Mule Deer Newbie

Ihavelegs

FNG
Joined
Dec 9, 2025
Messages
1
Hey everyone. I'm looking to gain some insight on Muley's. I was born in MT and have lived all over the country thanks to the US Army, but my wife and I came back and settled down in MT a number of years ago. Despite being born in MT, I have never harvested a mule deer. I know the east side of the state has taken a spanking as far as hunt pressure, droughts, and hard winters. Luckily, I'm not planning on hunting that side of the state.

I want to find some mountain Muley's. I know they are in the area, but I have never had a mentor for hunting. Everything I have learned has been on these forums, youtube, podcasts, or talking to people. I have found a lot of success with whitetail and I don't have trouble finding them intuitively.

Specifically my questions around mule deer are these: Okay so you've picked your zone (Or it has picked you). Once you have that information, how do I go about e-scouting before getting in with boots on the ground? What kind of terrain features? What slope orientation should I be looking for? What about feed in the mountains? I found threads on feed in the bottomland sage country, but not as much as mountain muley's. What about water? From my understanding and learning, I have found they are not as reliant on water as whitetails.

If you find muley's, but you're only finding large groups of does with spikes/forkies, where else should you look?

I see all of these videos online of these dudes glassing these deer up, but I have had trouble with my glassing approach I think as well. A lot of the areas I hunt are more of the timbered areas, so I have a hard time finding glassing vantages and glassable ground. When you're looking at a zone, how do you pick it apart for the "hidey holes" that fit or dictate your style of hunting ie; glassing, still hunting, tracking, etc.

Say a zone has a massive ridge running north & south, but has saddles/finger ridges dropping down the east face. I've seen deer on the east face, but does the orientation matter? Will they still find the feed, water, cover, and does? Or will they move to different areas on that ridge system? Just a little lost..

Thank you for any info in advance!
 
Mule deer don’t seem to be doing any better on the western side of the state. I’m done dedicating time to Montana mule deer until things improve, if they ever do. Planning to go out of state during rifle season for a while, population densities don’t seem to be worth the PTO, there’s better opportunity elsewhere. FWP needs to do something more drastic than their recent propositions. I saw more bighorn sheep than mule deer during rifle season this year.
 
Montanas season aligns with the rut. If you find does keep checking them and you’ll eventually find a buck with them.

Muley bucks cover a lot of country that time of year to find does. Find a good vantage point and glass.


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Hey everyone. I'm looking to gain some insight on Muley's. I was born in MT and have lived all over the country thanks to the US Army, but my wife and I came back and settled down in MT a number of years ago. Despite being born in MT, I have never harvested a mule deer. I know the east side of the state has taken a spanking as far as hunt pressure, droughts, and hard winters. Luckily, I'm not planning on hunting that side of the state.

I want to find some mountain Muley's. I know they are in the area, but I have never had a mentor for hunting. Everything I have learned has been on these forums, youtube, podcasts, or talking to people. I have found a lot of success with whitetail and I don't have trouble finding them intuitively.

Specifically my questions around mule deer are these: Okay so you've picked your zone (Or it has picked you). Once you have that information, how do I go about e-scouting before getting in with boots on the ground? What kind of terrain features? What slope orientation should I be looking for? What about feed in the mountains? I found threads on feed in the bottomland sage country, but not as much as mountain muley's. What about water? From my understanding and learning, I have found they are not as reliant on water as whitetails.

If you find muley's, but you're only finding large groups of does with spikes/forkies, where else should you look?

I see all of these videos online of these dudes glassing these deer up, but I have had trouble with my glassing approach I think as well. A lot of the areas I hunt are more of the timbered areas, so I have a hard time finding glassing vantages and glassable ground. When you're looking at a zone, how do you pick it apart for the "hidey holes" that fit or dictate your style of hunting ie; glassing, still hunting, tracking, etc.

Say a zone has a massive ridge running north & south, but has saddles/finger ridges dropping down the east face. I've seen deer on the east face, but does the orientation matter? Will they still find the feed, water, cover, and does? Or will they move to different areas on that ridge system? Just a little lost..

Thank you for any info in advance!



You have a long winter ahead of you.

Dig into every single thread in the Mule Deer section of this forum, going back a couple of years.

While doing this, also track down every book mentioned, or podcast referenced, and study those.

Every question you asked is here, for the finding. Study those threads and other sources, and you will have more knowledge than 95% of seasoned mule deer hunters.

Then go apply it, starting no later than late May, just "scouting" around any area you want. You don't need to have tags to learn how to hunt mule deer, but you do need to learn how to hunt by actually getting out and applying what you've absorbed.
 
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