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Busted By Doe
Good morning my fellow Deer slayers. How long after being busted in a spot will the Deer avoid it? I went out scouting last night to a corn field freshly harvested and waited for the sun to go down. About 7:30 3 Does worked their way into the field not more than 18 yards from my spot. I expected them to enter from the other side of the field but you know they never do what you think they will. I watched them for 15 minutes before the big mature one got to a point where she could see me. Well once she took a good look she stomped the ground blew and flew. This is a well concealed spot I hope to hunt in a month or so but now I afraid I've educated them more than I learned about them. Will they come by this spot again? How long would you stay away from it after being busted? Thanks and good hunting to all.:fighting0007:
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How long after being busted in a spot will the Deer avoid it? |
For the most part deer are used to see humans in urbanized environments.I consider corn fields pretty urbanazied considering
there is lots of vehicals farming equipment running from early dawn to after dusk.They are pretty use to seeing people.If you didn't give chase and push it right out of country like you claim not to have done they will be back.if the food they like is there it will be back.Weather or not it's the food they want in a month is a different story.They may want something different and move on then. |
If the doe just thought she saw something unusual and spooked I doubt there will be a long range affect. If she smelled you it might take longer.
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After she spooked I did not move a muscle until they went back into a thicket and then quitely left the area. She did not wind me because the wind was as good as it gets for a hunter in my favor. I watched her for quite a while and she was calm. She saw me and that spooked her,I don't think she could figure out what I was and decided not to risk geting nailed by what ever I was in her mind. So based on what you all have shared I think I will get to use that spot or close by it again.Thanks
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You should be alright.... I went and checked a trail cam the other day only to find the first 5 pics were of family members that decided to go for a walk through the woods and trounce around my treestand, (Baffles me...no one goes out there all dang season....and then they take field trips 2 weeks before the season opener...AAGGGHH!!!), yet I had 3 does in that spot within the hour, and continued to have activity til the next morning. LOL..they were right on schedule!
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Originally Posted by Muzzlearcher
(Post 3684294)
You should be alright.... I went and checked a trail cam the other day only to find the first 5 pics were of family members that decided to go for a walk through the woods and trounce around my treestand, (Baffles me...no one goes out there all dang season....and then they take field trips 2 weeks before the season opener...AAGGGHH!!!), yet I had 3 does in that spot within the hour, and continued to have activity til the next morning. LOL..they were right on schedule!
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Don't think that every time you bump a deer or get busted that the deer leave the area because they don't. You might run a mature buck out of his core area if you continously harrass him in and around his bedding area but the does ain't going anywhere. I even bumped a big 10 right out of one of his beds in his bedding area trying to get a stand set right on the edge of his bedding area for my son to pistol hunt him and my son still killed him the very next morning in that same stand.
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We had a hunting camp in Pennsylvania - about 5 miles up the road from my mom's house and I can remember dad throwing apples at two young deer and the deer eating the apples.
They had seen my dad from the time they were very young, while he was cutting grass. The camp yard was full of apple trees and to two young deer that had no fear of humans - it was like eating at the all you can eat buffet at Denny's. Come hunting season, my Uncle who owned the camp shot the one and I shot the other. There were times where we were cutting timber and was running chainsaws and stopped to do something and looked behind us and there were deer there 30 feet away - eating browse off the tree tops. Most urban deer have come to accept humans as a part of their lives and it doesn't make much difference to them one way or the other - as long as you are moving - it doesn't bother them. When you sit down somewhere and decide to stay there - that is when it gets more tricky. There are people who lives at Treasure Lake - up near Du Bois PA that will tell you that they have deer in their yards every day - that you can set your watch by them. Some of them comes walking around the side of the house - right down the side walk like family pets. Deer are real stupid - that is as long as you are not trying to archery hunt them. As soon as an arrow goes Zip - they get smart in a big hurry. |
I really don't think you have to worry about anything. If you didn't move till they where gone, more often than not they circled around and came back like rabbits. I have seen that more often than not.
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Mr. Deer Hunter, that reminds me of something that happened several years ago. I was having a stand of timber thinned and the man running the chainsaw felling trees had a tree rock back on his saw with the wind. He went up the hill to get a skidder to push the tree of the saw and when he walked back down to the still running saw there was an 8 point smelling of the saw.
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Last year I had this spot that I would go to for an afternoon hunt. Going in a good percentage of the time I would spook deer. There was just no way to get in without spooking some especially when you’re walking on potato chips the whole time. Because I was in full camo I don't think they really knew what I was and they definitely did not get wind of me but they saw enough movement to take off. Well what in learned is that these particular deer and it could be and usually was 10-15 of them would come right back within a couple of hours. Going in I would see them run right up the mountain and then come back. I could not believe it but it happened several times. So you never know what they will do but I agree with GregH it depends how badly they are spooked.
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Depends on how much corn I add to the bait pile orhow hungry they get after the fact.
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I think ur good. I was in a stand last night and had deer blowing at a racoon. I think deer are used the each other blowing at stuff.
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Exactly what PY Antlers said. Ive had them blow me in the stand and then come in 45 minutes later to be turned into sausage. If they didnt recognize you as a threat, only as something different or moving, they will watch you leave and be ok.
We had deer coming to the corn plies back in the sumer almost as soon as the corn hit the ground. If you are getting rain, unlike us, you can travel more without as much impact. A couple of my stand locations had blood spilled over them last weekend and they still havent recovered. Im hoping the deer will feel more at ease this week. |
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