I’ve called in whitetails with enough success to have felt confident about applying those techniques from hayfield/cottonwood river bottom whitetails to mountain whitetails. I’ve rattled in bucks that came in to bow range with zero regard for the wind and I’ve brought bucks in with a snort wheeze or aggressive “roar” if rattling didn’t work. The more aggressive calling strategy doesn’t seem to translate… for the most part. I would guess that it’s due to their over cautious nature of living and surviving in the mountains where deer is always on the menu for a predator.
The way you guys describe setting up for calling deer is almost exactly how I set up for calling coyotes and it has crossed my mind that I need to look at it more like that. Getting a decent vantage and calling into edge habitat (clear cuts) so a curious buck has to at least poke his head out.
The area I’ve been hunting is on a south face and has been logged, but not clear cut and there isn’t as much brush on that face. I think my furthest shot I’d be able to have in the clearest part is like 150ish, which is pretty open considering that there’s free standing timber dotted all around.
I bought the DOA doe bleat call that Phelps makes to try and change it up a bit and only use tending grunts if I grunt at all. I think I’m going to change my rattling to be my grand finale before I call the stand a bust, much like I do with using a coyote death cry at the end of a predator hunting set. If they don’t come in to that, then someone smelled a rat. I’m already excited for next year and this season isn’t even over yet.
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