Baiting means $500 less in pocket this season if you count corn, sugar beets, minerals and food plot seed. Why? I don't know. I haven't killed a deer by spending that $500. I do care for the herds in my area and I hope my $$ helps them a bit.
So fishing in water is baiting? Come on now...
I like reading the different point of views on this subject. I could care less what people do as long as it's legal.
Sorry broseph but that wasn't no family secret lol. I've heard of that trick from several old timers over the years. It's a damn good one.I should not tell you guys this because I feel like I'm betraying a family secret. But I will use it to illustrate a point. My grandfather was probably the best damn bluegill fisherman I've known in my life. He kept this secret to himself except from very few people. He would go out on the backside of the lake or anywhere you would typically find bluegill and take a dead raccoon or possum or any other type of roadkill and tie it up in the bushes that overhung the lake. Flies would lay eggs on them and produce a ton of maggots which when the wind blew would randomly fall into the water. He would go out there and slay bluegill as soon as his bobber splashed. Yep. He was fishing over bait. Or under bait. Whatever. He was baiting bluegill with basically a maggot food plot. The bluegill didn't know the difference between a planted maggot or a natural maggot. It just knew free maggots.
Sorry broseph but that wasn't no family secret lol. I've heard of that trick from several old timers over the years. It's a damn good one.
I don't really care one way or the other about baiting because it's legal. Nothing I can do about it. I don't agree that it's the same as hunting over an oak flat or a picked corn field though... It's not even in the same ballpark of you ask me. Yea by definition you could say both scenarios are "baiting" but they're not one in the same. That's like saying hunting ducks over a picked corn field is the same as hunting ducks in flooded corn, or more closely related, hunting them in a wetland where you've been pouring shelled corn. Ha! Yea, OK. Tell the ducks it's the same thing. That is nothing short of laughable.
Like I said it's legal so I really don't give two shits. What I really struggle to wrap my head around is how hunters can spend so much money on frickin corn. Guys spend more on corn per month than they do on some of their utility bills. Seems foolish to me. I understand we spend money on a lot of different things we dont necessarily need. Hell, I'm as guilty as anyone in that department. But dropping hundreds of dollars on shelled corn??? Ay ay ay...
Hahaha oh yea, forgot about that part.Lol. Probably so. But hearing it from several old timers is far less than 18,000 unique visitors a month. Lol.
I don't really care one way or the other about baiting because it's legal. Nothing I can do about it. I don't agree that it's the same as hunting over an oak flat or a picked corn field though... It's not even in the same ballpark of you ask me. Yea by definition you could say both scenarios are "baiting" but they're not one in the same.
Like I said it's legal so I really don't give two shits. What I really struggle to wrap my head around is how hunters can spend so much money on frickin corn. Guys spend more on corn per month than they do on some of their utility bills. Seems foolish to me. I understand we spend money on a lot of different things we dont necessarily need. Hell, I'm as guilty as anyone in that department. But dropping hundreds of dollars on shelled corn??? Ay ay ay...
Bait is anything that draws an animals to an area. Be it food, smells, or even does. If there is a reason a deer was drawn to that area he's been baited. The state draws the line at things placed in an area excluding normal farming practices. . But technically there's tons of natural bait also. Hunting over a white oak flat or a pile of corn is the same tactic. The deer was baited to that area, the type of bait doesn't matter. The same goes for food plots, it's baiting deer to an area just the same as dumped corn is baiting deer to an area.
To me baiting is throwing out a pile of food for the deer to eat. I have bought 3-4 bags of corn in my life. All in efforts to put my son on his first deer. It didn't work. Apparently, they liked the corn Brock was feeding them better. So we had to go kill one of the deer he fattened up for my son. Moving forward will I bait? Probably not unless my son requests it. Will I throw apples in a pile on my property? Yes. Only because they were not worthy of cooking and I had to put them somewhere. I do enjoy seeing local deer at their healthiest. This is the same reason i will plant a little food plot here and there. I don't hunt over them. I just enjoy the feeling that I am giving back to the local herd.
I am not a fan of hunting over a pile of bait. I have done it before, but very little. I don't care if someone else does. I have been known to tease them and call them "master baiters" though. Really doesn't bother me if they choose to hunt over it or not. Maybe I will hunt over it someday as well. Maybe I will use a crossbow someday. Maybe I will shoot expandable broad heads someday. I don't care what others do if it is legal.
I cannot imagine being a person just starting out in the hunting world having never experienced what hunting really is... If from day one a person hovers over the top of a pile of bait, they have missed out on the true experience. The learning curve would not be there, and that is where the enjoyment of hunting really comes from. Killing is a lot easier over bait, but killing and hunting do not go hand in hand all the time.
So fishing in water is baiting? Come on now...
Umm... Phil, that was apples, not corn. And as you may recall, I told you those deer were coming through there every morning when there were no apples there. Those apples were there to stop a deer where your son would have a good opportunity for a standing shot...