The worst part about trail-cameras

Ski

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Sometimes they flee at the first sounds of footsteps - being able to hear them on the next ridge over running away (when I know they don't see me or smell me).

Are you sure it was you who spooked them? Had you hunted that spot recently before, and perhaps they were there sniffing your trail and knew it was a human path?
 

JCDEERMAN

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Are you sure it was you who spooked them? Had you hunted that spot recently before, and perhaps they were there sniffing your trail and knew it was a human path?
Yeah it was me and no one had been there in several weeks.

I'll typically stop and listen. If they didn't initially run out of the county, most of the time they will run a little ways and stop/listen. Whenever I start taking a few steps, I'll hear them take off again.

But like I said, just as many times that they've spooked, I've had them come in to me. They sure are curious creatures. I just want to figure out their algorithm on decision making to flee or investigate
 

Ski

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Yeah it was me and no one had been there in several weeks.

I'll typically stop and listen. If they didn't initially run out of the county, most of the time they will run a little ways and stop/listen. Whenever I start taking a few steps, I'll hear them take off again.

But like I said, just as many times that they've spooked, I've had them come in to me. They sure are curious creatures. I just want to figure out their algorithm on decision making to flee or investigate

Strange. I wonder if something else had them on edge before you arrived? Weird that they'd run at the sound of crunching leaves.

And yes, you and me both would like to understand what drives their decisions. But I guess the random unpredictability is what makes them so intriguing. Would be boring if they were easy.
 

Henry

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Na... Its being dead asleep in the stand and checking the camera afterwards to see he sat there for 10 mins while you snored.... Ask me how I know this...
How do you know? lol. Please post the pics/video...literally laughed so hard the dog came up to the office to see what was going on.
 

huvrman

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Totally agree. Access getting in undetected is a ballgame in itself. When speaking of sounds, in recent years, I have made it a point to rid everything I possibly can that make noise. Velcro is no longer part of me or my pack. The little jingling nuts and bolts of ladders are tightened, the squeaking of stands sprayed in advance, the pins on ladders are duct-taped….any sound I can eliminate has been addressed to the best of my abilities. Some of my best spots are sneaking into their bedrooms way before light and I can't afford any metallic sounds or anything unnatural taking place. Of course, this much detail is not for most areas, but some definitely need this attention.

I spend half a day blowing leaves off trails leading to every one of my eight stands. Usually the first week of ML. Makes getting into stands quietly before daylight a piece of cake. You would be amazed at how well you can hear a deer at night, when winds are calm, and you are making no noise at all. And the deer don't seem to mind the noise and exhaust of the leaf blower, as I've killed nice bucks out of these stands just a couple of days after blowing the leaves. And a bonus is when turkey season rolls around, these same trails are used to ease into prime roosting areas before daylight.
 

Dodge Man

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...is seeing the big buck working the scrape right in front of your stand, in daylight, the day BEFORE you hunted it. Happens every time.
CDBB1920-2139-4F82-A205-C04925FE5B68.jpeg

Tell me about it, I have this one working a scrape by one of my stands. He was there Friday, I hunted that stand yesterday and he came by my other stand that is 200 yards away. I worked today and he was there working the scrape by the stand i was in yesterday.
 

BSK

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Not a monster buck by any means, but a decent one. Buck is checking the scrape at 8:01 AM Dec. 1. My brother-in-law hunted the stand right behind the double-trunk black oak on the right of the frame the next morning.
 

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harv418

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How do you know? lol. Please post the pics/video...literally laughed so hard the dog came up to the office to see what was going on.
That Camera Card was left in Texas...otherwise that picture would be up. He was a solid 140s class deer, I had chased him all season... and I was seriously out like a light snoring in the box stand, 80 yards from him...
 

Ski

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Not a monster buck by any means, but a decent one. Buck is checking the scrape at 8:01 AM Dec. 1. My brother-in-law hunted the stand right behind the double-trunk black oak on the right of the frame the next morning.

That's a shooter in these parts! You could hunt years around here & not see a buck like that. True story
 

Ski

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And the crazy thing is, he's only 2 1/2. That's a dang good 2 1/2!

Yessir he sure is!!! Beams already to nose tip. That's a special deer right there.

He looks a lot like this deer, except he's way younger. This guy was at or real near maturity last year in the top pic. Didn't grow much if at all from then to this year.

