When to quit?

jtevanMT

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 30, 2022
Messages
174
If you don’t enjoy hunting then quit. If you enjoy hunting and the pursuit then keep doing it and learn different areas and tactics that lead to better success or enjoyment. Personally, I hate hunting from a stand. I much prefer still hunting or spot and stalk (whitetail, mule deer, elk or bear). Of course, I am also a Western hunter with lots of public land to chase animals. Might not be as easy to spot and stalk or still hunt in other states.
 

PMcGee

WKR
Joined
Sep 18, 2012
Messages
696
It works. I dont TRUST it. For me, that's important.

The archery season is over for all intents and purposes. It ends Friday. If I want to kill something with a bow, I have to pay for it.

I get a short window after Christmas where I might get a sit or two in. Like a 10 day season but the focus is already on October 25 for the most part.

You can hunt with your bow in rifle season just have to wear orange.


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Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
389
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
You can hunt with your bow in rifle season just have to wear orange.


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Given my history as described in this thread, why would I do something to additionally limit my opportunities or abilities to take game?

I'm aware that I can hunt with a bow in gun season. I can also use a gun which is a lot more effective.
 

fatlander

WKR
Joined
Feb 11, 2016
Messages
2,158
Given my history as described in this thread, why would I do something to additionally limit my opportunities or abilities to take game?

I'm aware that I can hunt with a bow in gun season. I can also use a gun which is a lot more effective.

If you learn how to consistently kill deer with a bow, especially during rifle season, you’ll be deadlier than CWD with a rifle in your hand.

Bow hunting is a game of inches. Rifle hunting is game of hundreds of yards. I believe it was Fred Bear who said, “Most rifle hunts end where a bow hunt begins.”


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fatlander

WKR
Joined
Feb 11, 2016
Messages
2,158
the focus is already on October 25 for the most part.

FWIW I think October is a really tough time to kill whitetails compared to November, and even December/January if you can leave them alone and you’ve got quality food sources.

During October, there’s still a medley of food sources, making it hard to pin down where they’re going every day. A bumper crop of mast makes that much much harder. During October it’s also hot, and they’ve got their winter clothes on. Deer in general don’t move much before last night, mature bucks even less so. Hunting in the mornings before October 25 is about pointless in my experience, deer are generally already back to bed. Unless you really know what you’re doing and hunt fronts accordingly, hunting before October 25 does more harm than good in my overwhelming experience.

Halloween to Thanksgiving is the time to get after it. Late season with unpressured deer, cold temps, and quality food can make for good afternoon sits.


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Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
389
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
FWIW I think October is a really tough time to kill whitetails compared to November, and even December/January if you can leave them alone and you’ve got quality food sources.

During October, there’s still a medley of food sources, making it hard to pin down where they’re going every day. A bumper crop of mast makes that much much harder. During October it’s also hot, and they’ve got their winter clothes on. Deer in general don’t move much before last night, mature bucks even less so. Hunting in the mornings before October 25 is about pointless in my experience, deer are generally already back to bed. Unless you really know what you’re doing and hunt fronts accordingly, hunting before October 25 does more harm than good in my overwhelming experience.

Halloween to Thanksgiving is the time to get after it. Late season with unpressured deer, cold temps, and quality food can make for good afternoon sits.


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I meant October of 2025, our season starts first Saturday of October.

For does, I've had the most success the first weeks of October, before the young bucks start hassling them, when they're still coming out of cover and hitting acorns. Anecdotally here. I am not logging my sightings with detailed records or anything.

Once mid-later October hits, everything goes to rat$hi!t for me until some love starved buck wanders by. For several years running prior to this year, I take the last week of October and into November off work to hunt and put as many hours as physically possible in a stand but sightings are generally sparse during that time period for me.

I think pressure is much higher on the property I'm hunting during the gun season. I'm trying to figure out how to play off of that pressure and catch one running away.
 

fatlander

WKR
Joined
Feb 11, 2016
Messages
2,158
I meant October of 2025, our season starts first Saturday of October.

For does, I've had the most success the first weeks of October, before the young bucks start hassling them, when they're still coming out of cover and hitting acorns. Anecdotally here. I am not logging my sightings with detailed records or anything.

