Back in a climber... Oh boy!

TheLBLman

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2002
Messages
38,061
Location
Knoxville-Dover-Union City, TN
I'm not concerned about noise nearly as much as scent.
All depends on the circumstances.
Most hunters are currently overlooking just how many deer they're spooking by the noises they make, and they're spooking deer that would never have a chance to smell them. Sound travels much farther than scent.

But, it's the type sounds that matter more than a deer just hearing a sound.
Anything "unnatural" like metal touching metal will alert more deer and farther than human scent.
A truck door shutting, a metallic pop emitted by a metal ladder stand, and any deer that hears it is going away.

And velcro is the scourge of the earth.
Get that crap off your deer hunting clothes!

But someone slowly & carefully climbing a tree, being careful to make no metallic sounds? I've actually done it many times with deer bedded within 75 yards, unalarmed, only to come my way later.

TIMING of those sounds is also important. For whatever reasons, deer do not get as alarmed by walking sounds in the woods at least an hour before sunrise, as they do as dawn. I believe this may be because deer are so accustomed to hearing all types of critters walking around right at pre-dawn. They particularly hear a lot of racoons in most places.

And when I climb a tree @ an hour before daylight, I actually believe any nearby deer may just think I'm another raccoon climbing a tree.
 

Ski

Well-Known Member
Joined
Nov 18, 2019
Messages
4,521
Location
Coffee County
The type & nature of the sound undoubtedly makes a difference, but I can't say if a sound I've made ever spooked a deer or prevented it from coming in. For sure they look up to see what made a sound and that sometimes gets me busted. Otherwise I've not been aware of a sound preventing me from seeing deer. If it happened I'm unaware, so it's hard to say one way or the other.
 

double browtine

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 4, 2010
Messages
7,818
Location
Cheatham/Montgomery County
At 51, with screws in my lower back and two in my right knee I gave up on climbers years ago. But I have been blessed with hunting private property for years, and ladder stands and box blinds have spoiled me.
 

UTGrad

Well-Known Member
Joined
Dec 1, 2007
Messages
15,044
Location
Cookeville, TN
The Summit Viper is the most comfortable stand ever made IMO. I prefer summer pre set hang ons for bow hunting these days, but if I'm gun hunting some open woods, give me a Summit Viper. I'll go up till my pull rope and gun are coming off the ground.
 

TN Larry

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 17, 2003
Messages
7,605
Location
Baxter, Tennessee
OP - I like how you roll, keep at it. I've been climbing for 30 years, and killed 99% of my deer from a climber. It's all I know. Thanks for sharing your experience.
Same for me. I'll hunt a few times from the ground, ladder stand, and shooting house, but most of my hunting is from a Summit Viper. I hunt many of the same places year after year but usually only a couple of times a year and need to be higher than a ladder stand in most places due to terrain.

One disadvantage is finding a straight tree, but I've never had much problem. I do have one spot that I'm in a dilemma though. It's one of my better spots with one ash tree that is climbable which is now dead due to the ash borers. I have hunted there from the ground the last few times but would rather be in a tree. I have considered getting a saddle for these scenarios, but bad hips have prevented this the last two years. Maybe next year……
 

mike243

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 6, 2006
Messages
18,845
Location
east tn
Sold my open shot for $50 with new cables, somebody in the family is probably still using it. got tired of having to shoot left handed due to size lol
 

Latest posts

Top