Muley Buck
WKR
Love it! If ain't broke don't fix it!I like you have been hunting and backpacking the sierras for a long time. I’ve spent at least 7 days in D zone (most years a lot more than that) every year since 1994 and haven’t missed a year yet. I def agree with you that there is a lot in play in our neck of the sierras. What I’m telling you is that is has way more to do with vegetation and micro climates than it does hunting pressure.
What I can tell you from what I’ve seen, and maybe I’m just not the best hunter but it works for me year after year and that’s all that matters to me...
I'll give you that, topography can and will play a big role in that though. In my experience (at those elevations and in that type of country) most of the time they head to secondary living areas when that happens. How close is that to the bucks original location?? Answer is, it depends, I've seen bucks leave their original living area and relocate only a few hundred yards away. Then other times I've found that bucks have relocated up to 2 miles away in a completely different drainage.The deer are there. They may not be there during the season, but they don’t just disappear and “abandon” areas like guys think just because a few of them may get shot at for a few weeks out of the year. Or Billy Jack with his bow goes stomping through beds thinking he knows what he’s doing.
You're right, they don't just disappear. Although I have seen mountainsides that used to hold deer at one time that no longer do, due to legitimately being shot out. The deer simply cannot survive there because the hunting pressure was/is too great now. If I'm guessing correctly, (I think) I have a good idea about how and what you are doing. If that is the case, people saying “Ah hell that good area we used to hunt is just shot out” is just one of many excuses hunters use so they don't have to look at their own impatience and inadequacies. Those deer are indeed there. Ultimately I believe it is all situational and small things can have big impacts.They flat out don’t just disappear never to return again like everyone says. “Ah hell that good area we used to hunt is just shot out”. I always ask those guys how many times have you been to that spot in April May and June? Or for that matter, seeing how long after the season they stick around on dry years where late November and December snow packs are low enough? The biggest and baddest deer I ever laid eyes on stepped out 30 yards away from me on a hiking trail in D5 right at 8,000 feet of elevation. This was the 2nd week of December in 2006. I wish I had a camera he was just a thing of beauty. I looked for him the next year starting in late April, saw lots of deer but never found “the one” as I fondly refer to him lol.
Sorry and I apologize if I came across combative, that was not my intent at all. Don't get me wrong, I think you have tapped into a style of hunting and a line of thinking that most hunters will never experience, and I champion that! I enjoy reading and thinking about your perspective as well as others here. Hey, maybe we can show each other a thing or two someday.You’re right though there are a ton of arguments and strategies that work for guys that hunt this specific area. I was just offering a bit of advice for the guys who think they have to get out into the middle of nowhere when they simply don’t.