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Food or funnels.

Iglow

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Me and a buddy are texting, I'm in one of our ladders that is killer during the rut but I told him there's really no reason for a deer to be here now. This time of year it's about food and funnels. Find the acorns and you'll find the deer, find a hole in a fence, a low gap, a bridge strip of woods leading to the acorns and you'll see deer.
Agree or disagree?
 
It's about those things the entire year. The rut and deer running randomly sometimes makes it seem like those things don't matter at much. Funnels are good all year, food is good all year. Deer just aren't generally traveling as much to get to food especially with acorns falling this Is the reason we don't hunt early season. Hard to get where you need to without blowing out spots.
 
Food at the moment, funnels in the near future.
Agreed.

If you have a lot of food, hunt funnels. If you have limited food, hunt food. We have limited food (basically just some red oaks). What I saw over the weekend - hunt where you find the squirrels. They've done your scouting for you. You just have to be downwind of that
 
If you have acorns or persimmons, which we don't.
Last year you could put your hand down randomly anywhere in the woods and there would be 5 acorns under it, me and a friend were talking about the acorn crop and agreed it was the most we'd ever see in our lifetimes, (I'm 62 and he's 79) he said his cows were not great by September last year but put on a ton of weight once they got on the acorns.
This year they are scarce everywhere I've looked.
 
Hunted a funnel/staging area between two food sources yesterday evening. Tons of fresh sign, scrapes, scat, tracks. I got caught up in the amount of sign. Didn't see a thing. Should have done what I normally do this time of year. Push in close to bedding. I think this was nighttime sign.
 
Hunted a funnel/staging area between two food sources yesterday evening. Tons of fresh sign, scrapes, scat, tracks. I got caught up in the amount of sign. Didn't see a thing. Should have done what I normally do this time of year. Push in close to bedding. I think this was nighttime sign.
I think after about Nov 1 about 3/4 of the sign found is night time unless you've got a bunch of land that ain't pressured.
 
I think after about Nov 1 about 3/4 of the sign found is night time unless you've got a bunch of land that ain't pressured.
Much depends on where it's located. I've been keeping track (with trail-cameras) of activity at scrapes for years, and one of the things I've been analyzing is what percent of visits by bucks are during legal hunting hours versus at night. When looking at scrape visits by older bucks (2 1/2+) for field-edge scrapes versus those "back in the woods" (isolated scrapes or those along old logging roads), the percent of visits in daylight stays fairly stable across the three primary months of the season (Oct, Nov, and Dec) for "back in the woods" scrapes. However, for scrapes along field-edges, daylight visits rapidly decline as the season wears on. Again, for visits only by older bucks, field-edge scrapes visits start out at 30% in daylight during October, but decline to 22% daylight in November, and fall to 12% daylight in December. The percentages for daylight visits for "back in the woods" scrapes are Oct 32%, Nov 33%, Dec 29%.
 
Much depends on where it's located. I've been keeping track (with trail-cameras) of activity at scrapes for years, and one of the things I've been analyzing is what percent of visits by bucks are during legal hunting hours versus at night. When looking at scrape visits by older bucks (2 1/2+) for field-edge scrapes versus those "back in the woods" (isolated scrapes or those along old logging roads), the percent of visits in daylight stays fairly stable across the three primary months of the season (Oct, Nov, and Dec) for "back in the woods" scrapes. However, for scrapes along field-edges, daylight visits rapidly decline as the season wears on. Again, for visits only by older bucks, field-edge scrapes visits start out at 30% in daylight during October, but decline to 22% daylight in November, and fall to 12% daylight in December. The percentages for daylight visits for "back in the woods" scrapes are Oct 32%, Nov 33%, Dec 29%.
Great info! This is public land definitely gets pressure. I've had the best luck in these cases moving in deeper but the amount of sign got me. Should have known better.
 

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