OR / WA / CA BT rut ..............

repins05

WKR
Joined
Aug 29, 2021
Messages
564
Hunted my whole life for Blacktail in WA/OR. What factors do you think gets Blacktail Bucks moving in daylight?

I find one area could have bucks rutting......and then 20 miles in another direction.........nothing.

One day, the third week of OR season, bucks are out everywhere......rest of the week nothing.

Friend shot a 3 point 2 weeks ago with buck neck fully swollen......just an anomaly or?
 

541hunter

WKR
Joined
Jul 20, 2016
Messages
442
I think it is brought about by a variety of things like length of day and weather. I know this last weekend the deer were moving in southern Oregon. I went out for 2 hours before church and saw 6 bucks. No shooters but all had thick swollen necks. Here is one of them
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OP
R

repins05

WKR
Joined
Aug 29, 2021
Messages
564
Agree.
I find that sometimes when I think I have a pattern......it proves wrong. Sometimes it ends up in success.

Nice pic. Pretty swollen. Nice spot based on your pic.
 

JFK

WKR
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Sep 13, 2016
Messages
848
I’m in Ca. Length of day is the main factor, but I believe weather and hunting pressure play a part too. I’ve hunted on public where bucks were mostly nocturnal and a mile away on private you had bucks with does out most of the day. Same with weather. A cold snap will get them on their feet whereas a week of 100 degrees will put things on hold in daylight hours.
 

TripleJ

WKR
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Apr 12, 2016
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2,001
Location
OR
It's mostly a length of daylight trigger from what I've seen where I hunt. The farther east you head towards the high elevation cascades, the later they seem to rut. Bad weather really helps showcase it though. Around here, once the rut is cranking, private land unpressured bucks will be out cruising during daylight. High pressure public land bucks though will stay mostly nocturnal unless you have wet weather to get them up on their feet during daylight hours.
 

shootnrun

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 15, 2013
Messages
213
Location
United States
Length of day and elevation. Higher the elevation the later the does come in. As to drop their fawns when the green up hits, higher elevation wanting later fawns. Here you can see good rut activity Oct 23-31 if you're below 1500' or so. If you're up higher bucks are still nocturnal and not moving til Nov 7 or later.
 
Joined
Aug 23, 2014
Messages
5,476
Location
oregon coast
I have always preferred to kill bucks before they start getting rutty, but things have to fall into place a little more. That Oct 20th timeframe is probably my favorite, because there is something that happens around then that gets big bucks moving… but not throw caution to the wind moving

I like finding big sign as soon as they start making it, and then make a strategy to kill that deer, but you need room to make it work.

The last 2 years it seems people are more interested in staying ahead of other hunters than killing deer, and I have witnessed some bizarre stuff from other people. People have been terrible in my area the past couple years but it seems like they aren’t hunting, they are just making sure nobody else is going to kill anything. Skylining themselves on stumps at gray light with the wind blowing straight to where the deer would be, making sure a mature buck will not come out during daylight until they have to late in the season, so my favorite time of the season has been tough to capitalize on

(I have a good plan for next season though, I found a zone that people don’t go)

I think beyond that little window around the 20th, weather plays a big role to daylight buck movement. Wet crappy weather makes deer move, and the shorter the days, the more that holds true… at some point, there will be a light switch and deer will not be moving and they will not be making tracks. The lockdown can be a frustrating time if you don’t know why you aren’t seeing sign or deer

I still prefer frosty calm mornings after the 20th of October, we don’t get many of them, but they are my favorite conditions. I know raining sideways is a great day to catch a big buck in the open, but I don’t enjoy it as much when I can’t glass, and it feels like you just luck into deer… I like to hunt them deliberately

When we were living on the southern border of the state, and hunting southern Oregon, it was definitely a little behind the central coast, but once it turned on down there it was certainly larger scale… we did have a crazy morning on the 20th a few years ago, we had both killed bucks up here, but we wanted to walk back into this area we saw a nice buck early, and we got back there to find 2 bucks in bow range courting a doe, and the one was a huge dark horned 4pt, the other was the really tall 3 we had seen earlier… pressure is the biggest factor prior to Halloween… find a little zone with no pressure, you can kill a mature buck well before Halloween, and likely within a couple days of the 20th or earlier

Steady pressure, those bucks will not expose themselves until late, or nasty weather. Another thing happened down south around the 25th, any clear morning, it would sound like a war zone until 10am every morning in the road hunting zone, there would be steady shooting until 10ish. I assume those were mostly young bucks getting shot at, but it was all of a sudden

I think daylight buck movement has many factors, avoiding pressure opens up opportunities if you are smart yourself about not pressuring your own program.

People are worse every year, most have lost 100% respect and courtesy for other hunters and have no problem racing in and screwing up anyone’s chances… they don’t get it, and it’s getting worse. I think it’s a mix of Covid times and social media and their stupid messages. Hopefully it’s a phase, but I have my doubts

Finding less desirable spots and being cautious how you personally pressure it is important if you want to see mature bucks before Halloween

If you are happy to join the rat race, hunt late and bad weather, because that’s probably your window to see a buck over 2.5yrs
 

Dkerwin78

FNG
Joined
Nov 9, 2024
Messages
13
Hunted my whole life for Blacktail in WA/OR. What factors do you think gets Blacktail Bucks moving in daylight?

I find one area could have bucks rutting......and then 20 miles in another direction.........nothing.

One day, the third week of OR season, bucks are out everywhere......rest of the week nothing.

Friend shot a 3 point 2 weeks ago with buck neck fully swollen......just an anomaly or?
Living in Oregon and from every thing I’ve gathered from friends hunting too it’s just been a slow year
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2023
Messages
76
WA late Blacktail rifle opens this weekend. I hope I have better luck then I did with WA elk.... lol
 

Plague

FNG
Joined
May 12, 2024
Messages
23
WA late Blacktail rifle opens this weekend. I hope I have better luck then I did with WA elk.... lol
Same here. The unit I was hunting seemed to have 3 times as many hunters and less than half the elk of last year. Few poachers as well. Ran out of daylight trying to get to a bull on the 7th. Found his skull capped head along with 3 of the cows he was hanging around the next morning.
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2023
Messages
76
Same here. The unit I was hunting seemed to have 3 times as many hunters and less than half the elk of last year. Few poachers as well. Ran out of daylight trying to get to a bull on the 7th. Found his skull capped head along with 3 of the cows he was hanging around the next morning.
saw 0 elk, I had a prime westside weyco permit actually had 2. helens and aberdeen. and only saw doe's during deer
 

dheller30

FNG
Joined
Nov 26, 2024
Messages
6
Location
Oregon
I’ve found where we’re at is big temp changes from one day to the next get them going and heavy rains. The first day of a good storm I noticed quite a bit of movement. Around Oct. 20 is when I see the bucks showing themselves. Just what I’ve noticed anyways.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Joined
Nov 26, 2024
Messages
11
For me it has always seemed that the weather at night played the biggest role. If it was a clear moonlit night, they were moving at night and bedded down during the day. If it was rainy dark night, they were bedded all night and moving at dawn.
 
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