Bowhunting small woods?
#1
Thread Starter
Fork Horn
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 422
Likes: 0
From: NorthEast Arkansas river bottoms
The last several years I have bowhunted about 400+ acres near my house and have had success, and seen a lot of deer. However, I am moving in 1 week, and the place we are moving to has only 10.5 acres with it. The good thing is it is all wooded, has a pond on it and it covered with deer tracks right now. And I found an old rub from last year on a small pine tree.
It looks likeI may be bowhunting a little on my new place, but when I think of only having 10 acres I get kinda discouraged about it. The land is covered in Oak trees and I say many big white oak acorns from last year. And I got a spot around my pond where I may plant a small food plot (1 acre). And the land surrounding it is pretty open pasture, which Im hoping will persuad the deer to hang close to my place, where there is cover.
So, there should be cover, water, and plenty of food on this small place, and I could probably stick a young deer but Is there anything I can do to help my chances of having big deer passing through my place?
Who else hunts small woods successfully?
BTW, I cna still hunt my old place, I just cant hunt it alot like Im used to.
Thanks.
It looks likeI may be bowhunting a little on my new place, but when I think of only having 10 acres I get kinda discouraged about it. The land is covered in Oak trees and I say many big white oak acorns from last year. And I got a spot around my pond where I may plant a small food plot (1 acre). And the land surrounding it is pretty open pasture, which Im hoping will persuad the deer to hang close to my place, where there is cover.
So, there should be cover, water, and plenty of food on this small place, and I could probably stick a young deer but Is there anything I can do to help my chances of having big deer passing through my place?
Who else hunts small woods successfully?
BTW, I cna still hunt my old place, I just cant hunt it alot like Im used to.
Thanks.
#2
Never ever get discouraged by the size of the woods. The biggest deer I've seen taken are a lot of time taken from smalls woods.
With that said, be very picky when it comes to shooting deer. I hunt the smallest places you can imagine. I've hunted on next to tennis courts, golf greens and tees, kids tree houses, and once off a power line pole. I hunt where the deer are and I don't judge by the size of the woods. I only judge it by the trees I can climb.
If your allowed to bait, I would set up a feeder. Corn is the best thing to fatten them up and sweeten the meat before the slaughter. Farmers have been doing it for years with cattle. That steak you ate last night was grassed raised and then put on corn a few months before slaughter. Do the same to your pet deer. It helps you out as well as your pets.
Good luck
With that said, be very picky when it comes to shooting deer. I hunt the smallest places you can imagine. I've hunted on next to tennis courts, golf greens and tees, kids tree houses, and once off a power line pole. I hunt where the deer are and I don't judge by the size of the woods. I only judge it by the trees I can climb.
If your allowed to bait, I would set up a feeder. Corn is the best thing to fatten them up and sweeten the meat before the slaughter. Farmers have been doing it for years with cattle. That steak you ate last night was grassed raised and then put on corn a few months before slaughter. Do the same to your pet deer. It helps you out as well as your pets.
Good luck
#4
Dominant Buck
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 21,199
Likes: 1
From: Blossvale, New York
I've hunted and continue to hunt some REALLY small plots. One of the best I ever had here in suburbia was 25 acres. The best one I've seen in a couple years is a small 5 acre lot we hunted a couple years ago. Len got permission for us to hunt it again yesterday. The deer travel through it, but it's one of those deals where they just can't help themselves. They travel through it every morning like clock work, wind, rain, sleet or hail... they're always there. The key to these places is LOW IMPACT. Find your trees for your climber ahead of time. Hang 2 or 3 stands and DON'T over hunt. As hard as it is, if the wind is wrong, stay out. Start slow. Hunt the fringes, watch the movement, sneak in on them, and back out, and in... don't become patterned. Don't crowd them and you can have a heck of a gold mine. Get high.
#5
Nothing to worry about. I hunted an empty house on 3 acres. Probobly only 1/2 an acre wooded, yet plenty of woods behind the lot. Large concrete patio in rear around an average size built in pool, all encircled with hedges about 3-1/2 ft. tall. I got two nice does from the cement bench on the patio as they came in from the front from across the road. I put my friend Brian (who tragiclypassed 2 Fridays ago - God Bless his soul) in a giant ladder stand in the rear more wooded area and he shot a great 9/10 pointer his first time out there. There's tons of deer there and although the property changed hands in January, I have secured exclusive hunting rights to - get this ....... the same 3 acre lot (by new owner), the neighboring 5 acre lot (about 75%wooded) and the new ownerhas another 5 acre lot right down the road, that's right, FOR ME.
