High Elevation = Larger Bucks?

TimberHunter

WKR
Shoot2HuntU
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Prepping for an ID deer hunt. Over the last 5 years, we’ve dialed in a spot where deer seem to always be at. Largest deer we’ve seen in that spot was a 151” that I shot.

Plan to hunt the last week of Oct to hopefully increase the odds of larger bucks coming down to start the rut.

Part of me thinks go up high in new areas. Other parts says don’t leave deer to find deer. Any suggestions?


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I think the big deer are where they are. You probably just have to weed through a lot more of the medium sized ones to find a bigger one. And, there could be a bigger one this year in your normal spot.

IMO there’s no formula, if you’re not finding what you want then you’ll need to keep looking..high or low, cover the numbers
 
The biggest bucks I’ve ever seen and killed certainly aren’t “up high” or “miles back” in general. They are in the lower elevation rolling hills near agriculture. This holds true for the multiple states I hunt every year both private and public.

This is being very generic of course and I’ve seen and killed awesome bucks “up high” as well.

Learning an area can take years of spending time with the deer to figure it out.
 
That definitely depends on the area. I know places in Montana, where the big bucks are definitely down low. But where I hunt in Wyoming, the shooters are way up top above the elk.
 
Your key is hunting that last week in Oct.
We get pre rut then and bucks start staging near doe groups. Find doe - find bucks with or near them.
By those last 2-3 days the mature bucks are around the doe where we hunt in Wyoming.
Makes no difference in elevation for us.
 
5 years is a pretty good sample size. If you haven't seen any bigger deer than that and you aren't seeing rut activity then the majority of bigger bucks are probably still up high.
 
Your key is hunting that last week in Oct.
We get pre rut then and bucks start staging near doe groups. Find doe - find bucks with or near them.
By those last 2-3 days the mature bucks are around the doe where we hunt in Wyoming.
Makes no difference in elevation for us.

10-4. The spot I usually hunt definitely has does. We’ve just always hunted it some time between Oct 10-15 and the latest was Oct 23 (first year we were there so we likely missed other bucks as I went after the first decent one I saw)


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5 years is a pretty good sample size. If you haven't seen any bigger deer than that and you aren't seeing rut activity then the majority of bigger bucks are probably still up high.

80% of the years we’ve been there Oct 10-15, one year the latest was Oct 23 (first year so went after first decent buck). Wondering if those last days of Oct make a difference?


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