With the limited info provided on the challenges, spending more time in the outdoors where the deer are is a very effective method.What specific hunting method do you find most effective for deer in challenging conditions, and why?
Drycreek has written the textbook on perfect hunting right here! Key words are pre-rut all day sits in a comfortable spot overlooking a good food plot. Not to knock anyone else's method of hunting, but if you haven't done this yet you are missing out. Note "Keep a bag of your favorite goodies on hand for an all day sit"I only have one strategy at this point in my life, and that’s hunting from a comfortable stand overlooking a food plot. If you build it, they will come ! But….they will come at their convenience, not yours. That’s why I said “comfortable”, because I have pulled quite a few all day sits during peak pre-rut periods when bucks are moving. Especially the coldest days in the dark moons. We don’t get a lot of really cold weather here, and you don’t see a lot of early or late movement when it’s in the twenties or below. Our deer do not have the same fur as northern deer do, so I venture to say that they are more comfortable between 30* and 60* in the winter. If it’s 40* at high noon in the pre-rut, bet your money on buck movement mid-day where I hunt
"and I have the patience of a stone" And I have the patience of a pebble; a little nudge and I'm rolling along to the next great hunting spotMost of my kills over decades have come from stand hunting - elevated or ground. In our mountains here in Pa., you can sit on a high, rocky point or ledge, and see below you for quite a way. Same goes for an elevated tree stand. I've also taken deer by sneaking along quietly, placing each footstep on rocks or mossy spots to avoid crunching leaves. Wind must be right to pull off the sneaking method. Steady wind after a soaking rain is perfect. I might wait 5 minutes between steps (or more!) to avoid making noise, or having my movement noticed by any deer. I've walked up to within 25 yards of bedded deer that way.
No matter the type of stand I've taken, I do so in places deer frequent. Travel corridors between food & bedding cover, escape trails, and the thickest security cover in a given location are where I set up shop. I typically have hunted dark-to-dark, and I have the patience of a stone.
That still hunting on a mountaintop ridge in Pakistan, right?I switch between still-hunting and stand-hunting. Depends on the weather and what the deer are doing that week.