I've been listening to nothing but hunting podcasts to satisfy my desire to be pursuing a mature buck, and it got me thinking about things I know now that I wish I knew "back in the day". Today's podcast was Episode 962 of the Wired to Hunt Podcast. It is their weekly Rut Fresh Radio episode and one of the guests, Josh Profit from Kentucky, said something that I immediately recognized as something I wish I'd have heard and taken to heart 20 years ago.
"The afternoon is a deer's morning and the morning is a deer's afternoon."
I spent a good bit of time "chewing" on this and have settled on it being one of my favorite bits of wisdom that will certainly inform future strategies and decisions.
That train of thought led me this thread. When I look at the first half of my hunting career in comparison to the second half, I see how the mistakes I made early have led to great success in recent years. If I'm boiling that down to one tidbit of advice, it's that "less is more." Hunting less has led to success because I'm hunting smarter now. In the early days, I thought I could "earn" a buck but hunting 100-150 hours a year and it rarely correlated to success. But staying out of the woods until the conditions are right, has led to success.
So, the question is: What do you know now that you wish you knew much sooner if your hunting career?
"The afternoon is a deer's morning and the morning is a deer's afternoon."
I spent a good bit of time "chewing" on this and have settled on it being one of my favorite bits of wisdom that will certainly inform future strategies and decisions.
That train of thought led me this thread. When I look at the first half of my hunting career in comparison to the second half, I see how the mistakes I made early have led to great success in recent years. If I'm boiling that down to one tidbit of advice, it's that "less is more." Hunting less has led to success because I'm hunting smarter now. In the early days, I thought I could "earn" a buck but hunting 100-150 hours a year and it rarely correlated to success. But staying out of the woods until the conditions are right, has led to success.
So, the question is: What do you know now that you wish you knew much sooner if your hunting career?
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