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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
After season project
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5516364" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>It must be innate in deer to follow paths/trails, for whatever reason. I grew up on a farm halfway between Bowling Green and Scottsville, KY. We had a big pasture in front of the house. When we would get snow, we would cross-country ski through the pasture. I noticed that the day after we would ski, there would be deer tracks right in our ski path, and the deer would go wherever we had skied, even if we weren't really going anywhere. I began testing just how "out of the way" deer would go to stay in the ski path. I would cross the pasture, making huge S-bends and sweeping turns for no reason. Sure enough, the deer would go wherever I had gone. Again, it must be innate in deer to follow where others have gone.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5516364, member: 17"] It must be innate in deer to follow paths/trails, for whatever reason. I grew up on a farm halfway between Bowling Green and Scottsville, KY. We had a big pasture in front of the house. When we would get snow, we would cross-country ski through the pasture. I noticed that the day after we would ski, there would be deer tracks right in our ski path, and the deer would go wherever we had skied, even if we weren't really going anywhere. I began testing just how "out of the way" deer would go to stay in the ski path. I would cross the pasture, making huge S-bends and sweeping turns for no reason. Sure enough, the deer would go wherever I had gone. Again, it must be innate in deer to follow where others have gone. [/QUOTE]
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