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| You Are Here: | Game & Fish >> Hunting >> Whitetail Deer Hunting | ||||
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Deadly Transitional Rut Strategies
Carry these stratagems afield to improve your odds of tagging a rut-crazed buck this season!
There's something special about being in the woods during the rut, when bucks with swollen necks, high testosterone levels and bad attitudes are on the move. You never know when a heavy-racked giant is going to break out of a thicket chasing a hot doe and give you the shot you've been waiting on all season. There are probably more big deer tagged during the rut than at any other time of the year. In many cases a lot of luck is involved in these big buck encounters, but an understanding of the distinct stages of the rut can help ensure that a hunter is in the right place at the right time. Without question, simply being in the woods during the rut can sometimes be all it takes to tag a buck of a lifetime. Every year, "luck hunters" show up at the local check-in station showing off a stud in the back of their truck. However, there is a big difference between occasional luck and consistency in the deer woods. I have always been more impressed by the hunter who tags big bucks on a regular basis. These are usually the hunters who understand the different transitional phases of the rut and are able to adapt their hunting strategies to meet changes with whitetail behavior. This season, give the following deadly transitional rut strategies a try. Over time, they'll help you to consistently drop the hammer on bucks with intimidating headgear in your neck of the woods. THE OCTOBER CHANGE HUNTING THE PRE-RUT TRANSITION Glassing open food sources like green fields, soybeans or other types of plots to pattern how bucks are entering and leaving the area is a great starting point. A good quick-hitting strategy is to go mobile and set up a light climbing stand overlooking worn trails leading to the food source. Setting up along the edges of these food sources and intercepting bucks traveling to and from these areas can be deadly during this transition. Another good strategy is to hang a stand inside or along the edge of known staging areas to catch bucks hanging out within these sheltered sanctuaries before entering the open fields. Both of these early setups will produce long before the rut has ever started. HUNTING THE MID-OCTOBER PRE-RUT TRANSITION |
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