Netherman's 2025 Hunting Season

Day 3

Got pimped into helping with some office work so I took the early morning off. Late morning we set a hang on stand for the old guys on the edge of a big corn field. For the evening I went on another scout/hunt walk. I checked out some willow patches that had some sign but nothing “big”. I bumped a few does out of them too. (might be worth getting back to later in the week if the rut starts picking up.) I made a big move after that and started checking another section of creek. Creeping I stopped at a good looking community scrape and just crouched down to look and think for a minute. Suddenly I heard something walking and it was getting closer. I got an arrow nocked shifted to get a better angle on the trail the sound was coming from and slowly stood up to peek over the tall grass. It was a badger and he did not look happy that I was on “his” trail. “get out of here” I shouted in a whisper. He just stood there looking at me like I was the inferior species. Eventually he decided he didn’t want to fight the guy pointing a bow his way and turned around.

Continuing my walk in the overgrown hedgerow between the river and AG I spotted a doe that had already spotted me. I was already at 40 yards and with a new doe tag in my pocket decided to see if I could close the gap and get a shot. I got inside 30 but it was too brush for a shot. By that point she’d had enough and bounded over the hump down to the river. She didn’t seem all the smart so I continued creeping over, hoping she’d be standing there looking. As I peeked over I expecting to see her on my right. I don’t remember if I saw the doe or not but in my peripheral I saw a different deer to my left. It was a monster buck just standing in some leg deep willow along the bank about 50 yards away. We made eye contact then he whirled and crossed the 20 yard creek in two bounds and was gone. I poked around on the bank looking at his tracks. It looks like he had just crossed when I bumped into him. With about 30 min left of light I figured I’d give him some space and try and get on him in the morning. I scouted along the bank looking for a crossing trail and found a few candidates. Thinking he might still be on a bed to food pattern I found a ground set that would let me shoot the better of the two trails and planned to be in bright and early the next morning.

Lessons Learned: N/A

Questions: N/A

Day 4

In the black dark me and my friend hiked along the river to get to the crossing. As we got closer, I decided to flip my headlight from white to red. While I was messing with my headlamp, I stepped into a beaver hole along the bank and only stopped when my other knee hit the ground next to the hole. The hole was barely bigger than my boot and the statistical chance of this occurring had to be like 0.0001%. None of that matters though when your whole leg is soaked. I got set in a carved out hole in the willow patch overlooking the crossing and waited for daylight. I saw two coyotes running the opposite bank but no deer and no big buck. By 10 I was wet cold and ready to get a life change. We got back to the truck and ran to the B&B for so I could get some dry clothes.

For the afternoon hunt we went to a coulee type spot with a few cedar trees and a cut corn field above. Not a lot of sign where I was. My friend’s area had water and better sign. I ended up doing a big walk hoping to bump some deer to figure out how they were using the area, but never did.

Lessons Learned: I’m guessing the sign I saw was night time activity or even sign from when the corn was standing. Water is the source of life and I was never within 500 yards of it. I’m 75% confident in this and will focus my e-scouting to ensure water availability.

Questions: Curious to get other KS hunters thoughts on more arid spots. My thinking is that they’ll bed as close to water as cover and pressure allow.
 
Day 5

Had a heavy swirling wind so did some creeping in the general direction the big buck had come from. Saw a few butts but nothing with antlers (or antlers big enough to see while running). Midday I boned out the doe to make room in the cooler for the giant I was about to shoot.

The evening hunt we still had the high swirling wind so I decided to do a bit more creeping and hopefully find a new spot to leave a set for the morning. As I crept up to a pinch I found looking at onX I spotted a buck. He looked to be a 100s 6 point with a goofy left side and was working a scrape. (felt like I actually know something about hunting for once). I waffled on whether I wanted to shoot him. He got bonus points for being goofy, but I’d already shot a similar class buck back home and it’s not really what I went to KS for. Eventually he moved on following a worn in trail in the dry creek bed. I mapped out a ground setup for the next day and continued on my walk. Not much excitement after that until the hour before sunset. I got the text that the dad had shot a buck. I wasn’t far away so headed over to check it out and help get it out.

