I think the OP lacks some aggression and some hunting experience. Which is just fine!
If I were in your shoes, I would be trying to call an animal in, rather than sit and wait. It easier for them to come to you.
It sounds like you suffer from some setups that are not planned out well. I see this with newer hunters or hunters who haven't called in a lot of any animals. Learning how to position yourself in an ambush is a learn skilled. To learn this, try hunting turkeys and predators. Pay attention to what happens when you know you called something in. Each time you fail to kill the animal you called in, you'll apply that lesson to the next set up.
Animals expect to the animal making the noise. If you set up in a way the animal can look from a distance or cover, you're doomed. A proper set up will only let that animal see when they are killable. This why there are a lot of caller/shooter situations. The shooter is way out in front of the caller so the animal has no idea to expect something where the shooter is.
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If I were in your shoes, I would be trying to call an animal in, rather than sit and wait. It easier for them to come to you.
It sounds like you suffer from some setups that are not planned out well. I see this with newer hunters or hunters who haven't called in a lot of any animals. Learning how to position yourself in an ambush is a learn skilled. To learn this, try hunting turkeys and predators. Pay attention to what happens when you know you called something in. Each time you fail to kill the animal you called in, you'll apply that lesson to the next set up.
Animals expect to the animal making the noise. If you set up in a way the animal can look from a distance or cover, you're doomed. A proper set up will only let that animal see when they are killable. This why there are a lot of caller/shooter situations. The shooter is way out in front of the caller so the animal has no idea to expect something where the shooter is.
Sent from my SM-S918U using Tapatalk