Deer Hunting Tips
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Deer Calling Basics
From the maker of premium game calls, Knight & Hale
But what do you need to learn about deer calling to be able to practice? Read this lens and you will find out!
Choosing The Right Deer Call
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- Deer Talk 101
- A key to effective deer calling is matching your calling strategy and tactics to specific whitetail behavior at the time of year you're afield. You wouldn't greet everyone at a party by shouting "Fire!" would you? And you wouldn't wake your family up the morning of July 4th to celebrate Christmas would you? The same holds true for deer calling.
Types of Deer Calls
- Deer Grunt Calls
- Challenge the dominace of big bucks. Bucks grunt to indicate aggression toward another buck. Hearing a grunt in his territory will bring the dominate buck in close.
- Deer Bleat Calls
- Bleats are made by does and fawns. Fawns produce a bleat to keep in contact with does or as a call for help when in distress. Does bleat in social situations, as a contact call with fawns, to express distress or occasionally to let a buck know the doe's location.
- Deer Rattle Calls
- Everybody runs to a fight. Especially deer. Bring in curious bucks by imitating the sound of two sets of antlers crashing together.
- Electronic Hunting Calls
- Innovative new game calls will change the way you look at electronic calls.
Vote for Your Most Effective Deer Call
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Deer Hunting Tips
From the maker of premium game calls, Knight & Hale
- 20 Tips To Deer Hunting Success
- Whether you're a veteran buck hunter or a newbie heading to the woods for the first time, these tips can help you see more success this season.
- 8 Whitetail Hunting Mistakes: And How To Avoid Making Them
- The white-tail deer rut is the most talked about aspect of hunting, yet may be the most misunderstood. The rut can be broken down into three distinct phases: the pre-rut, peak of the rut and the post-rut.
- Deer Hunting Basics Article - How to Hunt America's Favorite Big Game
- Deer stay alive by avoiding predators. They do this by using their senses to detect danger. A deer's most useful senses are smell, hearing, and to a lesser extent, eyesight.
An Alternative To The Buck Grunt
These days, every hunter in the woods has some type of deer call, and odds are, it's a grunt call. Face it, grunt calls get all the press. And, buck grunts do pull in their share of big bucks. Who can say that a big, dominant buck charging in to a grunt call isn't exciting? From the late pre-rut to the post-rut, buck grunt calls enrage these testosterone-fueled animals, and the sound of another buck often is their undoing.But, there are times and locations when other calls make better attractors. If there are very few bucks in the area, a nearby subordinate buck may consider the sound of a buck grunt call a threat. Why fight if there are plenty of does to go around? In that case, a different type of deer call comes in handy.
How about during the early season when bucks are still in bachelor groups and not interested in meeting new friends? Or, during the late season, when food is on the minds of most bucks, which are weary from the rigors of fighting and the rest of the fun stuff associated with the rut. These reasons and more are why hunters should keep a fawn bleat call handy.
One of the reasons few hunters use fawn bleaters is that they simply don't understand these calls and why they work. A fawn bleat call plays on the maternal instincts of the doe. And remember, a buck may be following. When a mature deer hears a fawn in distress, it's going to investigate to see what's happening. But be aware, however, that responding deer will be on high-alert, and often circle downwind to get clues as to what's happening. When deer smell the hunter, the gig is up, and often the hunter hasn't even seen the deer.
In general, keep your calling sequences fairly short - 10 to 15 seconds, and wait 20 to 30 minutes before calling again. Whitetails have fantastic hearing, and a long calling sequence gives them time to pinpoint the source of the calling. Start quietly in case there's a deer closeby and get progressively quieter.
The fawn bleat is a sound created by the fawn to announce a form of distress, which can vary in intensity. A fairly calm fawn bleat can express that it's simply lost or separated from the doe. This call is a "contact call," and usually quiet and short. This call sound can be used anytime deer are not in sight. The result may not be a buck charging in, but will make any deer nearby more confident that other deer are nearby, and there's safety in numbers.
The other form of fawn bleat is the "full distress" call, when the hunter mimics the sounds of a fawn pleading for its life. This is the type of call often used by predator hunters. The sounds of a panicked, struggling fawn draws response from predators and mature deer, so be prepared for anything when producing these sounds.
As opposed to "contact calls," the "full distress" call can be very loud because the hunter is mimicking a fawn fighting for its life. Hunters also should call erratically, because a fawn defending its life will not be subtle. It will be screaming at the top of its lungs with every breath it takes.
Another factor to consider when using a "full distress" call is the predator factor. Hunters must realize that when imitating the sounds of a fawn in distress, they also are ringing a dinner bell for anything that preys on fawns, and that can mean grizzly bears, mountain lions, brown bears, or critters less likely to munch on you instead of a fawn, such as coyotes and bobcats.
Another important element to remember when using either fawn bleat calling method is to be selective in shooting. Often as not, the animal first responding to the call is a doe. When does are in the area, be alert to following bucks.
Buck grunt calls are fantastic calls that work a lot of the time. But, hunters should remember that other calls can work just as effectively.
Deer hunters can up the odds in their favor by using a bleat call instead of a grunt call.
How to Use a Deer Call to Lure in Bucks
How to Hunt Whitetail Deer : How to Use Deer Call to Lure in Bucks: Deer Hunting Tips & Techniques
Learn how to simulate buck calls to lure in deer using a deer call in this free video on deer hunting. Expert: John Borg Bio: John Borg has cut and stacked wood and has cleaned chimneys since young adulthood. Filmmaker: Blake Borg
Runtime: 1:01
73812 views
10 Comments:
curated content from YouTube
More Deer Hunting Tips
From the maker of premium game calls, Knight & Hale
- Proper Call and Scent Usage for Big Bucks
- A mature whitetail buck is a pretty calm, confident animal. Low-keyed in the shadows, big bucks use instinct and the experience of past seasons to stay out of sight. Just food, water and a comfortable bed - that's all it takes to satisfy a big buck. Until Fall Comes!
- Calling Big Bucks
- Several factors affect your success calling deer, but timing may be the most important. Perhaps the deer winded the hunter - calling often positions deer downwind of the sound so they can scent check the area to confirm with their noses what their ears told them. If the hunter is not relatively scent free, that downwind buck is long gone.
- Get Ready for the Rut
- The first thing to learn about big whitetail bucks during the rut is that there are no hard and fast rules. Bucks that felt the pressure of archery hunters likely have changed their routines or become more nocturnal. Regardless, as the rut peaks big whitetail bucks become unpredictable as their focus moves from food to does.
- 10 Tips For Archery Success
- Interested in learning 10 tips that will help you be more successful during bow hunting season?
Ultimate Whitetail Season 11 DVD
Another big season in the deer woods for Harold, David, and the Knight & Hale Ultimate Hunting Team is bad news for big bucks. Check out the newest installment of the Knight Hale Ultimate Whitetail XI for 22 heart-pounding bow, muzzleloader, and rifle hunts. Watch as the Ultimate Hunting Team captures 4 hours of breathtaking in-field footage. Harold and David give a fresh-look on rattling, muzzleloaders, and scoring big bucks in new tips segments. On 2 DVD's Ultimate Whitetail Season 12 DVD
Bustin' Bucks - 16 hunts on 2 DVDsDVD of Knight and Hale hunting bucks. Harold and David share the tips and tricks they used this season to harvest some big bucks despite the hindrance of a big acorn crop and warm weather. Includes a question and answer segment inspired by your emails.
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A place to share your deer calling tips or deer hunting experiences. Also, if you have any suggestions on how to improve this lens just let me know.
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