Free: Contests & Raffles.
I am by no means a rut expert. With that said, the biologist explained to me that the big misconception is that the weather dictates the rut. This is not true. Moon fazes and other things are more of the factors. I cant remember all that he told me (remember I said I was no rut expert) but I will always remember the part about the weather getting cold early or late is a very mild factor in when the rut starts or ends. I've been deer hunting every year for the last 12 years in Montana. We go roughly at the same time within a week or so every year. I've been there when the weather was nice and the deer were rutting and when the weather was hell and the deer were not. In my experience, the whitetail seem to go into the rut a little bit before the mule deer. At least it has seemed the whitetail bucks are chasing the doe's more early. But that is just what I have observed. In my observation it seems that the mule deer rut is usually the third and forth week of November and the whitetail rut is the second and third week of November. But it is hard to predict and I think it can be different in different regions and areas. I have went to Montana and hunted when the deer were rutting big time. When I got home I talked to a friend on the other end of the state that observed hardly no rutting at all. Sorry, this post is probably no help at all.