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How To Pick Your Hunting Location - Deep Hunting Tips

Sunday, November 22, 2009 , Posted by Your Travel Buddy at 8:14 AM

By John Eagleheart

Knowledge of how to decide on a smart hunting spot is a vital element to deer hunting. Your choice in location will mean the difference between returning home and stocking your freezer full of venison, or popping something into the microwave. You might be deadly accurate with your deer hunting rifle, but you won't catch anything if there simply aren't any deer around you.Read on for a handful of deer hunting tips which will guide you to an excellent location.

When you try to pick your site, you should know how deer move and behave. Deer will feel the safest in low light, and during the day, as well as the late night, they'll be resting. In late afternoon, they'll get up from where they were sleeping and start to head to where their food is. Once they've had their fill, they'll go back to where they rest during the day and sleep there.

About two weeks before you go hunting, you should study the hunting areas that are available to you. You need to know the area you hunt in. Study which spots see the most deer movement, the largest bucks, and the highest buck-to-doe ratios. Practice sitting in deer stands, blinds or any other hunting location, as you would when actually hunting, so that you can watch the deer and their movement patterns. During midday, walk through the area and look carefully for any signs of deer. The deer themselves will give you the best deer hunting tips.

Find their travel trails and tracks. Look at how many tracks there are in one area, and where they're going; this will tell you a lot. While bucks sometimes use the doe's trails as well, they'll often venture out on their own. You might find buck trails that run parallel to the doe trails or cross them.

Try to find the scrapes -- the spots where bucks scratch against the ground or brush. Scraping usually starts about three weeks ahead of rutting season; the scraping lessens as the rutting begins. And locate the rubs -- the areas on trees or posts where bucks either rub the velvet off their budding antlers or mark their territory when rutting. You want to find the rub lines or groups of rubs -- you can find six or more within a 75-100 yard stretch. Most often rubs are on the side of the tree where the buck has stood or traveled; therefore, knowing which sides of the trees have rubs can indicate the direction of the bucks movement. You should also look for bedding spots and note their size.

Deer hunting is a lot more complex than parking yourself in a stand and hoping for the best. Scouting the area ahead of time will bring you best best possible results.

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