It wasn’t a giant but was awesome hearing him tell the story of the buck walking in, working the scrape, and licking the branch. The old guys have done the spot and stalk thing for mule deer and elk, but their whitetail deer hunting has been corn feeders and snow tracking in the UP. They’d already got it to the truck when I’d got there so I texted my friend that I’d ride back to the B&B with them.

Lessons Learned: N/A

Questions: N/A

Day 6

I got into the creek bed spot a tad late. With gray light I heard what felt like 1000 turkeys in the trees all around me. As color entered my morning they began flying down and started milling around the creek bed. I didn’t count but would guess there were two dozen or more jakes. Just like they always seem to do, a buck appeared out of thin air on the opposite bank. He was a good one and headed towards the scrape in front of me. 80 yards 70 yards then he stopped, and the turkeys began putting. Did they see me? I was in a cluster of 20ish inch oaks with a hunk of deadfall behind me and felt really good about my concealment. The turkeys began flying into the trees above me while the buck whirled and trotted off. I got my answer soon enough as two coyotes came trotting up the creek bed. They almost were worth a $30 broadhead for blowing my setup, but it’s tough to hate them for doing the same thing I was.

After the coyotes moved thru, the turkeys flew down and I spent the next hour as part of the flock. Eventually one got inside 5 yards of me, got jiggy, and the whole flock moved off. The buck never came back that morning. I did see a few does cross the ditch further up the creek so midday I crept up there to see what was going on. there were a few more scrapes and another tree fort cluster of oaks for a 2.0 setup. The wind was supposed to shift from N to W this evening and would be blowing across the creek bed rather than down it. With that in mind I bumped down to the S end of the thicket the deer had gone into. I didn’t see anything for the evening hunt.

Lessons Learned: If I had done more scouting after spotting the buck the previous day I might have found the 2.0 spot and would have had a shot at the buck this morning. Hindsight is 20/20 but might should have set up where I saw deer and given up half the trail. Probably a situational call based on time left to hunt.

Questions: N/A
 
Day 7

More west wind and not loving the S edge of the thicket I opted to sit the big corn field treestand we had set and reset over the week. Got set in the dark dark and right around gray light I saw a hunter moving in the timber. At the same time, I heard what sounded like deer moving through the corn. Not wanting to wave or talk to the other hunter I turned on my red headlight and set it on my hanging pack pointed towards him. Hoping he would get my message I grabbed my bow and turned towards the sound. It ended up being a smaller doe that cut out of the corn, checked the scrape, then melted back into the corn. An hour or so later a small 5 point with booner browtines cruised thru headed the opposite direction. Considered shooting him, but I had another doe tag in my pocket and he wasn’t the kind of deer you go to Kansas for. Not long after he went thru a group of does came thru and checked out the scrape. When I got a broadside look at the biggest doe I took the shot. She jumped and took off running. I saw her go down just inside the woodline. The shot felt good but figured I’d give it another hour to just to see if anything else would cruise thru. The other does in the group circled back thru but no new deer.

I got down and didn’t see my arrow at first glance. I knew I had seen her in the timber so figured I’d get it after dealing with the doe as it was starting to warm up. Walking down the edge I spotted her bedded about 40 yards in front of her with her head up. Shit. I crept in and shot her a second time. That shot hit both lungs and gave me the miserable experience of watching it do its job. You do the best you can but it never feels great when things aren’t quick and clean. I got the doe quartered out and packed her out to the truck.

Thinking the other hunter and I had pressured that corn edge pretty well and with a north wind again, I decided to hunt the thicket next to the dry creek bed. I got setup on the ground at the 2.0 spot, but didn’t see anything the rest of the day.

Lessons Learned: Be better. My first shot was a bit back and I remember when taking the shot being a bit lackadaisical in picking “the spot” vs “the lungs”.

Questions: Are there any rules of thumb for “over pressured”? In hindsight I think I could/should have hunted that spot the rest of the evening. I had fresh sign and deer around.