Hey, I'll ride the tractor around some this season mowing grass and whatnot - but I got those 3 lots to bowhunt and they're probobly only 4 miles from my house as the crow flies - and deer season ain't even in sight yet!
Quick rundown of the opportunities set for this season.
1. The 3 acre lot.
2. The 5 acres the same guy owns.
3. The adjoining 5 acre lot next to #1.
4.Offer to do some hunts out in McHenry county on about 140 acres
(this from a guy I just did a fire sprinkler job for yesterday - yes
on Sunday - 16 hrs.)
5. A 5 acre lot backing up to a small river that has a 2 nice longfarm
fields parallelingthe river divided by tree lines. (This one isn't definate
yet - but I think it's 90% there!)
Now all these I'm talking about are not very rural at all! So I don't see the deer feeling pressured by people, odors, etc. But if your property is very rural, you have to be careful about stinkin the place up. I'd get my stands up (what looks good and some fall backs), lanes rough cut and funnels created early so come season, just a little trim and your in business.
Iteach hunter safety ed here in IL and there's always some invitations that arise from there, too.
THINGS ARE LOOKING SO SWEET RIGHT NOW!
Hey, I'll ride the tractor around some this season mowing grass and whatnot - but I got those 3 lots to bowhunt and they're probobly only 4 miles from my house as the crow flies - and deer season ain't even in sight yet!
Quick rundown of the opportunities set for this season.
1. The 3 acre lot.
2. The 5 acres the same guy owns.
3. The adjoining 5 acre lot next to #1.
4.Offer to do some hunts out in McHenry county on about 140 acres
(this from a guy I just did a fire sprinkler job for yesterday - yes
on Sunday - 16 hrs.)
5. A 5 acre lot backing up to a small river that has a 2 nice longfarm
fields parallelingthe river divided by tree lines. (This one isn't definate
yet - but I think it's 90% there!)
Now all these I'm talking about are not very rural at all! So I don't see the deer feeling pressured by people, odors, etc. But if your property is very rural, you have to be careful about stinkin the place up. I'd get my stands up (what looks good and some fall backs), lanes rough cut and funnels created early so come season, just a little trim and your in business.
Iteach hunter safety ed here in IL and there's always some invitations that arise from there, too.
THINGS ARE LOOKING SO SWEET RIGHT NOW!
#6
Hunt it basically the same way you would any other woodlot. Overhunting will bea big problem as you are very limited to your stand sites. Find the funnels and use them. Hunt the wind perfectly, and pull up an arial photo of the place to become familiar w/ what's around you. That will help in picking out your ambush points.
Like you are going to do, a good clover patch would help alot. Remember, you're going to get almost 100% pass through deer, but I'm sure you'll have a couple of "residents" as well. That pasture you speak of may hold a bed or two. david said it best.....low impact, and I mean VERY low impact.
Like you are going to do, a good clover patch would help alot. Remember, you're going to get almost 100% pass through deer, but I'm sure you'll have a couple of "residents" as well. That pasture you speak of may hold a bed or two. david said it best.....low impact, and I mean VERY low impact.
#7
Banned
Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 7,145
Likes: 0
From: IOWA/25' UP
Sounds like it should work fine;food,cover,water...this should bring in the does and that means bucks. Careful not to overhunt. I would only hunt once a week. Hunt where you can slip in and out with the least disturbance. I would get several stands hung at least a month in advanceso you can hunt whichever way the wind is. They have to get to your land somehow; watch for travel routes to your land.
#8
Thread Starter
Fork Horn
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 422
Likes: 0
From: NorthEast Arkansas river bottoms
Thanks for the positive encouragement, My plan is on my days off, to travel to my current place which is awesome and we got 40 acres about 25-30 minutes away but it historically hasn't been very good hunting and its 95% pasture which many hunters nearby, In fact right now this 10 acres looks 5 times better for an occasional hunt. And then there is public land I can hunt (but hate to). My place will mainly be for going after work for a few hours or in the mornings before work. I was figuring 1 day a week more or less.
I will try to gain permission for other land close to home, but in case I can't I wanna be able to shoot a deer or two.
I also talked to a pretty successful trophy hunter the other day and he said he has killed many of his largest bucks on small tracks of land less than 10 acres. I guess many hunters overlook small tracks of woods.
I will try to gain permission for other land close to home, but in case I can't I wanna be able to shoot a deer or two.
I also talked to a pretty successful trophy hunter the other day and he said he has killed many of his largest bucks on small tracks of land less than 10 acres. I guess many hunters overlook small tracks of woods.



