Stand height
#13
I like to get pretty high. I have a 30' pull rope, and frequently will have it taut before I am done climbing. Usually stay at, or around 25', though. I only hunt from ladder stands during gun season. The lowest of any of those, though, is 18' to the platform. The higher you can get, the less chance you have of being busted...being seen, or smelt.
#14
Spike
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 22
I hunt out of a climbing stand because they are easy to move and they are more comfortable than any ladder stand I've ever hunted out of. I would say 95% of the time I am 25 ft. or so. I feel at that height, you are out of their sight and it helps cut down on them busting you by smell.
#15
I like to get pretty high. I have a 30' pull rope, and frequently will have it taut before I am done climbing. Usually stay at, or around 25', though. I only hunt from ladder stands during gun season. The lowest of any of those, though, is 18' to the platform. The higher you can get, the less chance you have of being busted...being seen, or smelt.
I will add that while I prefer 20 - 25 feet, the height I climb to is always cover dependent. There are times, in certain areas that have thick cover, where 15 feet is as high as you can go and still have anything resembling a decent shot. There are other times when my 30' bow rope is pulling my bow into the air before I get to decent cover. It just depends on the situation, really.
#17
I agree 100%, I climb to where I have the best cover and/or the best shooting windows. The later in the season the higher I go because I loose the leaves to conceal me.
#18
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 1,926
Is there perfection?
Anyone using a ladder stand has to pick a location best for the ladder stand. One size doesn't fit all locations.
Using a climbing stand, I used the leaves on trees, the one I climbed and the nearby surrounding trees, to provide cover rather than taking a lower or higher place for the stand first.
And if what you do isn't working you change. You have to adjust to the deer; not adjust to yourself.
Using a climbing stand, I used the leaves on trees, the one I climbed and the nearby surrounding trees, to provide cover rather than taking a lower or higher place for the stand first.
And if what you do isn't working you change. You have to adjust to the deer; not adjust to yourself.
#20
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: ohio
Posts: 637
i have a 30 foot rope and on many occasions in the climber i have went until i lifted my bow. if it is a hang on stand 15-25 feet depending on the tree and cover. ladder stands, i use 20 foot ladder stands. in reality the platform is like 18ft