Brotha...that is creepy! Well done
i believe this does work. what im more interested in is in the years past ive would be baiting a few spots already this season i havent ran anything but minerals. the few places i plan on baiting i wasnt gonna start til late this month or september, i think that having something new in the area makes them want to use it more. the years i have baited in june and july the pics and movement start out good with lots of day time but the longer you feed the more they know its there and use it more at night. whats your guys thoughts on that?
For fear of stirring the pot and derailing the thread. . . .Let's just say I like the idea. Seems solid. It just isn't for me. Don't have the time. Too cheap to spend money doing it. I WILL however do some baiting this fall to try to get my Cousin Bubba some deer in the area when he comes up to hunt Ohio for the first time. I will not be hunting that property though.
What about using spin feeders on timer? A no no?
That's the thing. Lots of people claim baiting makes it easier. I disagree if its a mature buck you're after. In fact I believe it makes it harder in some aspects as that buck knows full well that you are there.
Really liked it. Thanks Joe. My cousins father in law killed this buck in mid October, 20 yards at a corn pile. On a warm evening. Not to mention he missed this buck less than a week prior eating corn at the exact same spot. Sometimes it just donāt make sense.
Let's be real. If it wasn't "easier," there wouldn't be so many people doing it... and there wouldn't be as many big deer getting killed. I know quite a few people with a wall of trophy mature bucks that fell victim to a corn pile. I bet we all do. Is it a guarantee? Absolutely not. Does it increase your odds of success? If done properly, I think it absolutely does.That's the thing. Lots of people claim baiting makes it easier. I disagree if its a mature buck you're after. In fact I believe it makes it harder in some aspects as that buck knows full well that you are there.
Let's be real. If it wasn't "easier," there wouldn't be so many people doing it... and there wouldn't be as many big deer getting killed. I know quite a few people with a wall of trophy mature bucks that fell victim to a corn pile. I bet we all do. Is it a guarantee? Absolutely not. Does it increase your odds of success? If done properly, I think it absolutely does.
Right now, we have a 140-150" 3.5 year-old 10-point in our neighborhood. All the guys on the N side of the road want to let him get to 4, myself included. There's a guy S of the road that's fed 1,500 #s of corn since the beginning of June trying to kill this buck on opening day. His decision to do that, although legal and "ethical", effects the rest of the neighborhood even if he doesn't kill him. Just the presence of that much corn within our square mile is enough to effectively alter everyone else's season. And yes, I was that guy once, so I can't cast too much shade. But as I've gotten away from corn, I can't help but feel like an AA instructor at times. Of note, I don't look down on late-season baiting in the same way as I now do running bait April-December. Not sure why, just seems less "offensive" to me in some way.
As to the discussion Joe and JB are batting back and forth, I liken it to the discussion I had with Tucky way back when on OS and he got pissed at me. IMO, it is harder to hunt Appalachian Ohio than it is NW Ohio. Doesn't mean it's easier to kill deer in NW Ohio, I am simply referring to the "physicality" of the hunting. Saying "easier" opens the door for a semantics argument. Define easy? It means different things to different people. For this discussion, I think it is fair to say baiting effectively "complicates" things, while it increases the likelihood that you can capitalize on a detectable pattern, which without corn, would be harder to identify. So does baiting make it easier to kill mature bucks? Depends on how you define easy and measure the process/results. What is 100% true is that by running bait, you increase the odds of establishing a pattern that both predator and prey can exploit.