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I absolutely hate deer drives. But they can be extremely effective unless your the lucky SOB that gets to push. A long long time ago I participated in a lot of those in SC for whitetail. Lots of wounded deer tracking later I swore I'd never participate in one again. You would think with as often as they did them there guys would be better at hitting those deer. That's what I thought...and I was wrong.
Quote from: RadSav on November 02, 2015, 12:49:09 AMI absolutely hate deer drives. But they can be extremely effective unless your the lucky SOB that gets to push. A long long time ago I participated in a lot of those in SC for whitetail. Lots of wounded deer tracking later I swore I'd never participate in one again. You would think with as often as they did them there guys would be better at hitting those deer. That's what I thought...and I was wrong.I can see that with whitetails, the way they take off and run run run. Blacktails will stop and look around or try to sneak out into the open looking for the next cover. A lot of our drives were into open fields and power lines. To be honest, I don't remember many wounded deer we had to hunt down. And we killed a lot of deer.
Pretty much what I expected. Thanks all for your thoughts. I hunt alone, so unfortunately, drives are not a possibility at this point.Baldguy - that deer you harvested was a toad. Nice job! Your Kitsap area doesn't sound remotely like the Kitsap areas I'm familiar with. Where's all the Evergreen Huck. and 8 foot tall salal?
In my experience, tall alder with the creeper type of blackberries that just run along the ground is best.
I keep thinking a permanent blind made of large slash from thinnings might work really well for a high traffic area pre-rut and during late buck seasons.
I beat a ton of brush to find that spot. Cut a trail and all that after google earth scouting. It's a unique spot for sure.