The Silence
PMA Member
The farm I hunt is primarily rolling hills with lots of pasture, some CRP and lots of row crops. There are a few small drainages and small woodlots but they're separated by lots of open ground. There are a couple small rivers on the perimeter which have a little timber along the edges. The challenge I've been having is that I may see pretty decent animals but it's been hard to determine more well established travel corridors since there are so many options, in so many directions that they can go to get to the various types of cover/bedding areas.
It seems like these deer may have circuits they run to the various doe bedding areas once the pre-rut traveling starts up with much of it being at night for the bigger boys until later. A couple years ago, for about a week (at the end of October, beginning of Nov.) I had a couple of real hogs trotting through a specific area at night several times on their way to other bedding areas. I have ideas where they may be going, but do you guys have any suggestions about how to nail down more specific travel circuits throughout this property. Have you used trail cams set up along possible travel corridors during late pre-rut and during the rut to help nail these down more precisely or is it best just to concentrate on known doe bedding/feeding areas and wait for the boys to show up? Do you set up observation stands at vantage points so you get a bead on where the bucks are traveling and then react accordingly? Or are travel patterns just too random to try to predict at that time?
It seems like these deer may have circuits they run to the various doe bedding areas once the pre-rut traveling starts up with much of it being at night for the bigger boys until later. A couple years ago, for about a week (at the end of October, beginning of Nov.) I had a couple of real hogs trotting through a specific area at night several times on their way to other bedding areas. I have ideas where they may be going, but do you guys have any suggestions about how to nail down more specific travel circuits throughout this property. Have you used trail cams set up along possible travel corridors during late pre-rut and during the rut to help nail these down more precisely or is it best just to concentrate on known doe bedding/feeding areas and wait for the boys to show up? Do you set up observation stands at vantage points so you get a bead on where the bucks are traveling and then react accordingly? Or are travel patterns just too random to try to predict at that time?