Free: Contests & Raffles.
Saw one buck today. First time he followed does into the woods. 2nd time I saw him he did not get to follow them back into the woods. I guess the point is, I saw multiple groups of does in one clear cut this morning, and the mature buck was definitely checking them out and drawing him out into the open in the middle of the day. Shot him at 11:30am.
Its like the rut just stopped where I am at. 10 days ago I was passing on small bucks and the last four days nothing. Not even any night photos with a bunch of does showing. Never seen this before.
Has anyone had luck seeing bucks in the daylight during the late season (Nov 14-17)?I’ve always wondered why it’s so short. Maybe it’s prime time?
The rut ebbs and flows from about October 15 until it really kicks in around November 5-15. The bulk of the buck movement that we see in mid-Late October is pre-rut movement, looking for doe groups and bucks being drawn by a hot doe that has gone into early estrus in October. Daytime movement "should" increase as we get to the end of the month, but since the overwhelming majority of does aren't in estrus yet, that movement is still heavily dependent on things like pressure and weather. Cold/wet/windy weather generally keeps deer on their feet longer than warm pleasant weather. I promise, if today was 42 degrees and raining sideways, deer would be dropping like hot rocks. To answer mboyle's question, the main event happens between about November 5-15 every year. There are does that come in sooner, and does that come in later, but that's when the vast majority are bred. The late buck season is short because it can be exceptionally productive. I read somewhere that often there are as many deer killed in those 4 days as there are in the entire general season. There's a few reasons for that. - It's close enough to the main rut that there can still be numbers of hot does around, keeping bucks active.- Bucks are rarely on lockdown at this point, they're cruising again looking for hot does, so they're visible. - The understory has thinned significantly because of leaves dropping and storms knocking them down. You can simply see better than you could the month before.- Weather is generally cool and rainy/windy, which is ideal weather for seeing Blacktail.