Hunting Washington Forum
Washington State Hunting Forum and Northwest Resource Site
Please
login
or
register
.
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
News:
Free:
Contests & Raffles
.
Home
Help
Calendar
Advertise
Login
Register
Hunting Washington Forum
»
Big Game Hunting
»
Elk Hunting
»
Patience on stand
Advertisement
Advertise Here
« previous
next »
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Author
Topic: Patience on stand (Read 2019 times)
CampCoffee
Trade Count:
(
0
)
Pilgrim
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 15
Location: Edmonds, WA
Patience on stand
«
on:
October 09, 2010, 07:49:11 AM »
Anybody got any good ideas for how to endure lots of hours on stand? I think I'm as good as the other guy with daydreaming and doing nothing, but after several days, it gets a little old.
Thought about taking a book, radio, whatnot, but that seems to be too much of a distraction. Breaking it up by taking a day doing still hunting would work, but our camp has been real successful on stand the last 3 years, with 4 spikes. Go ahead and tell me if I'm crazy, I can take it. Really interested in how the rest of youall do it.
Logged
I want to see you shoot the way you shout.
– Teddy Roosevelt
Advertise Here
unluckyjohn
Trade Count:
(
0
)
Hunter
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 131
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #1 on:
October 09, 2010, 07:57:24 AM »
Ill put a hand held yahtzee game in my day pack, just make sure you turn off the volume
Logged
archery288
Trade Count:
(
+1
)
Sourdough
Join Date: Oct 2007
Posts: 2227
Location: Auburn
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #2 on:
October 09, 2010, 08:02:24 AM »
When I hunt whitetails in November I sit in the treestand from about daylight until dark.. It's usually about 20 - 35 degrees - sometimes temperatures hit the single digits or below.. Makes for a long day and a cold one at that.. I usually do pretty good sitting all day however..
It is in the rut and you see deer or several deer usually once an hour or every other hour.. One thing I do to pass time is look around at the scenery and watch the squirrels eating their pine cones and the birds flying around and fighting with one another.. I also bring my camera and I'll take pictures at times of things around me or things going on.. I don't know what your stand is like for elk, but every time I hear the slightest twig break it keeps me on guard and awake.. There have been several times when I'll check to make sure my strap is tight on my safety vest and nod off, but the stupid squirrels usually manage to drop a pine cone from about 40 feet up and scare the crap out of me!
I am not sure what to tell you to do to pass the time, just try and enjoy everything and bring some snacks to munch on..
Logged
Hyde
Trade Count:
(
0
)
Longhunter
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 731
Location: Renton
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #3 on:
October 09, 2010, 08:11:04 AM »
I went on a bait bear hunt in Alberta, I couldn't stand it. I went crazy sitting in a tree stand. Thankfully I got my first bear on the 3rd day and stayed in camp the 4th day tending to the hide. It was all I could to to go back out the 5th day, (two bear area). In 6 days of hunting, I saw 2 bears. That type of hunting is not for me. I was freezing even though I had tons of clothes. I was starving all the time even though I had a satchel of grub each day. If I tried to read, I got sleepy. It didn't help that I knew I had to sit perfectly still for 8 hours. My suggestion is to make sure you have enough clothes to stay warm. The insulated boot covers look like a good idea too, as my feet were the most frozen. Have fuzzy type clothes on so you don't make noise when you fidget. Lots of food, and something soft to sit on.
Now if you are talking about stand hunting, but not necessarily in a tree stand, then I can do that. The three of us would go separate ways in the mornings, and meet up at a particular clear cut in the afternoon. Some of my best memories are of sitting with my buddies each year for several hours a day. We'd talk, but very low. We laughed and laughed, reliving old hunts, crazy stuff that happened, etc. We'd have a fire, and it never bothered the elk. We killed plenty of elk that way over the years.
Logged
Nothing witty here.... move along.
Annette
Past Sponsor
Trade Count:
(
0
)
Longhunter
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 885
Location: out on the river...
I hunt therefor I am an endangered species
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #4 on:
October 09, 2010, 09:30:14 AM »
Stand hunting certainly is not for everyone. In cold weather ( 17 `) I can sit only about 4 hrs. I pass the time thinking about many things that our fast pace life seldom fits in time for. I sit ready to shoot without having to reach for my weapon. I also photo other things going on . On my ground stand for elk this year this year I sat still from 10 am to when I shot my bull at dusk. You never know when an elk was around so no movement was best. I got up and went to the ladies room
about 3 times and buried it. I had elk come threw, ( cows ) through out the day. don't sit so long that you shoot the first thing that comes in. Don't be miserable...because you won't go back." Think like a trap, be the trap"
Annie
Logged
I hunt therefor I am an endangered species
PolarBear
Site Sponsor
Trade Count:
(
+4
)
Explorer
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 10468
Location: Tatooine
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #5 on:
October 09, 2010, 09:50:46 AM »
NO distractions at all! Even just the movement of turning page will spook of a deer from a ways off. I stay absolutely dead still the entire time. I only hunt the first 3-4 hours and the last 3-4 hours of daylight in my stand. I can't take any more than that. Mid-day I still hunt and look for fresh sign in other areas away from my stand site. I try to spend as littl time as possible on the ground around my treestand. In and out as quietly and quiclky as possible.
