31 08, 2022

Should You Shoot A Buck And Leave It Overnight?

2022-08-25T09:28:37-04:00August 31st, 2022|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Bowhunting, Deer Hunting, whitetail deer|1 Comment

Short answer, no. I’ve had several bad experiences with does and bucks I’ve shot at last light and, fearing a marginal hit, left overnight. I won’t do it now if the nighttime temperature is 40 or above, which it almost always is in early archery season in most places. And 40 degrees is marginal. I believe you need the night air to dip down into the 20s or cooler to have hope of salvaging good, tasty meat from a deer that has lain on the ground, guts in, for 10 to 12 hours or more. To leave a wounded buck or not all night is the most agonizing dilemma that I hope you are not forced to deal with this [...]

29 08, 2022

Hot-Weather Deer Care For The Best Venison

2022-08-25T09:16:37-04:00August 29th, 2022|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Bowhunting, Deer Hunting, whitetail deer|Comments Off on Hot-Weather Deer Care For The Best Venison

The weather will be warm to hot when you start bowhunting in September or early October. Whether you shoot a doe or 150-inch buck, it is your ethical and legal obligation to properly care for the meat. Allowing an animal to spoil is not only the biggest sin in the hunter’s code of conduct, but in an extreme case a conservation officer could cite you for wanton waste. You want to do right and you want good, clean venison; here are some things to keep in mind when the temperature is 60 to 70 degrees or more. After the Shot Climb out of your stand and go look for the deer as soon as you can after the shot.  The [...]

19 08, 2022

Deer Tip: Key Off A Small Buck To Shoot A Big Buck

2022-08-16T10:14:01-04:00August 19th, 2022|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Bowhunting, Deer Hunting, whitetail deer|Comments Off on Deer Tip: Key Off A Small Buck To Shoot A Big Buck

I cannot blog about buck bachelor groups, as I did earlier in the week, without my mind going back to John Schmucker and the enormous buck he killed in Ohio way back in 2006. That summer, John spent many evenings sitting on the roof of his carriage house in his backyard, watching an unbelievable buck through his binoculars. “I saw him almost every night when he’d come out into that bean field,” he said. “Some weeks, I’d see him 5 out of 7 afternoons.” Every time John spotted the 36-point giant, the deer was traveling with 3 smaller bucks, and he filed that away in his subconscious. When the Amish hunter went out with his crossbow on September 30 that [...]

16 08, 2022

3 Facts About Buck Bachelor Groups

2022-08-16T10:17:06-04:00August 16th, 2022|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Bowhunting, Deer Hunting, whitetail deer|Comments Off on 3 Facts About Buck Bachelor Groups

Buck Group Size: Two to 4 to 8 bucks hanging out together is typical in mid-August, but I have seen as many as 10 velvet-racked bucks in a late-summer group. Knowing how much I love to watch and study bachelor clubs, hunters from all over have emailed me with reports and pictures of 12 to 15 or more bucks feeding and posturing together in a field. Last year, a guy from Maryland reported seeing 30 different bucks in a soybean field most every night! Truth is, these mega-groups are rare. Big numbers of bucks are actually 2, 3 or more different bachelor groups that happen to come together and loosely comingle. Summer groups are comprised of bucks of all ages, [...]

22 07, 2022

9 Bowhunting Hacks For Early Deer Season

2022-07-18T08:53:12-04:00July 22nd, 2022|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Bowhunting, Deer Hunting, whitetail deer|1 Comment

To reduce hand pressure and torque that can throw arrows off line, hold your bow with a relaxed, open palm grip. When you relax your bow-holding hand your entire body tends to follow suit and loosen up, which makes you shoot more accurately. Screw broadheads into the 5 arrows you’ll carry in your hunting quiver. Shoot every arrow into a broadhead. You’ll find that 2 or 3 of those arrows fly truer than the rest, especially if you still use fixed heads. Mark those shafts 1,2 and 3. Those should be the first ones you hunt with. Is your peep sight right? To find out, clip your release to the string, close your eyes, draw your bow and anchor. Open [...]

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