If your a weekend warrior and live a long way form your lease it’s going to be extremely tough to hunt the acorns. Also, most people that Lease are not allowed to just set up a stand anywhere on the Lease because of the other members and Lease rules. It is not impossible though if you have the time and can scout and set up anywhere. You have to be able to read the sign and set up accordingly. I used to hunt millions of acres of public land with hundreds of thousands of acres of Oaks and would kill deer pretty much every year off the oaks. The same deer tend to hit the same patch of oaks until the acorns get scarce in that patch and them they move on. I was never after a certain buck though and if you are, that is going to be near impossible by hunting the acorns. With that said, I would much rather take my chances hunting the acorns then sitting over a feeder that no deer are coming to or sitting at home waiting for the acorns to disappear. You also may end up seeing a bigger buck than your target buck. You also have to be willing to move your stand location a lot or setup multiple stands. It’s a lot more work then sitting at a feeder but a lot more rewarding when it pays off. For most Texas hunters, hunting the acorns just isn’t a realistic option and I fully understand the guys that don’t want to do it and why.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Acorns! Wow!
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by chase15 View Postthis is dumb. Point me to which of the 250,000 live oaks on our place i should sit. It sounds good in theory but its still darn tough to get a pattern on one in the hill country with a bow.
I think feeders are a great tool, but they've made many of us out to be very lazy "hunters".
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sackett View PostWhat Feeder did you shoot that Elk under (Assuming it wasnt shot in TX)? Use some of the same outdoorsmanship to target a whitetail, whether its finding a water hole, scouting what oak motts have fresh deer crap/sign, looking for rubs/scrapes and even glassing.
I think feeders are a great tool, but they've made many of us out to be very lazy "hunters".
Comment
-
Originally posted by chase15 View PostHaha you guys dont quit. Cant some folks just b!tch about a slow weekend.........
Comment
-
Originally posted by Smart View PostLOL...Come on now !!!
Charlie, you and I are usually on the same page here on this sight but that's freaking ridiculous talk. 4,400 acres of live oaks/shin oak trees and acorns on my side and the landowners side. There is no way in hell to pinpoint which tree a target buck is using living 5 hours away and trying to guess withing a 30 yards circle with a bow. No place to glass, not much area to walk honestly without boogering up your areas. Definitely a lot easier to sit at a desk and say to do it than do it.
If I hunted in East Texas and could "scout" the 10 whiteoak trees in a patch of 1,000 pines that's one thing... but pinpointing one deer and hanging your blind in one tree in 30,000-40,000 live and shin oaks is just not feasible.
I mean its not like you can pre-scout them before season. With that many trees you have to "scout while they are falling" which we covered above . It s not like they used them in the offseason.
That would be akin to telling somebody in South Texas to set up on the blackbrush or cactus tunas on 2000 acres if they aren't hitting corn..... or set up on all the fresh green growth on a newly rained on West Texas property. Its just not that feasible from 5 hours away.
There are things called creeks bottoms, and river bottoms with thousands of acres of oaks not to mention the oaks in upland areas. And these acorns actually last. Not rot in a month like post oaks.
Comment
-
In most areas in and around the Hill Country most of the cedar is cleared. Deer don't follow trails like in other areas. There aren't really trails, well except the ones to the feeders. LOL.
Not to mention when it's hot they more than likely stay bedded down under said oaks with acorns....in the shade. Prior to the drop they had to move to find food......and go to the feeder when the food came out.
Comment
-
Acorns! Wow!
Originally posted by Burntorange Bowhunter View PostIn most areas in and around the Hill Country most of the cedar is cleared. Deer don't follow trails like in other areas. There aren't really trails, well except the ones to the feeders. LOL.
Not to mention when it's hot they more than likely stay bedded down under said oaks with acorns....in the shade. Prior to the drop they had to move to find food......and go to the feeder when the food came out.
And all at night..
Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLast edited by Dale Moser; 10-04-2019, 03:10 PM.
Comment
Comment