22 11, 2023

Thanksgiving Message: “Never End the Fight”

2023-11-22T10:31:22-05:00November 22nd, 2023|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Deer Hunting|Comments Off on Thanksgiving Message: “Never End the Fight”

Got this note from a hunter named Tracy K. It encourages me, and I hope you as well, to stay positive in mind and spirit this holiday season: Mike, suffering from diabetes and from multiple surgeries, I lost my lower right leg. Being 59 and a hunter all my life I was uncertain about my future in the deer woods. I would like to share with you that no matter what you go through, please “Never End The Fight,” as our brothers and sisters in the armed forces would say.—Tracy Bravo Tracy, hang in there man and good luck. To all of you, happy Thanksgiving.

20 11, 2023

Tired of Sitting in a Deer Stand? Try Stalking the November Rut

2023-11-20T13:53:22-05:00November 20th, 2023|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Deer Guns & Loads, Deer Hunting, Deer Rut, whitetail deer|Comments Off on Tired of Sitting in a Deer Stand? Try Stalking the November Rut

Sneak 15 yards…lean against a tree…look for movement…listen…glass ahead and to the sides with your binoculars…then slip another 20 yards…look and listen. I’ve killed quite a few rutting bucks that way with a gun, but only when conditions are right. This is NOT something you do on public land. And I “slip hunt” only on a private property with very light hunting pressure. You want to still-hunt without worry of bumping into a stranger, or driving an 8-pointer into his sights. Stalking has advantages. You cover a lot of ground, which increases your odds of encountering more bucks trolling for does if you do it right. The more you move around, the more rubs, scrapes and big tracks you’ll find [...]

20 11, 2023

5 Deer Facts That Will Help You Tag a Buck

2023-11-07T10:05:14-05:00November 20th, 2023|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Deer Science, whitetail deer|Comments Off on 5 Deer Facts That Will Help You Tag a Buck

When deer scientists talk, I listen. Men and women who make a career of studying the whitetail don’t do it for fame or money. Having grinded for years to obtain a master’s degree in wildlife ecology, and in many cases a PhD to boot, they are passionate about learning all they can about America’s most popular game animal, and then implementing best practices for managing herds across the nation. When the biologists are also hunters, as most mentioned here are, I double down on their data because I’m confident it will help me, and you, shoot more big deer. Rubs: Zero to 100s  In a Michigan study, whitetails were totally removed from an enclosure; no deer inhabited the place for [...]

16 11, 2023

3 Best Rifle Stands for the Deer Rut

2023-11-07T09:47:05-05:00November 16th, 2023|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Deer Guns & Loads, Deer Hunting, Deer Rut, whitetail deer|Comments Off on 3 Best Rifle Stands for the Deer Rut

One morning in Oklahoma, a guide named Jim pointed me to a box blind and whispered, “When the sun comes up, you can see and shoot a country mile brother. Watch the tree line out front. Good luck.” I climbed into the box and the sun rose splendid pink and blue. I couldn’t see a mile to the tree break, but might as well have. My rangefinder read 412 yards to the front edge of the timber. I refuse to shoot at a deer that far away, not even with a finely tuned rifle and a solid rest, so I was basically an observer the rest of the morning. Might as well make the best of it. I glassed 3 [...]

14 11, 2023

Deer Science: Whitetail Buck’s Pineal Gland

2023-11-07T09:34:14-05:00November 14th, 2023|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Deer Hunting, Deer Science, whitetail deer|Comments Off on Deer Science: Whitetail Buck’s Pineal Gland

My friends over at North American Whitetail magazine just published this article on the Science of the Whitetail Rut by deer researcher Clint McCoy. Among many other interesting rut things, Clint talks about a topic we’ve never addressed here at Big Deer: the pineal gland, which lies close to the optic nerve in a buck's brain…variations in photo-period (amount of light each day) prompt the pineal gland to initiate hormonal reactions in a buck’s body. Clint first points out that the whitetail deer is a “short-day breeder.” After the summer solstice occurs on June 21, each day’s length begins to shorten, dropping to less than 11 hours a day in early to mid-November. He then writes, …as daily photo-period reduces [...]

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