Trad Gang

Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: ESP on February 01, 2022, 08:46:40 PM

Title: Lessons learned this season
Post by: ESP on February 01, 2022, 08:46:40 PM
What are some lessons learned from this past hunting season?

Mine:
- don't hunt the pretty woods. I get in this trap every year.   The nasty stuff holds deer.

- have friends you bounce ideas off of during season. 

- next year buy a light weight hang and hunt system.  Climbers just did not cut it. 
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: ron w on February 01, 2022, 08:48:42 PM
Things happen, one accident and and the whole season lost !!
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: SlowBowKing on February 01, 2022, 09:21:08 PM
Hire an assistant so you can get out of the office when things start getting good!
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: GCook on February 01, 2022, 09:42:16 PM
The things I've been telling myself for three years finally kicked in.

1.  Shoot the first mature buck you see.  Any 5+ year old buck is a trophy regardless of inches of bone on it's head.  I shot a 6+ year old short tine 8 the first day I hunted.

2.  If I get into a situation where filling my freezer or not, is a matter of pride over weapon used, then I'm not serving my family properly.   
So this year I set with both bow and rifle in Missouri but shot my buck with a rifle when I sit a stand where chances of a bow shot were minimal and he happened to go by at 70 yards.
3.  Letting those you care about take your deer (of my allotment) won't take away from my success in a season.  My son in law took his first deer off my place and my priest one as well.  Both with a crossbow because we don't rifle hunt our place.  I shot two less deer than I could have because of that but it was sure worth it.
4.  Shoot less arrows per practice session.  Focus more on individual shots in practice.  My shoulder held up and both of the deer I shot at I hit as good as I hoped.
5.  I really miss the pigs.😩  I hope they come back soon.
6.  If you sharpen your ranch partners broadheads for them they'll have shorter blood trails that end with a dead animal.  If you buy good sharpening tools for the ranch and teach them how to use them they will do it themselves from now on. 

I had a great season.  I killed a lot fewer animals than normal but still enjoyed it, perhaps more than the years I've killed a dozen or more animals.  I'm thankful for it and if The Lord wills that it was my last season then I am content with that.


Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: ESP on February 01, 2022, 11:07:03 PM
Thought of another one.  There was a direct correlation to my scouting in February and March with the deer encounters in October and November.  Time to start scouting. 
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Blacktail42 on February 02, 2022, 05:27:25 AM
Be prepared for deer to show up from any direction. I made the mistake this year of betting on the deer approaching me from a certain trail only to have the deer approach from behind me, 15 yards away and I couldn't get into position to shoot without alerting him.
Either way I enjoyed my experience in getting close and having a chance from the ground.
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Bowguy67 on February 02, 2022, 08:30:10 AM
I've been at this a long time. No crazy revelations. If I could to the op. You state hunting based on looks of an area. I as well as many others hunt pretty places, great sunrises, awesome foliage, etc but that's only got to be a small part. . You should base sets on different things like wind, food sources, travel from bedding areas, etc.
Your comment about deer in the nasty stuff makes me think you're hunting bedding areas. My personal method is to leave them alone there. Leave security areas. If you keep buggering them up the deer will readjust. No you'll start again. If that's the case consider that when deciding sets
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: supernaut on February 02, 2022, 09:41:08 AM
Don't pinch your ulnar nerve in archery season  :banghead:
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: SS Snuffer on February 02, 2022, 11:17:09 AM
Get your sons, daughters and grandchildren into bowhunting, they come in very handy when your deer runs into  the thick stuff and cattails to die and you are 70 years old!!!
Many other reasons also.[attachment=1,msg2990567]
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Stringwacker on February 02, 2022, 11:22:36 AM
I made a promise that I would learn to hunt all day when the weather was nice to take full advantage of my opportunities....just like all the other years I promised myself the same thing and didn't do.
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: ESP on February 02, 2022, 11:25:17 AM
SS Snuffer. I would love to hunt the cattail marshes of the north.  Completely different habitat than  what I chase deer in.
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Terry Green on February 02, 2022, 11:27:56 AM
Quote from: supernaut on February 02, 2022, 09:41:08 AM
Don't pinch your ulnar nerve in archery season  :banghead:

hold on.......
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Terry Green on February 02, 2022, 11:49:27 AM
I blew mine saving a stage prop... but my girl won best actress in state..... so we both got medals!

I didn't miss much thankfully!!!  My surgeon was no issue!!!
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Tim Reese on February 04, 2022, 05:24:18 PM
Every year I learn go no matter what when you have time. I hear it's to hot, it's to windy, it's to cold, it's not the right wind it's not it's not it's not. I learned go whenever ya can fit it in. I tell my buddies my secret is I go. Lol. They say I have a horse shoe up My arse cause I'm fairly successful every year.  But they never go or only go when it's just the right conditions.  Also I only hunt a spot maybe 2 times and then I'm out of there but I'm blessed with a lot of public land and I know not everyone has that option. So being mobile is a big one for me personally.
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Wudstix on February 04, 2022, 08:35:27 PM
Miss my days in PA.  Western Union county.  Paddy Mt.
:campfire: :coffee: :archer2:
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Papadeerhtr on February 04, 2022, 09:43:10 PM
Lesson I learned this year, don't let so many walk. Now I'm going to eat tag soup. I let 5 doe 2 bucks walk that were within 8 yards of my ground setup. That won't happen again
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: goingoldskool on February 04, 2022, 10:28:39 PM
Don't try to stop a buck until you're at full draw!
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: ESP on February 16, 2022, 08:26:10 PM
Lesson learned walk around/they your property at least once during season a freshly fallen tree can alter deer movement
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Wudstix on February 18, 2022, 12:07:06 AM
Become familiar with everything you're going to use to hunt.  Shoot your form
:campfire: :coffee: :archer2:
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Friend on February 18, 2022, 06:33:38 AM
An interesting thread...
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Carpdaddy on February 18, 2022, 08:31:18 AM
That Squirrel ain't bothering you!  :banghead:
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Wudstix on February 19, 2022, 09:59:19 PM
Nice shoot on that tree!!!
:campfire: :coffee: :archer2:
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: varmint101 on March 01, 2022, 07:31:46 PM
Sit where the deer go by. If you see them go down hill B and you're on hill A go sit on hill B. Don't think because you surprised 2 bucks 50 yards from your stand getting in the hunt is a bust. It ain't!
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Al Dente on March 05, 2022, 08:28:43 AM
Restraint.  With EHD wreaking havoc through my WMU, not just myself, but everyone within shouting distance of each other decided not to hunt/kill ANY deer this year.  I feel that it was the right decision, especially after not seeing a single deer, deer track, or droppings after 5 days of getting out there.  It was extremely disappointing to see the decimation of the herd like that.   
Title: Re: Lessons learned this season
Post by: Ronnie Newell on March 05, 2022, 10:41:39 AM
Try harder to over come the overbearing temptation to hunt areas so thick that I cant get through or near property lines that I cant cross to recover an animal even though I know its the best area to hunt. Its almost as bad as "wanten waste".