year round.

Try to find places to hunt where there is little to no pressure. Hunting a few non pressured deer is better than hunting a bunch of pressured deer.

Landowners who post their land can be your best hunting asset if you learn to treat them well.

Put on your hunting outfit and go out and clean up a mile or two of road used by hunters who leave trash. YOU will get a good reputation. (Do it when there is a lot of traffic).
The best things in life....aren't things!

Hunter 709

Always practice with what you will be wearing in the field. I learned this the hard way this year.

I like having my binoculars on a harness against my chest for quick use. This set up worked fine for spring bear season but I wasn't thinking of the number of layers I would be wearing during November in Manitoba. I sent an arrow towards a small buck that had responded to my calling and missed by a mile, I almost laughed out loud. After the shot I looked down and realized that my string had hooked my bino harness and actually broke it. I may have still missed without the waredrobe malfunction but the malfunction should never have happened.

Again, always practice with what you will be wearing during your hunt, and don't have anything on you that may interfere with your string.
Earl

"Now then, get your weapons, your quiver and bow, and go out to the open country to hunt some wild game for me" Genesis 27:3

Stump_pounder

Youll kill more elk by using your sence of smell in thik cover. When I smell elk I stop find cover and let out a couple soft mews. most likley you will soon see a elk
Wes wallace recurve 58#@29
Bear Kodiak static recurve 70#@28
PBS member

Geezer

Never leave home with out your license!
Never hunt another state without calling the G&F and asking if you need a Hunters Education/Safety Card! (some have age limits).
Sharpen your moral conscience
Hunt ethically...that way you'll never be looking over your shoulder.
Relax...its all about the memories and not about the bone.
Thank God for Blessing you with a wonderful family and use the first minute  of solitude to say a prayer of thanks each time you step into the woods.
Wear wool.
Colorado Traditional Archers Society
Colorado Bowhunters Association
RMEF / NWTF

Skipmaster1

Hunt harder than everyone else, go into areas that are brutal to get through, you'll find more deer and less hunters........and get there EARLY in the mornings. My success has at least tripled by getting into my stand at least 1.5 hours before first light.

Don't over hunt an area, no matter how good it looks.

Use climbers, hang ons, man made ground blinds, natural hides.....whatever it takes!

Hunt the wind! Don't wear ANY of your hunting gear ANYWHERE but in the woods, not even in your car.

Not needed but i bought an ozone machine to eliminate scent from my clothes, very easy to use between hunts when washing in scent free soap isn't needed and works awesome on wool.

Ken Taylor

Be calm and at ease in the woods... no matter what the situation... it's not "Man Against Nature" as some would lead you to believe... be one with nature... be at home.
May your next adventure lighten your heart, test your spirit, and nourish your soul.

TRADARROW71

SHOT PLACEMENT!!!!!!!  SHOT PLACEMENT!!!  It all means nothing, If you cant make a good shot!!

Skipmaster1

Oh, most important!

When in doubt, quiver out!

No matter how good your first shot was, if you get another, TAKE IT

DWT

Dont eat yellow snow! Dont believe in everything you see Lee and Tiffany do, and work on your woodsmanship everything else will fall into place.

toddster

Hunt and shoot like it will be your last time, and enjoy, for someday it will be.  Always have fun.  Never talk yourself into settling, many times we go in and say this is good enough, then sure enough the game come from where we know we should of been.  Aim small, miss small.  when you take that ify shot, means longer tracking job.

jhg

What you eat affects how you smell. And smelling less is always a good thing.
Whitetails in rual contry especially are conditioned to associate (IMO) cologne, scented soaps, eggs and bacon fron the morning fried breakfast, and deodorant with man. Get rid of all that and they still smell you, but the alarm does not go off nearly as loud/soon.

Joshua
Learn, practice and pass on "leave no trace" ethics, no matter where you hunt.

elkken

KEEP THE WIND IN YOUR FACE .....   be the best shot you can be ... only take ethical shots
Sometimes it's better to be lucky than good

TGMM Family of the Bow

highPlains

Pay very good attention to where you last saw the animal after your shot. Take a compass bearing if it's getting dark or if it ran into a field.
>>---> TC
Rocky Mountain Specialt

RC

NEVER get in a hurry.
1. rushing to the stand makes you forget stuff.
2.rushing up or down the stand makes you get hurt.
3. rushing a shot makes you miss or wound game.
4.rushing a blood trail makes you jump and lose game.

Put a couple small pieces of reflective tape on your arrows. I put a piece next to the noc and another just below the feathers.I have found a couple deer fast by shining my late ahead and seeing the arrow. Sometimes broken off and three times still in the deer.

I would rather walk 2 miles in the swamp and see deer than walk 200 yards and see nothing.

Practice with your broadheads and a glove if you wear one hunting on your bow hand.

Everything I hunt in the South is ruled by their belly.I will walk days to find good places to hunt. I will not climb unless I expect to see deer close. If I don`t have that kind of confidence its time to walk and scout some more.Chris and I will probably walk 10 miles a week during bow season scouting for a primary feed tree. I usually when hunting the swamp will walk at least 2-3 hours midday for the next days hunt.All the same Oaks and persimmons were there last year but they all feed differently and at different times.Deer will come to a "new" tree dropping as opposed to one thats been dropping a week.

Tree Killer

Let your woodsmanship and instincts tell you what to do, if you have stop and think about it...you're too late!
"stickbows, putting the arch back in archery"


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