Whild_Bill
New Member
In here? Would love to bounce some ideas with you
well we have had some good success here in Alabama with defining sanctuarie boundaries and then slipping into them and making improvements, only if the wind and thermals are in our favor. We added a hedge row of bluberry & blackberry bushes along a wet weather creek in way that was they forced the deer into a crossing area. We only installed an observitory stand there where we documented several bucks
That sounds like a winning plan, you already have some big key requirements nailed down as follows;well we have had some good success here in Alabama with defining sanctuarie boundaries and then slipping into them and making improvements, only if the wind and thermals are in our favor. We added a hedge row of bluberry & blackberry bushes along a wet weather creek in way that was they forced the deer into a crossing area. We only installed an observitory stand there where we documented several bucks
Ya we only hang sets at 45’ can’t remember the last time anyone got winded most folks simply don’t put their lock ons high enough. We don’t run chain saws in the sanctuary, ever period.
Come on George, you aren't hanging your stands high enough!
You need to hang lights for the airplanes up there? I'm not making fun of you, every man to his own game, and I admire someone with enough stamina to get that high. When I was younger I got up pretty high sometimes, never measured to be exact, just absolutely need a safety belt up there.Ya we only hang sets at 45’ can’t remember the last time anyone got winded most folks simply don’t put their lock ons high enough. We don’t run chain saws in the sanctuary, ever period.
Do you even need a bow at that height? Dropping an arrow could do a lot of damage, in WWI pilots would release the canisters of flechettes over the enemy, raining down the arrowheads that had enough kinetic energy form falling to penetrate helmets and go right through a person.I actually did hang a stand 26' last year. I sat in it once with a bow and once with a muzzleloader. It is too steep a bow angle shot down for my liking.
G
It ain’t for the faint of heart and it ain’t for everybody but we just know it works and we just know what works for us
I really like this sanctuary builders/ developers topic, as we're always looking to pick up random new ideas for our management, and also to bounce some of our ideas off of others to get opinions on what we are doing. Interestingly, for us, this bunny trail of how high to hunt is not as far off of this sanctuary topic as one might think.It ain’t for the faint of heart and it ain’t for everybody but we just know it works and we just know what works for us
I really like this sanctuary builders/ developers topic, as we're always looking to pick up random new ideas for our management, and also to bounce some of our ideas off of others to get opinions on what we are doing. Interestingly, for us, this bunny trail of how high to hunt is not as far off of this sanctuary topic as one might think.
I'm going to point out a very interesting deviation on sanctuaries here, with us being deer managers who really buy into the sanctuary concept, we do something that might be considered very sacrilegious by many, while some others are doing exactly what we are doing, we actually hunt inside the boundaries of our sanctuaries (although never in the center of the sanctuary, usually we are just hunting a shooting plot close to the boundary of the sanctuary) which makes hunting concealment methods very important.
Back to the bunny trail of getting higher off the ground to hunt deer, elevation is the number one best scent control method, and it also helps a lot with sound and movement detection. A few tradeoffs are accuracy and safety, however, both of these can be negated to some degree.
In my 20's and 30's, being a barnbuilder by trade, I used to actually enjoy heights, but as I get older I'm not climbing trees with a climber as much anymore, and when I do I'll find the military crest of a ridge to do it on which makes height less important.
So these days my number one hunting choice is to hunt out of a 360 Hunting Blind over one of our dozen or so planted 1/2 acre fall shooting plots, most of these being what we consider being inside the edge of a designated sanctuary. (By the nature of the realestate none of our larger destination fields are inside a sanctuary)
Here's the argument that could be made; Well, if you are hunting inside your sanctuary boundaries, it's technically not a sanctuary, or at least that part with the plot is not a part of the sanctuary? Because a sanctuary by definition is a place that you never ever enter except to work in off season.
I'm ok with saying the plot is not a part of the sanctuary, but for our management purposes we treat it exactly like the rest sanctuary, except for hunting out of an enclosed blind two to four days a year. Otherwise we don't go in there except to mow and plant the plot with a tractor, a tractor being the one piece of equipment that generally doesn't drive deer out or their habitat. When we do go in to hunt, stealth and timing are key, we watch for a cold front with the correct wind, drop off and pick up the hunter up after dark with a golf cart so as not to spread scent and spook deer with a person walking through the sanctuary.
So, are we habitual deer management offenders that are handling our deer sanctuaries a deviate and delinquent way? Or are we just defining our sanctuary boundaries differently than some?