Shed hunting tips and tricks

Joined
Jan 22, 2021
Messages
317
I’d love to hear some of your best tips and tricks on how to best find sheds in your area. I found one next to a corn pile last week.
 

LCsmith

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 18, 2019
Messages
137
Drive around. Seriously, I have found my best sheds from the road.
 
Joined
Feb 11, 2023
Messages
33
I find most of mine on edges. I also have some success on well known travel routes and bedding as well. Cloudy/rainy days are better than sunny days. As you’re walking be sure to turn around often and look back the way you came from and different directions. When you do find one, pause for a second and look around really good. Sometimes the match is laying in close proximity. Anytime I find a large antler, I devote about an hour looking for the match in the same area. Winter food sources are a great starting point and the bedding closest to it.
 

skissell

FNG
Joined
Mar 6, 2023
Messages
10
Put some miles on the hiking boots and enjoy the outdoors. Keep your eyes low if your main goal is sheds. I personally get distracted looking at new spots and trees to setup in for next season lol
 

Ross

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Feb 24, 2012
Messages
4,687
Location
Liberty Lake, WA
Walk, walk and walk more🤙 As noted find travel and bedding places…silly whitetails around here drop them next to the road and 3000 ft higher..good bedding timber and some small southern exposure offer good opportunity.
 

IW17

FNG
Joined
Mar 10, 2022
Messages
78
Location
NE Ohio
Best advice I've heard, and the best I can give, is focus 90% of your time searching 10% of the areas. If the spot has something going for it, grid pattern the entire spot. I think so many people think walking ten plus miles a day will yield results, when they'd be better off hitting the good spots several times over.

Another thing is to pick your spots. Spending all day walking a couple hundred acre field is frustrating and time consuming. Instead, look for specific spots that might attract deer or give deer some cover in an otherwise wide open area. I'll make sure to pick apart wet spots with reeds growing, small ditches, anything holding water, or the base of a steeper hillside. Small pockets of woods in fields are great spots. Also, while I normally don't walk many deer trails, I'll hit each one entering a field for at least fifty yards.

South facing slopes are ok, but I prefer east or southeast facing. Most of our winter days are gloomy and windy, so I feel like deer aren't as focused on basking in sunshine that doesn't exist, but rather getting out of the cold prevailing wind.

Pine trees, especially pine forest pockets can be awesome, but usually only if the pines are smaller and bunched together to create a thick canopy that will block rain and snow.

Keep in mind that I live in Ohio, so this advice might not be applicable in southern states.
 
Joined
Oct 24, 2022
Messages
16
It seems like here in NC, by the time they start dropping, the squirrels and mice eat them up. Most of the ones you find, the tines will be chewed up or off even


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kolkat53

FNG
Joined
Mar 14, 2023
Messages
10
Put some miles on the hiking boots and enjoy the outdoors. Keep your eyes low if your main goal is sheds. I personally get distracted looking at new spots and trees to setup in for next season lol
i have the same problem getting distracted
 

hoyt-guy

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 27, 2018
Messages
180
Location
Minnesota
We have a thick stand of woods right off a big cattail slough on our ground. This stand of woods then opens up to more open CRP like ground. I found the majority of these sheds in this stand of woods. Not bad for a few hours of poking around. Find where the bucks like to stage up in the winter, and you should do pretty well shed hunting there in the spring. Also before anyone chimes in on the crossbow, it's for my kids who are just starting to get into hunting. 2022 sheds.jpg
 
Joined
Mar 5, 2021
Messages
49
My method is pretty simple. I walk miles of deer trails with my “shed eyes” on.
I picked up 27 on my March trip to my place in Oklahoma and three more a couple weeks ago.
3C03903B-18C1-491C-AD85-8118CD915A47.jpeg
 
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