Treestand?
#1
Fork Horn
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Maine
Posts: 328
Treestand?
I have a spot that I have seen deer all year and in the season. I bought two more stands this winter and I am trying to figure out where to put them. I have one spot that there is a beaten deer trail with droppings in it at the edge of a clear cut that is surrounded with woods. The other spot is about 125 yards away up hill, where there is another trail with the same except it is next to a old logging road with grass and clover growing in it. There is plenty of sign in both places, winds in my favor and no intersecting trails between the two. Is it a waste to put two stands that close together?
Thanks guys
Thanks guys
#3
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location:
Posts: 2,186
Tough call ... but here's an idea. If the sign in the area is strong enough, I'd have no problem setting two stands as long as I felt like I was covering two rather distinct trails. And I would take a look at setting each to take advantage of usual but two different wind directions. For sure if early on you discover that one or both are in the wrong locations, you can certainly relocate the stand(s).
#4
It is only a waste to put them that close if you got a guy sitting in both of them. You can set up one stand for a certain scenerio and one for another then you are covered either way. Set each one up the best way you think will work. Worse thing happens you can always move it.
#5
I would put up both make one for a morning hunt and the other for late afternoon
also put one for the wind in one direction and the other for oppisite.
Now you are covered any time you want to hunt that area
also put one for the wind in one direction and the other for oppisite.
Now you are covered any time you want to hunt that area
#9
I've found that a mere 50 yards can mean the difference between getting the shot and not. It doesn't hurt as far as Im concerned to have stands close together. Most boils down to what the deer are doing when the season rolls around. Where Im at you may find the deer going past a location all Spring but then move that pattern 50 to 100 yrds. away one the pressure starts. The worst part of having multiple stands is patterning them on one and only to have them move past the other. So, no I dont think you can have two of them too close together.
#10
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Southeast Missouri
Posts: 2,178
I think the 2 stands are far enough apart not to interfere with each other...You can only cover so much area and I'm sure the terrain and area's You will be able to veiw/cover will be different enough to see different Deer crossing especially if Your Bow Hunting!