Hi, folks. I moved to Boise for grad school this summer, so I'll be doing plenty of hunting over the next few falls. I recently got back from a 4 day solo scouting trip in an Idaho mountain range that shall remain nameless. I found over 100 individual elk by my count, but mule deer were few and far between. I ended up coming out earlier than I hoped to because I wasn't seeing many deer, which is primarily what drove me to head back there. I'm wondering if there jut weren't many deer there, or if I was scouting ineffectively. Here's what I was doing:
1) Looking at my map to identify patches of sage and grass in or near timber
2) Moving my camp 1/2 - 1 mile from a glassing knob then glassing the area for one morning and one evening
3) Glassing the surrounding land during the afternoon to look for good big buck hidey holes
Here are a few questions I have:
1) How can I narrow down the spots I should be glassing/scouting? It's big country out there, and I felt overwhelmed by all of the basins I could glass, and would like to focus on the one's that are most likely to hold deer.
2) Is glassing areas that might hold deer an adequate scouting technique, or is there more to it than that? I didn't want to drop down into the timber to look for sign much so as not to bump deer out of their beds. Additionally, I can cover a lot more country glassing than walking.
3) Is glassing a spot for 2-3 hours at both first and last light a good glassing technique, or is midday glassing productive as well?
Any other mule deer scouting tips that I didn't ask about are greatly appreciated.
1) Looking at my map to identify patches of sage and grass in or near timber
2) Moving my camp 1/2 - 1 mile from a glassing knob then glassing the area for one morning and one evening
3) Glassing the surrounding land during the afternoon to look for good big buck hidey holes
Here are a few questions I have:
1) How can I narrow down the spots I should be glassing/scouting? It's big country out there, and I felt overwhelmed by all of the basins I could glass, and would like to focus on the one's that are most likely to hold deer.
2) Is glassing areas that might hold deer an adequate scouting technique, or is there more to it than that? I didn't want to drop down into the timber to look for sign much so as not to bump deer out of their beds. Additionally, I can cover a lot more country glassing than walking.
3) Is glassing a spot for 2-3 hours at both first and last light a good glassing technique, or is midday glassing productive as well?
Any other mule deer scouting tips that I didn't ask about are greatly appreciated.