Mule deer hunting tips?

rp672

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Oct 19, 2024
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I'm a whitetail hunter from IL, considering a mule deer hunt in the coming years. I've never done much spot and stalk before (all stand hunting in IL), so just wanting to get some general advice on mule deer hunting. Leaving this very open ended as I'm really not sure what questions I need to be asking. Any pointers?
 
Definitely not trying to be a jerk in this response, but the single best tip I can give you is to read every thread in the Mule Deer section going back a year or two, and more if you can handle it. It's absolutely packed with some of the best information you could ever find, anywhere, on hunting mule deer.
 
Mulies live in such varied terrain it can help to know what topography you enjoy hunting and focus on that. Not only is that more enjoyable, but you become more proficient in that niche. At first everything is new, but if it doesn’t quite seem like a good fit, trying a different type of hunting can be more personally rewarding.

I enjoy hunting ridges that concentrate bedding areas in ways my brain understands, while certain friends hunt a part of the state where foothills meet aspen patches without well defined ridges. These friends have a pile of 30” deer, so it’s been quite effective. When I join them, my intuition isn’t well developed for that type of hunting and it’s just not enjoyable, or productive after years of trying to make it work. Some ridges can be glassed and I also like those that are hidden from long range and have to be still hunted.

Other friends focus entirely on dry foothills almost entirely sage draws and some Pinion Juniper (PJ). I’ve met guys that specialize in heavily covered brush hillsides, or agricultural adjacent herds, or rolling heavily timbered terrain, or even mountain creek bottom deer that are bedded down low and feed up away from the creek bottoms. In each case it takes some experience and good fit with how your brain works to understand them well enough to find older deer consistently. In the end we tend to lean towards what produces the best results.

A big regret was a monster non typical seen in the middle of nothing but miles of nondescript heavily timbered rather flat terrain with multiple small springs and tiny patches of browse scattered all over it. He grew old because it was incredibly hard for hunters to understand how to find him. At the time I spend many weeks going over maps, visiting it, brainstorming how to hunt it and after that season wrote it off as a low percentage area even with one good deer somewhere in there. To this day it makes my gut hurt to be so close and not have the ability to figure it out, and my ADHD isn’t patient enough to just mindlessly still hunt it all season. Lol

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