Not in Idaho anymore but I’m doing exactly that in North Dakota right now. I’ve got a little chunk of public land that holds a bunch of does. There’s a really good buck that’s sitting on the outskirts of that public right now. I’m not going in to bump the does until I see he’s on unable land. Hoping he slips up tomorrow morning and comes to check them in the cut banks.Here's a question for all of you. Just got back from another 4 days of hunting, found a pile of deer and mainly 2-3 year olds with the doe groups, along with forkies, but bucks were acting rutty. We did find two older age class bucks that had doe groups but elected to pass on both of them. I will be back down again for another long weekend then again the following weekend if needed.
My thought is to keep tabs on the doe groups to see if any bigger bucks show up while also expanding the search to the outskirts of where we found the majority of the deer. Would anyone do anything different? Go to a whole new area maybe? I have 2-3 helpers so we can spread out, but even if we were spreading out to check the different groups of deer we still wouldn't be able to cover all the area we found deer.