Stalkhunter
Well-Known Member
I am interested in your all thoughts, I don't think they mingle well but it's what I have. Not to say I have not killed deer. It makes it a challenge for sure.
My primary pastures are in front of my house, I don't hunt them, but we do see deer in those pastures from time to time, especially when acorns are dropping.hunting amongst cows reduces sightings by about 75% in my experience with thousands and thousands of hours on stand around cows and pastures nearby without cows.
What I do is rotate my cows off my primary hunting grounds about 3-4 weeks before I plan to hunt, then rotate them back to that pasture after I'm done hunting... problem solved.
Yes, this is why mega has less sightings. If there is no food, deer don't have much of a reason to use the property. Edges can still be good though, especially if you have producing oaks.Cows eat everything we do for the deer, and eat plants more completely
This ^^^^ deer will usually be at the other end of cows . Hate to hunt farms will cattle. Hard to scout and if cows see you your done. You wouldn't believe the difference in the place in Lincoln Co. we leased once the farmer quit dealing with cattle. Our kill numbers doubled especially bucks. But one advantage I believe was the farmer quit mowing his fields as well . Actually I got off the lease but joined back up once I knew he'd gave up his cattle.My parents leased my grandads farm and theirs to a nieghbor for cattle for only $500 a year for at least 20 years. The cows cleared all the underbrush in the trees and took out 20 years of young tree growth. It was about 50 acres of non-ag in woods and fields.
Yeah, they kept up the fences and kept the fields mowed. But, I think they got the better deal and no matter how much I pleaded, he would not simply ask them to keep the cows out of the woods.
Deer and cows mingle, but the deer tend to go where the cows are not.