Once mid-later October hits, everything goes to rat$hi!t for me until some love starved buck wanders by. For several years running prior to this year, I take the last week of October and into November off work to hunt and put as many hours as physically possible in a stand but sightings are generally sparse during that time period for me.

I think pressure is much higher on the property I'm hunting during the gun season. I'm trying to figure out how to play off of that pressure and catch one running away.

I know you meant October of 2025. It’s just coincidence that my experience of hunting before October 25th of any given year is tough. I can go way off to the side somewhere to shoot does with regularity before October 25, but I don’t even bother trying to hunt mature bucks until Halloween.

It’s hard for most of us to accept this, but the guy in the mirror is why you’re not seeing deer. And he’s definitely the reason deer sightings go down with every subsequent hunt in a specific area. We’ll often use the excuse “I’ve got to get in there before someone else does” or “there’s so much pressure” to hunt somewhere we shouldn’t given the conditions. The real reason you’re not seeing deer is you. You’re either hunting the same spots too much with bad entry/exit/wind, and/or you’re hunting places everyone else hunts too.


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bowkill

FNG
Joined
Jul 3, 2023
Messages
58
Anecdotally here. I am not logging my sightings with detailed records or anything.
Maybe you should be logging your sightings with detailed records. You've already admitted that you didn't realized the success you've actually had until someone pointed it out. Maybe if you actually put it down on paper, you would gain some confidence and help to get out of your own way!
Also, you've said several times that your not a trophy hunter and complained about lack of opportunities, but then you said you had several does that came by with no mention of trying to get a shot! You can't have it both ways. Either you're a meat hunter looking for opportunities or your a trophy hunter holding out for the big one! Shoot enough of those does and the chance at a buck will come!
 
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Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
389
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
I know you meant October of 2025. It’s just coincidence that my experience of hunting before October 25th of any given year is tough. I can go way off to the side somewhere to shoot does with regularity before October 25, but I don’t even bother trying to hunt mature bucks until Halloween.

It’s hard for most of us to accept this, but the guy in the mirror is why you’re not seeing deer. And he’s definitely the reason deer sightings go down with every subsequent hunt in a specific area. We’ll often use the excuse “I’ve got to get in there before someone else does” or “there’s so much pressure” to hunt somewhere we shouldn’t given the conditions. The real reason you’re not seeing deer is you. You’re either hunting the same spots too much with bad entry/exit/wind, and/or you’re hunting places everyone else hunts too.


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It isn't difficult for me at all to accept that I am the problem. I have been working to correct that and, in some ways have made progress. I have taken probably 3 major and a dozen more minor things that I need to work on in the off season and next bow season out of this conversation.
Maybe you should be logging your sightings with detailed records. You've already admitted that you didn't realized the success you've actually had until someone pointed it out. Maybe if you actually put it down on paper, you would gain some confidence and help to get out of your own way!
Also, you've said several times that your not a trophy hunter and complained about lack of opportunities, but then you said you had several does that came by with no mention of trying to get a shot! You can't have it both ways. Either you're a meat hunter looking for opportunities or your a trophy hunter holding out for the big one! Shoot enough of those does and the chance at a buck will come!
Maybe I do need to do that.

I'm not a "trophy" hunter in the sense that I don't care about any arbitrary standard of a trophy (inches of antler or number of points or whatever else) but I have been targeting a buck which is why I have passed on does.

The law says it has to have 3 point on one side. That's a far higher standard than I personally hold. A spike would be fine. A forked horn would be awesome. It's often painful to let them walk when I'd love to shoot one but the law says I can't.

So, maybe I AM a trophy hunter, just in a different way than most people think of it.

On Saturday, 3 does ran in and, before offering anything resembling an opportunity, scattered. I might have had trouble taking a shot with a rifle they were there and gone so fast. Later, 2 does, a mother and yearling came through alert and moving but not running i might have had a chance but I was waiting for what might have been following and wasn't.

