Post Deer Season Boredom
Deer season is over and the fish have not started biting. Late winter can be an incredibly boring time of year for the deer hunter. I thought I would try to help everyone out and make a list of post season boredom breaking ideas.
- Winter is a great time to put up a trail camera. A winter wheat field or a small corn pile can really concentrate deer in front of a trail camera. Here are a few trail camera setup tips.
- Get out and hike with the family. Take the kids out for a walk on your deer lease. Look for rub lines, funnels and white oaks that could be likely stand locations. You also stand a great chance of finding some shed antlers.
- Run out and by the Sunday paper. Deer leases are expiring and hunting clubs are looking for new members. Don’t miss out on your chance to join the most popular deer hunting club in your area.
- Grab the shotgun and hit the range. Shooting trap and sporting clays is a great way to spend a Saturday.
Deer Hunting Blinds

When I was first introduced to deer hunting as a child, I was taught that you hunted deer from a tree stand. A tree stand seemed to be the most popular and preferred method for ambushing a trophy whitetail deer. It was not till I went off to college that I was exposed to hunting deer with hounds. Now as a continue to mature as a deer hunter, I continue to look for ways to close the distance on a whitetail. A deer hunting blind offers several great features that can not be found in any other piece of hunting equipment. The most important feature is the ability of many blinds to control or suppress human scent. If you can beat a deers nose you can get within bow range. The second thing that a deer blind accomplishes is hiding movement of the hunter drawing a bow or shouldering a slug gun. Last but definitely not least is the fact that a deer hunting blind can be placed ANYWHERE. You can place it in the middle of a cut corn field in Iowa. You can place it on a fence row in Texas. You can place it in the middle of a 400 acre stand of pines in Alabama. You can…well you get the idea. The picture to the rigt is of an Ameristep Intimidator. Right now Basspro is offering a $50 rebate on this incredible deer hunting blind. You can also find some really great deals by watching Ebay.
Exreme Deer Stands
Deer season is over in most parts of the United States and it is now time to begin planning for the 2007 season. There are still many deer hunting related activities that you can do even though season is over. Many people love to search for shed antlers. This can be a ton of fun and you verify which bucks made it through the year alive. You can also continue a supplemental feeding program and monitoring the area with trail cameras. Another off season project could be maintaining or building deer stands on your property. I have always been a big believer in getting this done way before opening day. For my hunting style I prefer lock on stands and self climbing stands. But for many other people they take building deer stands to the extreme. Take a look at these extreme deer stands.
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Trail Camera Reviews
As you can tell from some of my other post, I really feel that everyone should utilize trail cameras. So now that you know you should have one which one should you buy. Up until now I have really not been able to find a good resource to help me determine which trail camera fit my situation. I recently ran across a site while surfing the forum over at huntingnet.com. It is a new site but the idea is awesome so I am trying to help promote it. It is a trail camera review site that always hunters to grade the game camera in 8 categories on a scale of 1 to 5. So go check it out and read/leave a review.
NC’s Whitetail Rut
NC is my home state so this information was very interesting to me. I read every hunting magazine I can get my hands on and watch all the major hunting shows. In all the shows and publications the RUT is the main topic. The breeding is not the exciting part. The exciting part is the chasing. This is the period when big bucks make mistakes and are harvested. It is a period when all hunters want to be in the woods. In the north and midwest hunters can basically pinpoint the rut to the same week year after year. I have seen some very exciting chasing activity in PA but I have never really witnessed a full blown rut in NC. I mean I have seen a buck chase a doe but I have never seen a half a dozen bucks running 1 doe all over the country side while fighting and grunting. Then I read a recent article in NC Game and Fish that provided data from the NC Wildlife Resource Commission that showed 3 very different breeding periods across the state.
