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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Trail Cams & Pic's
NOT worst pull ever
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<blockquote data-quote="BSK" data-source="post: 5678218" data-attributes="member: 17"><p>Somewhat similar situation. In my area, there are two primary habitat types: 1) huge wide-open agricultural bottoms (and these bottoms are over a mile wide in places), and 2) ridge-and-hollow hardwoods that are primary White Oak. If there is an acorn crop, once the acorns begin to fall, and once the ag has been harvested in the bottoms, all the deer move up in the hilly oak forests. What gives me an advantage is that about 1/3 of my property is in cover habitat. My neighbors in the hardwoods do not have that kind of cover. Hunter-wary deer that want places to hide tend to congregate on my place, especially once the guns start going off. In fact, we have so much cover, that even though we put far more hunting pressure on our property than the neighbors do, we still hold most of the deer because we've given them so many places to hide from us (and they do so, very successfully!).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BSK, post: 5678218, member: 17"] Somewhat similar situation. In my area, there are two primary habitat types: 1) huge wide-open agricultural bottoms (and these bottoms are over a mile wide in places), and 2) ridge-and-hollow hardwoods that are primary White Oak. If there is an acorn crop, once the acorns begin to fall, and once the ag has been harvested in the bottoms, all the deer move up in the hilly oak forests. What gives me an advantage is that about 1/3 of my property is in cover habitat. My neighbors in the hardwoods do not have that kind of cover. Hunter-wary deer that want places to hide tend to congregate on my place, especially once the guns start going off. In fact, we have so much cover, that even though we put far more hunting pressure on our property than the neighbors do, we still hold most of the deer because we've given them so many places to hide from us (and they do so, very successfully!). [/QUOTE]
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