P & Y stats
#31
When the days are hot and the Bucks are still hanging around together in bachelor groups, the evenings always workedbetterfor me catching them moving from Bedding to feeding areas ( and they usually dont move far),with little to no movement at daybreak.
As a chill clings to the morning air and themonth of Oct draws to an end, the rub and scrape lines begin getting active, and I start hunting the mornings trying to catch them finishing up their rounds befor moving back to their bedding areas.
I, like most, probably hunt twice as many evenings as I do mornings. SoI can only assume thats where the high % of Kills in the P&Y listings come from.
I did take a 150 class Buck off public hunting land in Kansas at around 1:30 in the afternoon when I figured out he was cleaning out the scrapes inbetween my morning and evening hunts.
As a chill clings to the morning air and themonth of Oct draws to an end, the rub and scrape lines begin getting active, and I start hunting the mornings trying to catch them finishing up their rounds befor moving back to their bedding areas.
I, like most, probably hunt twice as many evenings as I do mornings. SoI can only assume thats where the high % of Kills in the P&Y listings come from.
I did take a 150 class Buck off public hunting land in Kansas at around 1:30 in the afternoon when I figured out he was cleaning out the scrapes inbetween my morning and evening hunts.




