Midday hunting
#1
Midday hunting
Its been hard latley going for a morning hunt since I have to wake my son up extra early and take him to the sitter. So tomorrow I am planning to do a midday sit from about 9:30 or 10 until about 1. Have any of you had any luck with this before. I've read alot about what some people call the "noon stroll" and thought it couldn't hurt, can't kill em sitting at home.
#3
During that time tomorrow they are calling for 1-3 mph winds up this way so its going to be very calm. I'm hoping and praying that I'll go out tomorrow and the combine will pull in the corn field when I get in stand.......That would be great!
#4
I saw a really nice buck last friday morning at 11 cruising down a field edge, you just never know what these bucks are thinking, especially at this time of the year. My dad is picking cotton now and he saw a buck and a doe bedded in a cotton field earlier this week, they didnt move til the combine was really close to them. And they see deer at all times of the day while out picking.
#10
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location:
Posts: 2,186
During the peak of the does' estrus cycle when they are about or are ready to be bred, any time of day is a good time to be hunting for a love struck buck. Over the several decades that I have hunted deer in the deep south, by far my most successfull time for both does and bucks has been later in the afternoon from about 3:00 p.m. to dusk. I have not had a great deal of success in early a.m., but those bucks that I have killed around 08:30 or earlier have been nicer ones. Why I have no clue.
I have had some nice bucks come crusiing by mid-day. Usually early in the season when the bucks are still in groups of 2-3-4-5. I cannot prove this, but seems to me that as the season progresses the mature deer (both older bucks and older does) where I hunt tend to become more nocturnal and if they do move in the daytime, it is 10:00 a.m. or later, on up to about 2:00 p.m. Trail camera evidence reinforce this notion. I have often wondered if they become somewhat conditioned to when most of us leave the woods and head in ?!?
I have had some nice bucks come crusiing by mid-day. Usually early in the season when the bucks are still in groups of 2-3-4-5. I cannot prove this, but seems to me that as the season progresses the mature deer (both older bucks and older does) where I hunt tend to become more nocturnal and if they do move in the daytime, it is 10:00 a.m. or later, on up to about 2:00 p.m. Trail camera evidence reinforce this notion. I have often wondered if they become somewhat conditioned to when most of us leave the woods and head in ?!?