Favorite types of trees for stands
#12
RE: Favorite types of trees for stands
Any tree with3 big branches, main trunk with 2 or 3 branches I can sit right in the middle of. I have an old maple I have hunted for 12 years out of, sit right in the middle of 4 branches around me. I can dance the jig, and the deer have no idea. Second choice is oak tree, can get real high and plenty of cover.
#14
RE: Favorite types of trees for stands
I usually try to hunt form Oak trees, mainly because when snow is on the ground and all other trees have dropped leaves, oaks tend to hold theirs and that gives you some good breakup cover.
I WILL NOT hunt from a hickory. The wood is so hard and bark so slippery, it is impossible to get a portable stand to bite into it, and if you do, you never know when it may slip ( I know form experience). Plus its a real b!tch getting steps screwed into a hickory
I WILL NOT hunt from a hickory. The wood is so hard and bark so slippery, it is impossible to get a portable stand to bite into it, and if you do, you never know when it may slip ( I know form experience). Plus its a real b!tch getting steps screwed into a hickory
#15
Dominant Buck
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Blossvale, New York
Posts: 21,199
RE: Favorite types of trees for stands
Not any particular flavor of tree as much as what it offers. First it must be in the right place, whether its a food source or on an intercept course. THen I look for cover. Cover can come in many forms. It can be multiple trees in a wad(I love two or threes). It can be a tree with small full trees growing up near it to give me cover. It can be a tree that allows me to lasso and pull other trees and branches in around me for cover. Nothing worse than a 220 pound man hanging on the side of a 12 inch tree with nothing around him. It can be a tree with a lot of vines and things hanging all over it that I can blend in with. I don't care what flavor it is as long as deer pass near it and I'm hidden.
#17
RE: Favorite types of trees for stands
White oaks and ladder stands are my prefered setup early. Later in the season I'll go to a red oak thats still holding some leaves. The deer around here will devour the white oak acorns first then move to the reds & pin oaks later in the year.
#18
RE: Favorite types of trees for stands
ORIGINAL: BobCo19-65
Personally, I love to hunt pines. Not big dark open pine forests, but smaller patches of pines with some hardwoods mixed in. Most of my stands are in thick imature/mature pines.
Personally, I love to hunt pines. Not big dark open pine forests, but smaller patches of pines with some hardwoods mixed in. Most of my stands are in thick imature/mature pines.
I'm hoping to get a climber for the upcoming season and I imagine I will use the same technique for picking trees for that stand as well.
Combine that tree setup with a nearby funnel, and I'm in heaven!!
#19
RE: Favorite types of trees for stands
I like what Davidmil said about "an intercept course". That's how my favorite tree location would be described as.
A nice straight sweetgum tree a few yards away from a bunch of oaks. The trees are 20 yards parallel to a trail and on the other side of the trail is a tangle of overgrowth, thickets, briars. I can climb perfectly to 22' in that sweetgum tree and overlook the acorns on the ground, and to the left side of me, I can overlook the small field of brush, thickets, etc... It's a perfect setup!
A nice straight sweetgum tree a few yards away from a bunch of oaks. The trees are 20 yards parallel to a trail and on the other side of the trail is a tangle of overgrowth, thickets, briars. I can climb perfectly to 22' in that sweetgum tree and overlook the acorns on the ground, and to the left side of me, I can overlook the small field of brush, thickets, etc... It's a perfect setup!