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In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

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In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

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Old 01-07-2003, 08:01 AM
  #11  
Typical Buck
 
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

I would be the LAST person to say that dreaded phrase..."if it's legal then it's ok"...I hate that statement. What a cop-out. However, in this case baiting doesn't necessarily bother me. I personally think in my area it is a detriment to productive daylight hunting as davidmil pointed out. Studies have even shown that deer, especially mature bucks, become nocturnal when baited. They have no need to forage for food and hit browse lines and edge areas etc. They just hop out of bed, go to the bait site, pig out, then head back out and bed down again. I used to have a feeder that I kept stocked religiously and NEVER saw a mature buck in daylight hours. I saw gobs of squirrels, coons, oppossum, skunks, and birds with an ocassional doe with fawns mixed in there. I've never hunted Texas and think conditions down there may differ but that is just an assumption.
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Old 01-07-2003, 08:12 AM
  #12  
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

Just for the record, some of us do not sit on top of a bait area. I do alot of scouting and find where I want to hunt but their are several things that we must take into consideration here,
1. Land. Usually the lease you have is shaired with several people. If you go walking around you are going to mess up someone elses hunt or cause a unsafe condition. This is one reason that we are not allowed to get out of our hunting area till 11am.
2. Food. Usually there is one big or small field that is planted for the cattle. To save problems here we are not to hunt these we must find some where else to spread out the hunting area. We must make a food plot of some size and or a feeder. Some hunt over these but again I dont.
3. Water. Here this is also a very important draw for the deer. Several months of no or little rain and 100+ temps tend to make cattle tanks into mud holes. For those of you who have streams or rivers consider yourselves lucky. We dont. Some lakes around here are close to being dry. Farmers pump for the crops they have and towns and citys fight for water rights and there is just so much to go around.
4. Trees. LOL Unless you know what a mesquite tree is you wont know what I am <img src=icon_smile_big.gif border=0 align=middle> about. We have some large trees and sometimes mesquite get big but for the most part I would love to see one of you to put one of your tree climers on them. Most you cant even hang a deer in. Now they bush out and get tall but the branches are usually very thin. So this is the reason for box, ground or tripod type blinds.
5. Deer. Again I am describing the area I am in. We have some big deer here but not like alot of you describe. I would love to pick and choose but you do not get that chance too often here. This year I saw 3 bucks and took one. The other 3 guys on this lease did not get any. We have a 2 week doe season for white tails but no mule deer doe hunting. I can take one MD and one WT buck but havent seen a WT buck on the place. Our MD season is very short. Starting to see things a little different here?

We as hunters can look at these little things and point fingers at our brother hunters and some times we should but you know there is a larger picture here. We should be looking at and doing somthing about it every day. There are groups of people out there who want to take this right away from us and unless we stop them we will be scratching our collective a$$es and saying &quot;do you remember when we were able to hunt!&quot; or &quot;I use to have a gun or bow!&quot; Now this is somthing to fight for.

We all live in different enviroments with different extreems. Our hunting adapts to the hunting we have or dont have. If a person lives in a area with lots of deer with big open forest and lots of food for the deer to eat thats great but some other parts of this country dont have it.
So next time you are up in one of your many trees looking at that great buck or bucks or Elk or bear or......... stop and give thanks, before you take the shot, for what you have and for the privilege we have in being able to hunt.
Take care my friends,
Rick

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Edited by - Who on 01/07/2003 09:39:29
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Old 01-07-2003, 08:24 AM
  #13  
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

I have never once seen a big buck at a feeder. Lots of does, yearlings and 2-3 year old bucks, but the big boys don't come in. So if you want challenge, go after those guys.

Problem here is that Texas Parks and Wildlife consider bowhunting to be part of their overall game management program now, and our deer herd is overpopulated. TPWD is constantly after bowhunters to take more deer, especially in drought conditions. They don't want the bucks stressed out to the point of an early antler drop, which would tick off the gun hunters. They tried to stick in a youth rifle hunt on each weekend of our bow season last year to take more early season deer, but only did the last weekend.

It's not challenge or even fair chase that's important to them. It's numbers. So, since feeders put hunters in range of deer that's what we do.

By the way, in Texas we're not talking about a pile of corn. We're talking automatic feeders that dispense feed at particular times. Some on a timer, some on photo cells that work off sunlight. The deer know exactly when those feeders are going to go off and they hang around in the brush waiting for the pan to drop. They have to be there to get their share and they don't lay around being lazy, waiting to go get some feed at their leisure. It's like women at the mall on the day after Christmas, waiting for security to unlock the doors.<img src=icon_smile_wink.gif border=0 align=middle>
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Old 01-07-2003, 09:01 AM
  #14  
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Old 01-07-2003, 12:50 PM
  #15  
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

