BrendanHickey
FNG
Hunting in California wildernesses - do the bucks like to live on slopes that only have brush and no trees? If not pressured at all, how far are they moving for food, water and shade during archery season?
Appreciate the reply - We went into an area that burned fairly recently, found a lot of good bucks in archery opener last year and got some shots off without luck and then went back in rifle and didn't find any of the big ones, only a few of the smaller ones. I just assume the pressure pushed them deeper in the canyons or pushed them into adjacent draws.There are no hard and fast rules. Many times they can be in the brush that regrows after a fire as there is often feed there. If there is shade there, they may bed there as well. Slopes that burn that hot and every tree is gone are often south facing, meaning not a lot of mid day shade, in which case they’ll go into a nearby draw or change slope aspect to get shade. As far as how far they are moving….as little as possible. Can be 10 feet or a mile. Just really depends on the area, the deer, pressure, etc. One thing is that the bucks will try to stay up high and will use little springs and seeps for water if available, whereas the does will come down to established water like ponds and creeks. If you are seeing does down low but no bucks, then look into higher, thicker cover. Be prepared to sit and glass a long time and pick a hillside apart. They definitely like burns. I shot my buck in a 3 year old burn last season here in Ca.
very true, brush is easier to glass but hard to focus on particular portions, versus timber patches on some broken hillside where you'd expect to see the deer.To answer your specific question. NO- bucks won't "live" in an area that only has brush and no trees..
There is ALWAYS pressure. Human, Bear, Cougar, etc.. Just because you think you have found a spot that no human has been at, likely one has.
I have seen bucks stay in hillsides with only brush and no trees for a while, but eventually they will move/relocate to other areas.
Upside of brush hills is they are easier to glass. Glass them long and hard and hard and long.
that's a dandy blacktail shedI did a lot of shed hunting this spring in a recent-ish burn area. Found this in the only spot on the entire mountain that had a stand of mature Doug-firs that survived. The rest of that mountain was scorched earth. Never say never and never say always, but if it were me I’d look for places that still have some shade trees.
Not California, but I would still think they'd seek out the cover.