Saturday - October 10, 2020:
2hr Morning Hunt @Northwestern Stand:
I awoke @5:00 a.m. and got settled into my stand with no issues by 6:30 a.m.
Approximately 15 minutes later, I heard what sounded like a few deer coming off the upper field, down through the woods, down the hill and slow walked to the North, possibly heading towards the bait station.
After an hour at least, I see five antlerless deer coming from the NE circling around the lower CRP field, out of bow range, roughly 60+ yards away. I continued to watch them travel along the bottom of the ridge/hill heading away from me and towards the lower CRP field on the South side of it, then finally out of sight roughly around 8:00 a.m.
Then I sat for another hour of not seeing or hearing anymore deer before I decided to pack it up, climb down and go pull the SD card out the TC that covers the pine licking branch below me, which is the one I hung at the end of July.
BTW, that pine licking branch desperately needs to be replaced. Not only is it destroyed by the deer, it’s pretty well dried out too. I will replace it tomorrow during the rain that we are supposed to receive. Right next to it though, there is a 7” in diameter vine that is rubbed to death and obviously, some rather large fresh scrapes right underneath the PLB.
I have not been to this location since August 4th, and it was raining out then too. That is when I pulled the SD card last out of the TC, which was a week right after I hung the new pine licking branch.
The very affordable, $24.99/unit, new Simmons trail camera that covers the pine licking branch seems to be holding up very well. Once opened, I was quite impressed to see that the batteries registered a full charge still after taking nearly 1,900 photographs over a two in half month period.
I need to clean up one of my main shooting lanes also. It appears, perhaps during one of the big storms we had over the past couple of months, a few small dead trees fell over and is now blocking my primary shooting window/lane that offers me a clear shot opportunity to the edge of the upper field, which is 30 yards to the wood/field edge from my hang-on stand.
After I made back to my workshop, I changed back into my regular work clothes, made a fresh hot cup of coffee, sat down and started to go through all the TC photographs on the pulled SD card that covered the pine licking branch.
The follow video encapsulates every deer, plus one coyote that visited that spot since August 5th. Out of the nearly 1,900 photographs, 95% of them are within this video, I tossed out all the small game stuff, except for the yote.
The photographs within the video are set at 3 second intervals each, which totals up to 1 hour and 27 minutes of some rather outranges deer activity at my ‘Northwestern Stand’/pine licking branch setup, pretty much at least one deer showed up every day since then.
This is the same setup/location that I use for any new and/or youth hunters that I take out. There is a 16’ ladder stand setup near the bottom of the hill, up against a large mature tree that has a perfect ‘Y’ crotch right above it, so you can see through it, towards the PLB. I also have a hang-on stand right above that ladder stand that I use to either hunt out of myself, and/or film a quest’s hunt for them. It’s approximately 10’ right above the ladder, also inside the crotch of the tree.
Anyhow, I did not have time to index the video yet for all the real cool highlights, but if you wish to view the raw version of it and see all the deer activity, you can increase the speed of the video to twice the speed, which cuts it down to approximately 35 minutes if you wish.
I can tell you that I was more than impressed with the amount of deer activity hitting that pine licking branch. You certainly will get to see several good bucks, with velvet and without, plenty of antlerless deer, tons of tree rubbing happening, scrapes being made, deer bedding and bucks fighting their asses off. The power of a good PLB being placed in a high travel area.
The imagine quality is more than simply fine for me too, which most images provides all the information that I need. For only $25 bucks a unit, I am incredibly pleased with those little trail cameras.
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2hr Evening Hunt @North CRP Stand:
I did not make it back out until about 5:00 p.m. because it appeared that the skies were about to open and pour rain. When I soon realized that it only turned out to be just a light sprinkle, I quickly grabbed my hunting gear, including my tree umbrella and started down the middle of the main creek, heading towards my CRP stand that is just minutes away.
Once I got the base of the tree, hooked up a new handline to swap out the old, climbed the tree. No sooner I stood up onto the platform, I seen a doe to my right at 16 yards. She was looking right towards my tree, but not up into it. I froze in place, she froze too. After a minute, she gave a very soft blow, which it alerted four other antlerless deer that were bedded within 20 yards of her inside the CRP. They all hopped towards the middle of the CRP field and away from me, then they simply disappeared within the extremely tall this year CRP. I estimate that the CRP is at least 8-10’ tall this year.
I know she did not smell me because we had a decent crosswind between us. I think she just heard me coming and did not know what it was once I got to my tree. I might have woken her out of her bed right along the edge of the field or just inside the wooded area, but I really do not know for sure. I just happened to spot her as soon as I stood up in the stand.
Anyways, that was all the deer I seen this evening and I didn’t even get to cradle the bow yet up into the tree when I saw them. Oh well, I still enjoyed the hunt. I also did not have to hang my tree umbrella, which was excellent!
I believe those were the same five antlerless deer that I saw earlier this morning.
Roughly four hours of hunting in the stand today, I seen a total of 10 deer and no blood was shed. None of them were bucks.
I doubt that I’ll hunt tomorrow, but I will replace the pine licking branch at my ‘Northwestern Stand’ and cutdown those few dead trees that are blocking my main shooting lane. All that will get done as soon as it starts raining.
So, to date, I have done four sits altogether. Three of those were hang-on setups out of the six that I have in place. I’d hope to get to the other three before I head down to deer camp, so I might get back out sometime between Monday & Tuesday, the 12th & the 13th, weather/wind depending for those setups.
Until next time, everybody take care!
Good night!