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Deer Hunting Tips - Choosing Your Spot

Choosing the right location is one of the most critical factors for a successful deer hunt. It requires preparation, knowledge of deer behavior, and keen observation.

Pre-Season Scouting

Before the season even begins, you should dedicate time to scouting the areas you plan to hunt. This helps you understand deer movement and identify high-traffic areas.

Activity

Description

When to Perform

Map Analysis

Study aerial photos and topographic maps to identify funnels, bedding areas, and water sources.

Off-season/Early Summer

Field Scouting

Walk the terrain, look for physical sign (tracks, rubs, scrapes), and hang trail cameras.

Late Summer/Early Fall

Access Confirmation

Confirm legal access to private or public lands and identify parking spots.


Key Locations to Look For

Deer have predictable needs: food, water, and cover. Your best spot will often be near where these needs intersect.

1. Funnels and Bottlenecks

These are narrow patches of cover that force deer to travel through a smaller area, concentrating their movement.

  • Saddles: Low spots in a ridge or hill that deer will use to cross to the other side.
  • Pinch Points: Narrow strips of woods between open fields or thick cover between two water sources.
  • Creek and River Crossings: Locations where a creek or river is easiest to cross.

2. Food Sources

The best food source depends on the time of year.

  • Early Season: Focus on green fields, alfalfa, soybean, or soft mast like apples and pears.
  • Late Season: Deer will typically switch to hard mast like acorns or newly cut crop fields.

3. Bedding Areas

Deer spend the majority of the day resting in thick cover. Set up your hunting spot far enough away to avoid pressuring the deer, but close enough to catch them traveling to or from food.

  • Thick Conifer Stands: Provides excellent thermal cover and is a common bedding location.
  • Thick Brush Piles or Cuts: Areas with dense new growth after logging or land clearing.

Setting Up Your Stand or Blind

Once you've chosen a location, proper setup is key to concealment and success.

Wind Direction is Critical

Always position your stand so that your scent blows away from the expected travel path of the deer. A hunting app or local weather report can help you determine the prevailing wind direction on the day of your hunt.

Stand Placement Tips
  1. Elevation: Aim for a height that gives you a clear shot but minimizes your silhouette.
  2. Background: Use a cluttered background (e.g., against a tree canopy or dense brush) to help break up your outline.
  3. Shooting Lanes: Clear a few small lanes for a clean shot, but don't clear so much that it looks unnatural.
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