Day 8

I decided to head back to the corn field and sit a ground spot a bit deeper in than the treestand spot I shot the doe from. I had some good lanes but was going to be a pain with all the overhanging branches. Three hours in I was freezing so I decided to creep the edge and see if I could bump into something. Shortly into the creep I got a message from my friend that he had shot a buck. I crept my way back to meet him at the truck and didn’t run into anything.

Midday we quartered his buck and packed the truck as much as we could, keeping what we needed for the evening hunt at the top of the pile. That took a bit longer than expected so I was a bit late getting in for the evening. My plan was to sit a spot further down the creek with a crossing, the edge of a big willow patch, and some edge meeting hardwoods and AG. I had a doe fawn walk up 10 yards from me as I was setting up (these deer are dumb). I had a lot of confidence in the spot as I had deer as soon as I got there, but with darkness threatening they willow patch erupted with coyote howls. As you’d expect there were no deer sightings after/because of that.

Lessons Learned: When speed scouting a new area and identify a spot get in and “prep” it. Whether that is moving some deadfall around, tying some branches back with paracord, or making a plan on what you’ll need to do on arrival, being quite and efficient is huge. You already did the work to get there and identify the spot, got the extra mile and get it optimized.

Questions: N/A
 
Trip and Gear Report

Trip Thoughts:

I had blast and my “doing whatever is the most fun” attitude is something I’ll work on continuing. With that said I think I should have spent more time hunting than scouting (180 from my last trip to KS). I found spots with a pile of things going for it and kept moving. In MI AG edges are a waste of time due to pressure, but I think if I had sat that first corn field edge for a few days I would have had an opportunity a something I’d be happy to shoot. I also need to decide if I am scouting or hunting when I leave the truck. I ran around with everything and the kitchen sink and feel like it made me louder and less efficient. Next time I’ll bring a small pack and have it setup for a scouting mission with water, a snack, and maybe an extra layer if I feel like I “have” to sit a spot. I also felt like we were pretty limited on space as other hunters began rolling in for the “proper” rut. Still nothing like the pressure I see in MI, but freedom and space are things I really enjoy on hunting trips.

Noteworthy Gear:

The quick sticks stand for my bow worked awesome for ground sits. I have the first gen and see how the 2.0 would be a bit better. I painted mine orange so I don’t lose them. Muck boots. I live in these whitetail hunting. I probably would have been fine most of the time in trail runners, but crossed the creek a few times and even then was tickling the tops of the mucks. I do wish they were more durable as I seem to go thru a pair every year to year and a half. By the end they’re covered in seam grip and duct tape and are mostly waterproof. An electric boot dryer was perfect for drying out my rubber boots. They always seem to be wet from sweat or water. I’ll have to find a solution for this when I don’t have 110 available. Lighted nocks are super helpful finding arrows. I spent 20-30 minutes looking for my arrow after the followup shot on the second doe before I gave up. On my way in the next morning it took me longer to figure out the source of the strange green glow than finding the arrow. Last but maybe my favorite addition this year was some precut 12’ lengths of paracord with a loop tied on the end. I used these to create cover and shooting lanes and was quick, quite, and simple.

Disappointing Gear:

Super short here as I’m pretty dialed in on what I like and how I hunt whitetails. The only thing I can’t seem to figure out is how to have binos in the tree. Either they’re on my chest or strapped to the tree, but they’re always in the way or too far out of the way. I’ve taken to having them “half zipped” in the lid of my pack (Kifaru shape charge). This works pretty we’ll but stresses me out having my high end binos strap free 10-20’ up a tree. I’ll keep looking but think it may be an unsolvable problem.

Gear to Buy/Consider:

I really can’t think of anything major here. Like I said I’m pretty dialed for whitetail stand hunting. The last few years I’ve been working on things to leave behind rather than add. I am intrigued by the OOAL hunt cleat to replace the cam cleat on my one stick. I’ve tried a few things to silence the cams snapping together but nothing seems perfect. Not sure that click is impacting my hunts, but I’m always looking to be quieter
 
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