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Hey!

Ghost

Life Member
Here is a new idea...instead of expending all that time and energy bickering about who's state is better...

Explain to me how you guys use topography to your advantage when hunting a mature buck.

You can post all your information right here in this post.

I love to learn new things. /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/grin.gif
 
Afew different ways for me. Ok so you love to hunt the ridges right?? well hunting public ground that is where everyone wants to be. Late october and early rut there are a lot of people in the woods and pressuring deer. So of my favorite places to hunt are the figers that extend from these ridges to the bottom. almost all the time there is a buck trail running perpendicular to this. The does come up these fingers to get to the feeding areas on top and the bucks will run these perpendicular trails almost all day long because they are close to bedding and the can be downwind of the bedding areas all day long. You find the right trail and you are killer!!1

Also another place I look for are shelves. Something about being 80 yards of the top on a shelf works out great.

Also when looking at arials/topos it is so easy to find a natural funnel. Whether it be a pinch between water or maybe the easiest access between two ridges. Maybe a river winds and makes a thin spot......

I LOVE MAPS!!!

ALSO LOOK FOR SADDLES... O they make me drool.
 
I must have taken too long to type haha... I'll throw in another vote for SADDLE so that you don't have to read my rant about it after it has already been said /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/grin.gif
 
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Doubleaarchery</div><div class="ubbcode-body">What is a good site to get a topo </div></div>

Iowa State Geographical Map Server
http://cairo.gis.iastate.edu/
 
I can't get topos or updated arials for where I live, google earth is as good as it gets.

So..I don't use topos....

I know..I'm behind the tims when it comes to hunting mature bucks, but I still seem to find them...key ingredient for me, time spent in the woods.
 
I use Topos and area Sat pictures together to find funnels,bedding areas, and pinch points. Then i mark them on the map and walk the area with the maps. This has worked real good for me over the years. You still need to get out there and scout the area, but the maps sure help out. I found one of my favorite stands this way.
 
Kaare...I rarely use maps either.

I like to spend a lot of time with my feet on the ground.

Good spots on a map aren't always good spots in the timber.
 
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Ghost</div><div class="ubbcode-body">

Good spots on a map aren't always good spots in the timber.

</div></div>

This is very true! But if your walking into new unknow timber i think it helps. I had 4 spot marked on a map this fall to go scout. I think you seen them ghost. I never placed a stand in any of the spots i thought looked good. That's why you need to put your footwork in! /forum/images/%%GRAEMLIN_URL%%/grin.gif
 
I'd go to a county ASCS office and pick up a arial photo. If you can get topo map to go with these it helps a bunch. I picked up a soil map book for my county at the NRCS. Its pretty easy to pick out the land changes with it.
 
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Ghost</div><div class="ubbcode-body">

Good spots on a map aren't always good spots in the timber.

</div></div>

Agreed. Heck, sometimes a map shows a great finger or pinch point and once you actually walk it you find out the largest tree is only 6" round!

I like google earth but I wish it was clearer when you zoomed into an area. Some areas don't have the best resolution. I do use it though to note stand locations which I give to my wife and a few trusted friend just in case.
 
A great way to get aerial photos is to go to mapquest.com, type in the nearest town to where your hunting spot is and then when the map of that town comes up, in the upper right hand corner of the map there will be an "aerial" button. Click on this button and it shows the aerial view of the map. Then zoom in as close as you need to follow the roads to your hunting spot. You can just click & drag your mouse around the map and the aerial feature will follow it around. It works awesome !

MB1
 
I use Maps.live.com for my aerials and love the site. I am looking at the topos now and am completely lost.

Risto or Gundog, maybe one of you two can teach me in the near future!
 
I feel that the only way for myself to learn a property is to get out and walk it. Topo maps for me give me great clues but the land must still be walked.
1. I will look for areas that force deer to move through the land a set way. These barriers include steep ravines, rivers,and open areas that give no security or hiding for the deer. A fenceline that runs next to a timber with an open pasture on one side, 10-50 yds of timber, and then a steep ravine after that is a great funnel or pinch point. I have a timber like this that the deer move through constantly.
2. I like oak flats in the timber with several hogbacks(ridges leading up to them)These hogbacks funnel the deer through these flats, not ot mention the acorns are a great food source.
3. One of my favorite spots to hunt is where a river is at my back with a steep bank or drop off. The timber is running along the river and gets narrow as it aproaches an open crop field as the farmer has farmed up to the timber edge as close as possible.
4.These setups are only hunted with the wind in my favor as to how the deer will move throgh the area. I use the topo of the land to my advantage. For instance, with the river at my back favorite stand on my father-in-laws land, it only works with a north to northeast or northwest wind as the river sets to the south of my stand. The topo forces any deer to move through a small funnel of timber that gets narrow as a farmers' field pushes into the narrow edge of timber. This timber is sandwiched between the field edge and the river. Deer have the option of walking the open field in plain site, walking a slippery steep riverbank, or coming through a 20-30 yd wide strip of timber if they want to get to the adjoining timber. This is where I put my wife Sarah last year and where she took her nice buck. Does move through these areas regularly and bucks want to check the trails for scent of any hot does. Works perfect.
 
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Quote:</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> Good spots on a map aren't always good spots in the timber. </div></div>

Most of my really good terrain setups aren't easily picked out on a map or air photo. However, I did find a heck of a spot in NE Iowa last Fall just by looking at aireals on the net.

If there is water on a property, it's one of the first places I head to check out. Whether it is for sustinance, a crossing, or a bottleneck, waterways can do all of these and are a good place to start.
 
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: windwalker</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> I look for bottle necks .Also where 2 small valleys meet at the top of a ridge and form a small saddle.</div></div>

FO SHO
 
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