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Buck bedding behavior
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<blockquote data-quote="348Winchester" data-source="post: 5891186" data-attributes="member: 11952"><p>I hunt two different areas. One is in southern Scott County on the western edge of the Cumberland Mountains. This area is old reclaimed strip mines. The other area is 10 miles west as the crow flies in northern Morgan County a couple of miles east of the southern end of The BIg South Fork of the Cumberland River. It is a softly rolling mixture of medium to large sized woods interspersed with fields and meadows. </p><p></p><p>The deer in the mountains tend to bed at higher elevations and seem to prefer benches and points of ridges or points of spur ridges. They also seem to prefer the leeward sides of the ridges for their beds. It seems like they want to be able to spring from their beds and in a bound or two be heading down a hollow. </p><p></p><p>The deer in the rolling terrain around my home appear to bed moer randomly but still like to be on the higher areas as a general rule.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="348Winchester, post: 5891186, member: 11952"] I hunt two different areas. One is in southern Scott County on the western edge of the Cumberland Mountains. This area is old reclaimed strip mines. The other area is 10 miles west as the crow flies in northern Morgan County a couple of miles east of the southern end of The BIg South Fork of the Cumberland River. It is a softly rolling mixture of medium to large sized woods interspersed with fields and meadows. The deer in the mountains tend to bed at higher elevations and seem to prefer benches and points of ridges or points of spur ridges. They also seem to prefer the leeward sides of the ridges for their beds. It seems like they want to be able to spring from their beds and in a bound or two be heading down a hollow. The deer in the rolling terrain around my home appear to bed moer randomly but still like to be on the higher areas as a general rule. [/QUOTE]
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Buck bedding behavior
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