Logged
baldopepper
Non-Hunting Topics
Trade Count:
(
0
)
Frontiersman
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 2715
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #6 on:
October 09, 2010, 10:07:02 AM »
I use a Kindle (can even get a camo cover)-very easy to take as it's light and thin and you can turn the pages with a simple push of your thumb. I suspect any e reader would work and they're not as distracting as a regular book is. I even download the newspaper on mine. I've only used it on a turkey blind but it did help pass the time.
Logged
bow4elk
Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
Washington For Wildlife
Trade Count:
(
0
)
Frontiersman
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 3413
Location: Olympia, WA
Contact me at: tom@pnwbowhunting.com
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #7 on:
October 09, 2010, 10:24:09 AM »
I'm known for daylight till dark treestand stints. They can be agonizing but you just don't know when cruising buck will show up. I write in a small notebook sometimes but mostly I just try to enjoy the time. I alternate between sitting and standing and always have my bow hanging with an arrow nocked. Hunting whitetails in the midwest, you can often hear a deer coming way before they get close but hunting late season blacktails, they can just appear due to the quiet, wet ground cover. Knowing this keeps me focused.
Logged
Official Measurer: Pope and Young Club, NW Big Game Inc., National Muzzle Loading Rifle Association, Oregon Shed Hunters
First Hunt Foundation mentor
Washington State R3 Coordinator
Pacific Northwest Bowhunting
http://www.pnwbowhunting.com
rasbo
Trade Count:
(
+1
)
Legend
Join Date: Aug 2008
Posts: 20144
Location: Grant county
In God I trust...Try taking that away from me!
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #8 on:
October 09, 2010, 10:53:05 AM »
I can sit long periods if I know I put my stand in a good spot..I dont do anything but sit,snack a little have a smoke and wait for the ghosts to appear..
Logged
PolarBear
Site Sponsor
Trade Count:
(
+4
)
Explorer
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 10468
Location: Tatooine
Re: Patience on stand
«
Reply #9 on:
October 09, 2010, 11:15:59 AM »
I use to have my boom box tied to the tree while I played my guitar and smoked cigars. It made the time go by but wasn't great for hunting.
Logged
Advertise Here
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
« previous
next »
Hunting Washington Forum
»
Big Game Hunting
»
Elk Hunting
»
Patience on stand
Advertisement
Advertise Here
Quick Links
Front Page
Donate To Forum
Advertise on H-W
Recent Posts
Articles
Forum Rules
Recent Topics
Bearpaw Season 2025
by
bearpaw
[
Today
at 07:58:19 AM]
2025 deer, let's see em!
by
HntnFsh
[
Today
at 07:58:09 AM]
Who knows Stihl Chainsaws? messed up and cooked my 044 hoping to save/rebuild
by
puyallupaul
[
Today
at 06:36:17 AM]
2025 15th Annual Hunting-Washington Christmas Gift Exchange
by
wadu1
[
Today
at 06:22:31 AM]
Colville lodging, any recommendations?
by
bearpaw
[
Today
at 05:49:39 AM]
KODIAK06 2025 trail cam and personal pics thread
by
finnman
[
Yesterday
at 11:52:05 PM]
Unit 346 little naches
by
scoutdog346
[
Yesterday
at 11:34:48 PM]
2024 Ford Edge Opinion
by
JJJ
[
Yesterday
at 11:22:26 PM]
Share your out of state experience
by
HighlandLofts
[
Yesterday
at 10:55:10 PM]
Roosevelt Elk. Please nudge me in the right direction. I feel hopeless.
by
medic6
[
Yesterday
at 10:43:26 PM]
2025 blacktail rut thread
by
jamesjett
[
Yesterday
at 10:05:08 PM]
Bogachiel boat accident
by
X-Force
[
Yesterday
at 09:39:31 PM]
GL Late Tag holders
by
X-Force
[
Yesterday
at 09:31:13 PM]
Youth cow tag success
by
Bullkllr
[
Yesterday
at 09:22:08 PM]
Weyerhaeuser recreation permit access times
by
280ackley
[
Yesterday
at 09:06:21 PM]
328/329 reports
by
MADMAX
[
Yesterday
at 08:30:37 PM]
Multi season elk
by
Mfowl
[
Yesterday
at 07:19:15 PM]
CB Radio Hints and Tips, Installing guidance.
by
ghosthunter
[
Yesterday
at 07:07:45 PM]
3 pintails
by
metlhead
[
Yesterday
at 05:59:58 PM]
NAVY BEAN SOUP
by
Alchase
[
Yesterday
at 05:27:01 PM]
SimplePortal 2.3.7 © 2008-2025, SimplePortal