Tips From MDR Outdoor group

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February - March: The Best Time to Setup Treestands

 

A fatal error I hear many whitetail hunters make is to setup a tree stand, or create major shooting lanes right before the season, or even the day before they plan to hunt! There are numerous reasons why this reduces your chances for success and I will attempt to touch on them all.

Being the research scientist for MDR Outdoor Group, I always like to hear the details behind any negative reaction a hunter has with a hunting scent product. By far, the most consistent error most hunters make, whether they are using attractant scent or not, is to not address their own scent with scent destroying soaps, detergents, sprays, and outerwear. A hunter needs to use a combination in which they are comfortable that they are truly accomplishing this. The first pitfall in establishing a tree stand at the last minute is that it finds a hunter contaminating their stand site with unusually high levels of human scent. It is true that one can be very careful with the stand itself, as experienced climbing stand hunters prove week in and week out. However, when one goes beyond that, trouble is in the making. One must remember you are in the whitetail’s living room. If someone were to come into your house and re-arrange part of a room, how long would it take for you to notice it? Not long at all, if not immediately. Sure, the ever-ignorant yearling buck or 6 month old fawn will wander through your new site clueless. But when a mature buck, or even worse a mature doe enters the scene, you are in a world of trouble. First they will get nervous and stomp their feet multiple times releasing large amounts of interdigital gland scent to warn others in the herd who come through later. Then they will change their travel routes to avoid the site you worked hard to establish, or worse yet, go nocturnal. Most hunters establishing lock-on or ladder stands at the last minute, when things are very much still green, have a hard time refraining from pruning some openings for quality shots around their stand. The result is two things: over pruning for the peak season when the foliage will be gone, as well as the scent contamination issue that I already mentioned.

By far the best time to establish new tree stand sites is from the time your deer season ends until spring. That is when the foliage returns, and a safety issue arises with turkey hunters sharing the woods. This gives most of us a 2-3 month window to find days to do this work. The observant hunter pays attention from season to season and keeps track of the patterns that setup on the property once fall sets in and food sources change. I have always believed that the mid-winter pattern is much more closely representative of how the deer travel during the hunting seasons than what we observe in late summer and early fall. It’s March, you are in the woods, and there is no foliage just as there wasn’t any in November. Whitetails are continuing to use the heavy cover to conceal their movements to the best of their ability as they move from bedding areas to food sources. One can’t make that statement in mid-September. Observe the patterns in the snow. This will reveal trails you may not even know existed without it. Pick a tree in areas of the highest levels of activity based on the evidence at hand. I am always looking for “funnel” or “edge” type areas that whitetails notoriously frequent more than other areas that do not contain changing landscape features (like the middle of mature hardwoods). Where hardwoods, brush lots, fields and evergreen stands meet each other, or come up against a body of water, should be considerations. I find myself always gravitating toward evergreens or low brush (deciduous plants 4 -15 feet tall) as my experience tells me that deer are very comfortable in both situations. I look for a tree that’s going to conceal me well. Nothing breaks up the hunters outline better than an evergreen. But oftentimes you will sacrifice some of your shooting radius in choosing this type of tree. For hunters who are not fond of heights I strongly recommend the evergreen, as I have been able to get away with things at a 10 foot height that you cannot even dream about in a hardwood of the same height. Still thinking about breaking up my outline to the best of my ability, the other type of tree I look for are doubles or clumps. A single tree of large diameter can also be effective. It’s obvious none of these situations are attractive to the climbing stand hunter, and it’s probably the number one reason they hunt higher on average than hunters using other stand strategies. I’m going to refrain from recommending a certain stand or climbing device as there are so many great products on the market for us to choose from. If it is “TMA Approved” and you follow the directions that come with your product, then you are well on your way. I will strongly recommend the use of a safety harness in all stand hanging and hunting situations. If it saves your life once, it was worth it.

Now think about your prevailing wind direction and if you will be using this stand predominantly in the morning or evening. Also think about how you will approach it and on what winds. It’s very frustrating if you setup a morning stand that faces east or an evening stand that faces west, and you are constantly fighting that low sun in your eyes. I’ve learned that the hard way. There are very few stand sites that can be hunted on any wind, or approached from any direction. This stuff matters big time! A Midwest outfitter made a statement to me a couple of years ago that I will never forget. He said, “When you add up all the little things that people say do not matter, they matter a lot”. Man did he hit the nail on the head. The hunter who is scoring on mature bucks at close range year in and year out is thinking about all of these variables, and understands the properties they hunt intimately. I also recommend placing several stands. This will allow you to make a quality choice the day of the hunt no matter the situation you’re presented with.

This late winter – early spring period is also the time I feel comfortable doing major trimming of shooting lanes. I generally like 3-4 lanes in different directions that are 6-7 feet wide. That way I can shoot an arrow unobstructed out to the distance that I am comfortable shooting. I would strongly recommend, if possible, making this a two man operation. It is nearly impossible to accurately tell what needs to be trimmed as you are looking from the ground up at the stand. A good bow saw and loppers are usually sufficient, but a chainsaw may be necessary and make life a little easier. Be sure to make at least two of your shooting lanes on the side of your stand that will be upwind when you plan to hunt there. Oftentimes the western side of the stand, or the uphill side on an evening stand site with the cooling/falling air. Or downhill on a morning stand site with rising air. This will be the situation on days that winds are light as they often are at dusk and dawn. I prefer to clear the bulk of the brush I create to an area out of range of my stand. Another option I consider is to place the brush right at the base of my tree or directly behind my stand as to avoid those shots presenting themselves. Now with your hard work done, the whitetails in your area have an entire 6 month growing season to acclimate to your new stand site. You can take your stand home and bring it back to the tree 1-3 weeks prior to hunting and easily put it where you had it at setup. Some would do this to avoid theft. I do it to avoid the local squirrels chewing at the seats and straps of the stand.

The last tip I would give on tree stand preparation is to test it in the coldest temperatures you anticipate hunting in. This could be on a tree near your house or in your neighborhood. What you will often find is the stand that was quiet at 40 degrees makes some obnoxious squeaks at zero degrees. The time to find this out is not when that wallhanger buck is right behind you. You will either change position on the platform or lift up your seat to get a shot, only to hear a squeak that sounds like a red squirrel hooked up to a amplifier! Adding Teflon washers or scent-free lubricants that are available is a way to prevent living out that nightmare.
I hope this helps our website visitors think about their stand strategy for the upcoming season, and provide them with the best chance of success in 2008!

Good Hunting!
Ron Boyce
Field Research Scientist
MDR Outdoor Group