Independent Study

For our area of northern middle TN historically I take vacation days to hunt as hard as possible the first three weeks in November....may shift this plan into the last week of November based off drought, weather forecast or lack of acorns...but for the most part Nov 15 to 17 is the peak of the rut bell curve in my area....so I'm hunting the days going up the curve and the days going down the curve as much as possible...now if I only had a couple of vacation days set aside for the rut...I'd pick my days off during this same time period when there was a front or significant temp drop forecasted.
Moon phase or any app doesnt factor into choosing which days to be in the woods. I want to hunt the rut when the most mature bucks are the most vulnerable.
Thank you for your input. I agree with the first few weeks of November. This also coincides with muzzleloader season and my favorite time of the season.🦌
 
I've always heard if cows are laying then deer ain't moving. Told my cousin once after he'd told me that ...I said those cows will get up when they get hungry and so will deer and they got to eat every day . May be at night mostly but they are going to eat ...with that said I hate hunting during a full moon . It does kinda make sense that animals could feed during the night at a full moon .
I helped out a little when the TWRA was doing night-time thermal imaging deer censuses years ago. We drove around at night, sitting in a high perch mounted in a truck bed, and counted deer in open areas (usually ag fields) with thermal imagers. Later, we went back and looked at the data collected on full moon nights versus new moon nights. No difference existed between the two (same number of deer out feeding). I think the lack of difference is because their night vision is so good they only need starlight to navigate at night. We humans place a lot of emphasis on full moons because it helps US see at night. Deer don't need moonlight to see at night.
 
In my experience the moon doesn't have any major effect on deer movement. Now if your trying to dial in to the minute details of a hunt then maybe you would consider it as a small factor for deer movement.

Weather patterns + time of the year + strategy = dead deer IMO
Thank you for your in put.🦌
 
For our area of northern middle TN historically I take vacation days to hunt as hard as possible the first three weeks in November....may shift this plan into the last week of November based off drought, weather forecast or lack of acorns...but for the most part Nov 15 to 17 is the peak of the rut bell curve in my area....
Our local timing exactly. In a decent acorn crop year, you better be hunting the first three weeks of November. In an acorn failure year, shift your hunting to the last three weeks of November.
 
I don't use apps, and I certainly haven't studied moon phase hunting that much. What I have noticed during October is very late morning movement during a full moon, almost to the point that I don't care if I get in a stand within the first hour of daylight.

I've also enjoyed many a moonlit evening from a treestand as the sound of approaching deer kept me pinned down right at last light in my tree, hoping I wouldn't educate them by climbing down.

I hate hunting in October during a full moon.
 
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I love talking about this stuff. There is always something to learn and I try to keep an open mind. I also did my own super limited trail cam study 2 seasons ago. And the only 2 factors that I could see had any real sway (outside the rut) were temperature and wind direction. Temperature drops usually brought more overall deer on the cameras and certain wind directions seemed to bring more bucks on the cameras. those are the only 2 correlations that presented some kind of pattern. I could not find any useful pattern out of moon phases/positions. These are just my super basic observations.
 

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