Welcome to TheOhioOutdoors
Wanting to join the rest of our members? Login or sign up today!
Login / Join

Baiting Mature Bucks.

Creamer

Active Member
1,639
87
Athens
Something I think is interesting, and I will admit I have not read through this whole thread, is the difference between a feeder and a pile. I've been experimenting on this with the yard deer behind the house this fall. I've got a hanging feeder with a motor. I had it set to feed roughly an hour before dark and an hour after sunrise. So in other words, the corn is on the ground in daylight. I'd still not very often see deer at the feeder during daylight. And I've got a camera there, so I'm not relying on visual sightings. If I take a bag of corn out there and dump it, within a day or so, I start seeing a lot more consistent daylight deer. It's like there's a bigger draw to them, knowing it's on the ground and they can see that it's there. Maybe I'm giving them more credit than they deserve, but I 100% see a difference between loose corn on the ground and a feeder mechanism delivering it early morning/late afternoon.
 

Stressless

Active Member
2,418
85
Keene, OH
What I found with spin [timer] feeders rather than gravity feeders is the spook factor, deer within a certain range go on full afterburner away within 200 or so yards or so of a spin feeder when it goes off.... seen this visual and cameras.

Got pics and vids of bucks and does feeding close to a timer and then it goes off - fur blur - bigger bucks take a long time if ever coming back from that negative experience.

Got rid of spin feeders and no similar issues with gravity feeders. Also much less waste feed going to secondary species like coons and such relative to putting it on the ground.

Just my $.02 and observations.

If OH would just get the stones and outlaw baiting I'd be much happier overall.
 

Jackalope

Dignitary Member
Staff member
39,066
274
Something I think is interesting, and I will admit I have not read through this whole thread, is the difference between a feeder and a pile. I've been experimenting on this with the yard deer behind the house this fall. I've got a hanging feeder with a motor. I had it set to feed roughly an hour before dark and an hour after sunrise. So in other words, the corn is on the ground in daylight. I'd still not very often see deer at the feeder during daylight. And I've got a camera there, so I'm not relying on visual sightings. If I take a bag of corn out there and dump it, within a day or so, I start seeing a lot more consistent daylight deer. It's like there's a bigger draw to them, knowing it's on the ground and they can see that it's there. Maybe I'm giving them more credit than they deserve, but I 100% see a difference between loose corn on the ground and a feeder mechanism delivering it early morning/late afternoon.


You're not wrong. I think a lot of people have had this same observation. Even though a pile of corn is unnatural, it's way more naturally familiar than a spin feeder. But gravity feeders don't seem to have the same spook factor.
 

bowhunter1023

Owner/Operator
Staff member
49,369
288
Appalachia
Just picked up a custom blended deer feed from our local mill. Similar blends are $18 at TSC, but I got out the door at $13.60 a bag.

300#s of shelled corn
100#s of sweet feed
50#s of black oil sunflower seeds
50#s of roasted soybeans

The sweet feed has oats, cracked corn, and molasses flavored protein pellets. I had this made specifically for the feeder behind our house where the girls will be hunting. There's a regular old corn pile on every property in the square mile (at least 6 guys other than me running bait in a 640 acre block) so a man needs a competitive advantage and I see this a chess, not checkers 😂
 

giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
Look up feeding deer sunflower seeds. Not good for them
1000004959.jpg
 

bowhunter1023

Owner/Operator
Staff member
49,369
288
Appalachia
Yeah, I've seen that before. But from the reading I've done, they would need to eat large quantities of nothing but sunflower seeds to reach a toxicity level that causes damage. Kind of like selenium in minerals - it's toxic in volume, but it would be hard for them to selectively feed on just that. Probably more on par with us eating sugar in terms of how it impacts our gut biome. If we had 10#s of sugar, we'd die, but we can eat it in small doses without obvious toxicity issues. Certainly willing to change my opinion though.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Wiley E Coyote

giles

Cull buck specialist
Supporting Member
Yeah, I've seen that before. But from the reading I've done, they would need to eat large quantities of nothing but sunflower seeds to reach a toxicity level that causes damage. Kind of like selenium in minerals - it's toxic in volume, but it would be hard for them to selectively feed on just that. Probably more on par with us eating sugar in terms of how it impacts our gut biome. If we had 10#s of sugar, we'd die, but we can eat it in small doses without obvious toxicity issues. Certainly willing to change my opinion though.
I've done it before I knew. But if we are truly trying to help the deer...I'd rather stick my money on the grape drank mafia mix. Also, it attracts squirrels and I really dislike those things.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bowhunter1023

jagermeister

Dignitary Member
Supporting Member
18,258
237
Ohio
I put a custom mix together last year with some sunflower seed. In the wide open, it attracts too many birds to make it worthwhile IMO. But in a timber stand, I could see SF seed being a great addition.
 

Creamer

Active Member
1,639
87
Athens
I have put that sweet feed out for the deer before, usually bucket scoop at a time behind the house. They love it, but you'd have to be careful with it in any kind of feeder. If it gets wet, it will swell up quite a bit. I tried it in a gravity feeder once, and it swelled up near the end of the feeder and clogged itself up.