Getting a buck, outsmarting, outwitting and ultimately killing a buck, ANY BUCK, BY MYSELF, has been a near all consuming effort for a while now.
 

adamm88

WKR
Joined
Sep 6, 2016
Messages
473
Location
Pennsylvania
I have a note in my iphone of sits, years ago i did every sit, i missed a few years when lift was too busy, last year i did just deer sittings, THis year i did every sit, i try to put wind direction but 1/2 the time the direction either is different in the hills than predicted or switches 1/2 way through. I do go back when i get in a slump and read where i saw deer in past years.

Were i hunt in pa i dont see crap until October 20th time frame, and then i see deer.......I hunt the edges of state land that boarder ag so if there is corn that isnt cut that is close it screws my area up too.
 
Joined
Jun 7, 2018
Messages
491
Location
South Carolina
On Saturday, 3 does ran in and, before offering anything resembling an opportunity, scattered. I might have had trouble taking a shot with a rifle they were there and gone so fast. Later, 2 does, a mother and yearling came through alert and moving but not running i might have had a chance but I was waiting for what might have been following and wasn't.

Getting a buck, outsmarting, outwitting and ultimately killing a buck, ANY BUCK, BY MYSELF, has been a near all consuming effort for a while now.

After reading through 12 pages, I'd say that you just suck and have a defeatist attitude. You probably just smell bad too.

Kidding aside, you may want to re-evaluate everything you're doing from stand location and position, wind and thermals in those locations. Are you hunting private or public land? Public is challenging enough as it is. Are you hunting near thick cover or out in the open in the "pretty woods". Are your buck pictures at night, or during the day? Hard to kill Mr. Big at night legally. You gotta find where he's active in the day.

A dead doe often makes good bait, but would be more challenging to drop her right there when you're bow hunting. I have yet to kill a "trophy buck" with my bow and encounters that I've had make me think that a mature doe is the hardest thing to kill in the woods with a bow. Start stacking up the does as practice and you'll be less likely to miss when you get an opportunity with a bow.

I have no idea how many deer I've killed in the 28 years I've been hunting. Started shooting deer at age 9. I've lost count at 75 deer, think I'm around 100. Granted they've mostly been rifle and mostly on private. I'd say a good 80-90% of those deer have been does.

Travel to a different state. The adventure and exploration aspect may be more fun than actually hunting. You can DIY it too.

Good luck! I've been getting my butt kicked this season on Public in SC. Hurricane really messed up some of my spots and I've not had the scouting time in the last 6 weeks to get back on track.
 

bowkill

FNG
Joined
Jul 3, 2023
Messages
58
It isn't difficult for me at all to accept that I am the problem. I have been working to correct that and, in some ways have made progress. I have taken probably 3 major and a dozen more minor things that I need to work on in the off season and next bow season out of this conversation.

Maybe I do need to do that.

I'm not a "trophy" hunter in the sense that I don't care about any arbitrary standard of a trophy (inches of antler or number of points or whatever else) but I have been targeting a buck which is why I have passed on does.

The law says it has to have 3 point on one side. That's a far higher standard than I personally hold. A spike would be fine. A forked horn would be awesome. It's often painful to let them walk when I'd love to shoot one but the law says I can't.

So, maybe I AM a trophy hunter, just in a different way than most people think of it.

On Saturday, 3 does ran in and, before offering anything resembling an opportunity, scattered. I might have had trouble taking a shot with a rifle they were there and gone so fast. Later, 2 does, a mother and yearling came through alert and moving but not running i might have had a chance but I was waiting for what might have been following and wasn't.

Getting a buck, outsmarting, outwitting and ultimately killing a buck, ANY BUCK, BY MYSELF, has been a near all consuming effort for a while now.
I don't really understand what the difference is if you are fine with any buck and not worried about it being a "trophy". According to your logic, you would be way happier with a small spike buck rather than a large, adult doe. I don't understand why that makes such a difference to you. Do you think that you're accomplishing something more by shooting a stupid, young buck that you could probably walk right up to rather than shooting a wise, old, experienced doe that won't let you get away with anything? Do your buddies give you more credit because you shot some little dinker buck rather than shooting some fat, old doe? I'm just not really understanding why a buck, any buck, makes it so much more of an accomplishment.
 