Krisken,
Its hard to explain unless you see the conditions. Some places here are better than others. If the water level is high then the cost of pumping and useing a well is cheeper, but if its deep.....$$$$.
There are two wells on this property but for that reason they are not used.
I would love to plant but this past year the area did not get any rain to speak of till Oct. and then it was hit with about 10 to 12 inches or more. I could not get most of the time to hunt till about mid november. Sounds like everything should be nice and green doesnt it? Well with that amount most of the seed was washed away. Where the wheat was drilled is a little higher and it came up in spots. Right now the farmer is feeding cotton hulls to his cows. Its a cheep filler type of food.
I was out last week and the tanks are already getting low. The big one is ok but the smaller ones do not hold for long.
So again I can plant and hope that the rain will be kind and it will grow to be a nice plot, BUT, if it does the chances are that the farmer will put his cows on it. Can I do anything about it? I can say all I want but its his land and what grows on it is his to use as he wants.
Makes you think twice about how lucky you are to have a nice area doesnt it!
Prices for good leases here have about doubled from last year. Why? Texas Parks and Wildlife!!! Thats the bottom line. They are telling farmers and ranchers that they should be getting about a thousand a gun for hunting rights. Last year the average lease within 3 hrs of here was about 650 to 800 a gun depending on the amount of land ect...
This year its about 1000 to 1700 per gun. Next year who knows? I may be buying a cow and shooting it with my bow. It probably will be cheeper and I would be getting alot more for my money.<img src=icon_smile_dissapprove.gif border=0 align=middle>
Land prices arnt any better. What I have seen is about 500/acre for unimproved ranch land with nothing on it. I dont know about you but that is very high for me unless I win the loto or somthing.

I have painted a gloomy picture here. This is where I hunt. There are better areas for $$$ prices and you have to go alot more miles.
When I read post of others getting 5 or more deer and what ever else I really wish I had a area like that. It would be great. However when I read post where someone who has places to hunt like those and comes in and tells everyone how bad it is to use a feeder I cant help but to get just a little bent. Not much just a little.
So I hope these post help shed some light on the other side of the coin. Any time you want to trade hunting spots let me know but no trading back.
Take care of what you have and good hunting.
Rick


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Old 01-07-2003, 04:18 PM
  #16  
 
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

I also hunt in Texas, and do not hunt a feeder, but I do bait in a way. I watch where the deer are feeding, naturally, and put down small 8&quot; piles of corn, or some other attractant not unlike using scent tactics on their travel corridors just to get them a little bit closer to me. I don't condition them, but simply offer a little snack. It seems to work great for me, and it is not so much like shooting fish out of a barrel, because of the patterning, and scouting necessary to find these corridors to begin with.
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Old 01-07-2003, 05:56 PM
  #17  
 
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

As has already been mentioned, it is your choice and how you feel about it. I hunt in Texas and while I have hunted feeders on occassion in the past, I personally no longer hunt feeders, just as I no longer hunt with a rifle. Not that I am against it, but for me it takes away from the hunt. However, while I do not hunt them,I do have a few feeders scattered about in peripheral areas. Whether perception or reality I do not know, but since all of my neighbors have feeders, I feel like I need them in order to draw/keep the deer on my property.

But I also have wheat in fall/winter and peanuts or sudan in the summer (assuming we have rain as mentioned) and can tell you that when given a choice deer prefer food plots over dry corn. If you hunt feeders in an area that has ample food plots available, you will likely be disappointed.

I concur with several of the other posts in that you are not likely to get a mature buck to visit a feeder during shooting hours. It has also been my experience that dominant and mature does also shy away from feeders during daylight hours, even when their offspring are feeding under them.

Interesting comments about the possible effects baiting has on deer's nocturnal habits. If the argument is that any introduced food source that is in ample supply, whether it be corn bait or food plot, causes the deer to be more nocturnal, I can buy into that. But to differentiate between a corn feeder and a field of wheat as far as its effect on nocturnal habits, I'm still scratching my head.

The same argument would hold true in that the deer know where an ample supply of food awaits them and they do not have too work hard to get their fill. Granted, there is a lot more peripheal area to a food plot compared to a feeder, making the hunt more difficult, but as far as suggesting that deer will start moving earlier in the afternoon when comparing food plots to corn bait, well.......???



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Old 01-07-2003, 06:01 PM
  #18  
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Old 01-07-2003, 06:10 PM
  #19  
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

Thundermug stole my thunder as did 5 shot. I am with them. there is just no difference at all. Good luck

Brian

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Old 01-07-2003, 08:26 PM
  #20  
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Default RE: In the interest of stirring up lots of trouble

Bow,
I think you mistitled your post. I for one have had a good time posting and reading on this.
Cods,
<BLOCKQUOTE id=quote<font size=1 face='Verdana, Arial, Helvetica' id=quote>quote:<hr height=1 noshade id=quote> However, while I do not hunt them,I do have a few feeders scattered about in peripheral areas. Whether perception or reality I do not know, but since all of my neighbors have feeders, I feel like I need them in order to draw/keep the deer on my property. <hr height=1 noshade id=quote></BLOCKQUOTE id=quote></font id=quote><font face='Verdana, Arial, Helvetica' size=2 id=quote>
<img src=icon_smile_question.gif border=0 align=middle> If the deer in your area are coming to your food plots why do you think that the feeders will make a difference in keeping them there? I feed corn and High protein in mine but the deer do not seem to like the protein. My corn is gone but not the other.
I also feel that the corn does help as a food during stress times.
Thanks for the thoughts,
Rick

Lifes not about knowing the answers, its about asking the questions.
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