Claude Pollington the Whitetail Wizard

 

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Opening Day Tips

image

 

It’s human nature. We fall in love with our opening-day ground blind or tree stand because we’ve thought about it for months on end. Does this mean your hotspot will be hot on opening day? Perhaps it will and maybe it won’t. It all depends on wind and weather conditions. One major problem hunters face is setting all of their stands for the prevailing wind direction. During Michigan’s bow and firearm deer seasons, the prevailing direction is south and southwest in October, west to northwest in November and northwest and north in December.

So here is this hotspot stand set up for opening day. It has the stand downwind for a south or southwest breeze. Good thinking! However, if you’ve followed wind patterns the past few years as I have, you’ll remember that nearly half of our October days featured an east wind. An east wind, unless stands are specifically placed for such wind currents, makes other stand locations nearly impossible to hunt without being detected by approaching deer. It’s easy to advocate having stands in key hunting locations for an east wind, but it’s sometimes quite difficult to find good spots. Most bow hunters, like me, prefer hunting out of a tree. One way to get around this problem is to hunt from an elevated coop. Keep the windows closed until it’s time to take a shot. The best way is to look at how deer travel, especially on an east wind, and locate that one key spot where whitetails filter through. Try to be downwind of the whitetail traffic.

Fishermen have long known that angling success often takes a nose dive on an east wind, and deer hunters - especially bow hunters - know the same holds true for them when hunting on an east wind. I’ve long known that an open tree stand may cause your scent to drift to the deer when the wind huffs from the east. An enclosed and elevated wooden blind with shooting windows can save the day. One thing is certain. The hunter who deliberately puts himself upwind of deer on an east wind will probably ruin that hunting spot for the rest of the season unless he can prevent deer from smelling them. A simple V-shaped wooden structure with just enough room to shoot can work if a box-type blind is not used. If an east wind blows on the Saturday opener, and your stand is not placed properly for that wind, it’s better to sit out the day than to risk spooking all the deer. Once deer are spooked from your hotspot stand, the odds are that they either won’t return past that site or will approach it with a great deal of caution. Be a savvy hunter. Play the wind like a fine violin, and never discount the ability of a whitetail deer to catch your scent.


image

Posted by Whitetail Wizard on 09/29 at 09:32 AM
Permalink
Page 1 of 1 pages

Statistics

This page has been viewed 77345 times
Page rendered in 0.1405 seconds
Total Entries: 13
Total Comments: 0
Total Trackbacks: 0
Most Recent Entry: 04/10/2011 02:15 pm
Most Recent Comment on: --
Total Members: 1
Total Logged in members: 0
Total guests: 2
Total anonymous users: 0
Most Recent Visitor on: 05/19/2012 01:00 pm
The most visitors ever was 89 on 07/16/2011 05:55 am

Referrers

Powered by ExpressionEngine

About

Welcome to the Whitetail Wizards Blog and I will have tips and tricks to make you a better hunter.

May 2012
S M T W T F S
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    

Search


Advanced Search

Categories

Monthly Archives

Most recent entries

Syndicate