Chasing deer

Badseed

WKR
Joined
Jul 10, 2020
Messages
540
How long do you wait to chase a bumped buck and how far will you track him before turning around?

While hunting with my son the other morning we bumped two bucks. My assumption was that they saw us because they wasn’t any wind that I could detect. They were just far enough away and tucked into some shrubby brushes that there was no chance for a quick off hand shot. As soon as we saw the bucks we had stopped moving with the hopes that they would bound off a little ways and stop moving once they realized they weren’t being pressured. We watched the bucks for at least 150 yards before they disappeared into the brush. We had a good vantage spot to see the area where they ran into so we laid down and glassed the area for about 10-15 minutes to see if they would pop up in one of the open pockets. I felt confident that if they hadn’t popped up by then, they had probably continued to run out of sight. After waiting, we walked down to where we saw them originally and started to follow their tracks. We followed them into some thick timber on a very steep canyon slope and ended up turning back because it was getting late in the morning and the wind was starting to swirl. On the walk back I started to wonder if I should have done anything different to increase the likelihood of a having a shot at the bucks.


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Joined
Jul 29, 2024
Messages
8
Location
Spokane, WA
How long do you wait to chase a bumped buck and how far will you track him before turning around?

While hunting with my son the other morning we bumped two bucks. My assumption was that they saw us because they wasn’t any wind that I could detect. They were just far enough away and tucked into some shrubby brushes that there was no chance for a quick off hand shot. As soon as we saw the bucks we had stopped moving with the hopes that they would bound off a little ways and stop moving once they realized they weren’t being pressured. We watched the bucks for at least 150 yards before they disappeared into the brush. We had a good vantage spot to see the area where they ran into so we laid down and glassed the area for about 10-15 minutes to see if they would pop up in one of the open pockets. I felt confident that if they hadn’t popped up by then, they had probably continued to run out of sight. After waiting, we walked down to where we saw them originally and started to follow their tracks. We followed them into some thick timber on a very steep canyon slope and ended up turning back because it was getting late in the morning and the wind was starting to swirl. On the walk back I started to wonder if I should have done anything different to increase the likelihood of a having a shot at the bucks.


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From my experience many bucks will run and eventually make a “J” or “L” shape. When they make their hook or turn they will often watch their back trail. I haven’t really gotten a consistent distance because of different situations. How hard they are bumped definitely plays into it. I think the more open the country, the further they will run without slowing down. How far I will follow them would depend on how well I know the area. Many spots I hunt, I know very well and would have a solid guess as to where those bucks are going. If I don’t have any clue where they are going, it would most likely depend on how well I could track them and how quiet I could be following them. If I have consistent tracks in quiet conditions, and know the buck I’m following is a shooter, I would drop the rest of my hunt to follow them. That situation would be most optimal after a fresh few inches of powder. If they go into a thick area with no chance of a shot, I would give them space and not spook them completely out of the area. Robby Denning has some great stuff to learn about this on the Rokcast episodes.
 

TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
3,105
On the walk back I started to wonder if I should have done anything different to increase the likelihood of a having a shot at the bucks.
That’s a good situation to meow at them with a cow call to pique their curiosity, stop and look back. I’ll blow it once just barely loud enough for them to hear and stop. If you aren’t able to get the shot off before they start moving again, and they aren’t too skittish, you might get them to stop a second time, but they will only stop for a few seconds so the shot has to be quick.

There are multiple compact calls that can be kept handy and are so small they don’t weigh much. I started using the Cow Talk brand way back and never had a reason to upgrade. The newer models do seem to have better sound, but for this purpose it probably doesn’t matter. Mine is always on the binocular strap and it’s automatic to put in the mouth just in case.
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TaperPin

WKR
Joined
Jul 12, 2023
Messages
3,105
. . . and there is a time to watch them walk away, and sometimes it pays off to run up to where they were last seen if it gives you a better vantage point. I’ve had deer on an all out run stop to look back at what is making all the noise coming toward them. Being excited, out of breath from a jog, and knowing a shot will have to be quick, is one of the most challenging moments to get a shot off. The same month I thought a nephew was old enough to fully understand and do it safely, we went over what not to do, and he ended up using it to get a respectable buck he had jumped near a big sage draw. Had he not changed vantage point quickly, his odds would have been zero.
 
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