1670274214923.png


1670274265535.png
 

dr

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Years ago I had been hunting a buck hard and just couldn't catch up to him. I was telling a certified big buck killer about it and he said "that buck has you patterned. You are hunting mornings and afternoons and doing the same thing every day. Next time you hunt get in the stand at 930 and hunt the midday." So I did. I felt like a fool driving to hunt in the broad daylight, but I did it. At 11:30 that buck came down the scrape line like he owned the place and I killed him. Coincidence? Maybe. Maybe not.
I definitely believe they pattern hunters. I've hunted mornings, and evenings not seeing a thing. Then, when I'm at the cabin at noon for lunch, will see deer several hundred yards away
 

DeerCamp

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Not a monster buck by any means, but a decent one. Buck is checking the scrape at 8:01 AM Dec. 1. My brother-in-law hunted the stand right behind the double-trunk black oak on the right of the frame the next morning.
Curious for your thoughts on something.

I've noticed areas tend to have "trends" when it comes to antler structure.

Here at my home place, we have a history in this area of big 6 points. Do see a share of 8 points, but rarely see a main frame 10.

Is this just a genetic blip? Historical high grading? Food quality?
 

BSK

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Curious for your thoughts on something.

I've noticed areas tend to have "trends" when it comes to antler structure.

Here at my home place, we have a history in this area of big 6 points. Do see a share of 8 points, but rarely see a main frame 10.

Is this just a genetic blip? Historical high grading? Food quality?
I think it is localized genetics coming from the local doe social groups. Doe genetics do not spread across the landscape as fast as buck genetics do (because does do not disperse as frequently or as far from their birth range as bucks do). I often see a couple of common basic-frame shapes show up on a given property year after year after year. And those "common basic frame shapes" can be VERY different from location to location.
 

BSK

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Here at my home place, we have a history in this area of big 6 points. Do see a share of 8 points, but rarely see a main frame 10.

Is this just a genetic blip? Historical high grading? Food quality?
I never discount the role of localized genetics in antler development. However, in most instances where I see a high percentage of mature bucks with 6 or fewer points, the problem is high-grading of the middle-aged buck population. I have a club client that for many years had a 2 1/2 year-old buck harvest rule. This meant the very best 2 1/2 and 3 1/2 year-old were shot ever year. The bottom end middle-aged bucks were not killed. What this produced was a lot of mature bucks with 6 or fewer points. In fact, the first photo census I ran for them found 25% of all their mature bucks had 6 or fewer points, and only 19% had 9 or more points. Looking at data from nearby clients, I found most well-managed properties in the region with similar habitat had 35-50% mature bucks with 9 or more points. So it wasn't the habitat. We began a program where I produced a photo list of middle-aged bucks to protect. They were the top-end middle-aged bucks, basically 2 1/2 and 3 1/2 year-old bucks with 9 or more points. The club made copies of these trail-cam photos and hung them in every shooting house - basically an ABSOLUTELY DO NOT SHOOT list. In just two years were decreased the percentage of mature bucks with 6 or fewer points from 25% to 0%. And now, 5 years into the program, 44% of mature bucks have 9 or more points, and even 27% of 3 1/2 year-old bucks have 9 or more points (it had been 5% at the beginning of the program).
 

TheLBLman

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However, in most instances where I see a high percentage of mature bucks with 6 or fewer points, the problem is high-grading of the middle-aged buck population. I have a club client that for many years had a 2 1/2 year-old buck harvest rule. This meant the very best 2 1/2 and 3 1/2 year-old were shot ever year. The bottom end middle-aged bucks were not killed. What this produced was a lot of mature bucks with 6 or fewer points.
I believe this phenomena is exactly what is happening in most areas hunted statewide.

The best yearling bucks, the best 2 1/2s, and the best 3 1/2s simply get killed at a much higher rate than their peers having average to below average antlers.

In "managed" areas, it just happens more with the 2 1/2's & 3 1/2's.
In less "managed" areas, it just happens more with 1 1/2's & 2 1/2's.

But in both areas, surviving results are similar by 4 1/2 & older, in that it's mainly just the below average antlered bucks surviving to maturity EVERYWHERE bucks are hunted any amount at all.

On QDM areas, 1 1/2-yr-old (yearling) bucks are highly protected, but then highly shot as top-end 2 1/2's or 3 1/2's. In "un-managed" hunting areas, those 6 to 8-point top-antlered yearling bucks get slaughtered, but surprisingly, the number of above averaged mature bucks may end up similar, sometimes even greater in the "un-managed" areas. Go figure that one.

About the only practical way to reduce hunters' antler high-grading is simply to have less buck hunting, and/or less buck hunting with more highly effective weapons. But we like to hunt, and we prefer hunting when the taking of a buck is an option.

Every option has its trade-offs.
Be careful for what you wish.
That green grass in KY may turn brown if you plant it in TN.
 

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