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Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
389
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
I don't really understand what the difference is if you are fine with any buck and not worried about it being a "trophy". According to your logic, you would be way happier with a small spike buck rather than a large, adult doe. I don't understand why that makes such a difference to you. Do you think that you're accomplishing something more by shooting a stupid, young buck that you could probably walk right up to rather than shooting a wise, old, experienced doe that won't let you get away with anything? Do your buddies give you more credit because you shot some little dinker buck rather than shooting some fat, old doe? I'm just not really understanding why a buck, any buck, makes it so much more of an accomplishment.
I never claimed it was logical. Getting a buck has been something I've targeted for so long that it's become this completely irrational thing.

Ive even managed to minimize the one that I did shoot because someone else "did the work"
 

Rob960

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 30, 2021
Messages
211
JP, I see where you are coming from. I hunt Lehigh County and for many years I was getting Doe but never a buck. Changed location and started getting Buck. Missed last year due to being extremely anemic due to two GI bleeds. Got them fixed and then 10 weeks of iron infusions which took me right to the start of firearms. Didn't go out as I was still physically recovering. Amped up for this year but then I get thoughts to not due to the fact I am still not where I was at physically previous to the bleeds. But I figure, you know what, I always enjoyed being in the woods so have at it.

I say don't give up. Figure out what changes to make, pay attention to how your h7 t goes this year and if you need to adjust. Come back with your observations and get feedback.
 
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Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
389
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
Quick update to this topic.

Thanks to everyone for the advice, encouragement and maybe "tough love"

I did a thing this morning.

Scouting and conversations with other hunters tell me this is a food to bedding travel corridor. I hesitate to call it a "funnel" but kind of. Setup a solid 45 minutes before shooting light with wind in my face and stood.

About 2 hours into the day, i caught her moving. Then 2 more behind her. Moved my rifle in front of me while they were still partly screened. Watched her come closer. As I was waiting, my rifle slid down out of reach without big movements, so I brought the pistol out. Checked the sight was turned on, made a brightness adjustment so I wouldn't lose the dot in the sun and cocked it.

She came to 35 yards and I took the shot. She mule kicked hard and ran about 40 yards and fell over. I watched her try to get up a couple times but didn't want to risk pushing it with the other 2 still hanging around. Once they left, I walked to where I'd shot her. Worked her trail back and she laid where she fell.
 

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Jpsmith1

WKR
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Messages
389
Location
Western Pennsylvania, Lawrence County
I've taken the week for our firearms season. It's been chilly (mid 20s) and windy until today with winds gusting over 25mph.

Sightings have been lean.

I saw 2 on doe Sunday night but they were extremely close and I couldn't get a clean line on them with the rifle.

Last night I had an opportunity at 200 yards but, as I was waiting for my shot angle, I thought I saw antlers. Turned out to be a "protected deer" having antlers greater than 3" long but smaller than legal size.

I've got a couple more "bedrooms" blocked out on OnX from mid day still hunts and I'm sure I'll have more dumb azz questions to come
 

01lowbird

FNG
Joined
Dec 5, 2024
Messages
15
I am a 49 year old man. I have missed one year of hunting since I was 12 and that was due to an injury that laid me flat for the season.

I have invested thousands of hours in scouting, map study, hanging and checking cameras and, of course hunting. Bow, gun, muzzleloader you name it, I'll use it.

In those years, I've taken 10 deer, one of which was a buck. I've spent so many hours on stand with nothing but a few squirrels to break up the boredom. I've wounded and lost a few and missed more than I care to talk about. The wounding and missing, IMO, dovetail with rarely seeing game hence a lack of experience, leading to a lack of confidence which leads to a bad mental state and more difficulty staying 'in the hunt'


Every year, the thought occurs to me to just walk away. Just leave a big pile of high dollar gear at the bottom of a tree as a gift to the next guy and quit.

As if to add insult to injury as I'm composing this, 3 doe came trotting in, clearly spooked by another hunter, hit some invisible line and SCATTERED. They winded me, obviously, even though I'm down wind, the wind is shifty and probably blew that way for a split second. Which is the story of my life.
jesus dude..... move out of PA
 
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