So hunting on the private land that has for many years produced much venison for me has been a problem this year. I'm one of only two hunters allowed on, and the other is a very badly wounded vet who shoots crossbow...he's had a bad year there too. In the past I would often "kick up" at least one deer at any time that I walked the property between early black powder season, shotgun season, and late black powder season. When hunting, not only would I get at least one deer, but often two during a season, and the wounded warrior usually got at least one as well...there were usually two herds in the area of about ten deer each. This year I've seen only one deer there.
There are plenty of trails....and new ones since the first week of December. I put down some surplus acorns late in November and they were gone in 24 hours. Rubs on the trees where a buck or two removed his velvet are there too. What is lacking is deer scat. Unlike in previous years, and I think the deer are moving through the land, instead of bedding down or feeding there. Couldn't figure out what caused the change.
There had been some rumors of coyotes in the area, but no signs (nor sounds) of them since July.
Now the Northern two acres of this property is heavily overgrown, and really tough to get a shot, so I don't go in there much. It was a regular place for deer to bed, and I'd get them coming out or going in. So since I've not seen more than one deer (and that was two days after Christmas) I went looking around, including the Northern two acres.
What I found was 5 yards on the other side of the northern boundary (a broken down fence, though the fence posts are clearly visible) was a tree stand facing the boundary. Plus about a bushel of field corn had been dumped on my side of the property line. The tree stand was positioned so that the archer or shooter could not possibly fire at deer on the stand's side of the property line, and was well hidden from the view of the homeowner on the other side of the boundary. I also found a large salt block dropped even further onto my side of the fence.
So I suspect that the neighbor to the East, who has had run-ins for poaching in the past, came onto the Northern neighbor's land, and put up the stand, then dumped the salt and the bait. Following that I think he hunted it very hard, and really disrupted the normal movement of the deer...hence my lack of seeing them this year. They know to pass through but not to bed down or linger.
I should've wondered when the landowner where I hunt asked if I got a deer "the other day" since he heard a shot very close, and thought I was in his woods. The couple that live there are very elderly, and it didn't occur to the husband that my car wasn't parked next to theirs in the driveway; the shot didn't come from me. I told the folks that own the land, and their son, what was up. So, the couple is contacting the neighbor to the North to see if they gave permission for a hunter.
I don't think that I will have much luck the last two open days for deer, Jan 8th & 9th. IF the neighbors tell me they didn't give permission, I will seize that stand and impound it. Either way I will have to mark the trees so the schmuck poacher can't say "Duuhh....I didn't realize that old fence line was a land boundary." Even though he had to cross his own fence to get onto the land, or if a person was given permission, they have to shoot across a boundary and then cross that boundary to get their deer....it's still poaching.
I've been there more than 10 years, and have always respected the boundary. I've passed up a couple of shots in the past when the area wasn't so overgrown, because the deer were on the wrong side of the fence, even though by about a few feet. I could easily have dragged the deer back onto my side without anybody seeing....but didn't....
LD
There are plenty of trails....and new ones since the first week of December. I put down some surplus acorns late in November and they were gone in 24 hours. Rubs on the trees where a buck or two removed his velvet are there too. What is lacking is deer scat. Unlike in previous years, and I think the deer are moving through the land, instead of bedding down or feeding there. Couldn't figure out what caused the change.
There had been some rumors of coyotes in the area, but no signs (nor sounds) of them since July.
Now the Northern two acres of this property is heavily overgrown, and really tough to get a shot, so I don't go in there much. It was a regular place for deer to bed, and I'd get them coming out or going in. So since I've not seen more than one deer (and that was two days after Christmas) I went looking around, including the Northern two acres.
What I found was 5 yards on the other side of the northern boundary (a broken down fence, though the fence posts are clearly visible) was a tree stand facing the boundary. Plus about a bushel of field corn had been dumped on my side of the property line. The tree stand was positioned so that the archer or shooter could not possibly fire at deer on the stand's side of the property line, and was well hidden from the view of the homeowner on the other side of the boundary. I also found a large salt block dropped even further onto my side of the fence.
So I suspect that the neighbor to the East, who has had run-ins for poaching in the past, came onto the Northern neighbor's land, and put up the stand, then dumped the salt and the bait. Following that I think he hunted it very hard, and really disrupted the normal movement of the deer...hence my lack of seeing them this year. They know to pass through but not to bed down or linger.
I should've wondered when the landowner where I hunt asked if I got a deer "the other day" since he heard a shot very close, and thought I was in his woods. The couple that live there are very elderly, and it didn't occur to the husband that my car wasn't parked next to theirs in the driveway; the shot didn't come from me. I told the folks that own the land, and their son, what was up. So, the couple is contacting the neighbor to the North to see if they gave permission for a hunter.
I don't think that I will have much luck the last two open days for deer, Jan 8th & 9th. IF the neighbors tell me they didn't give permission, I will seize that stand and impound it. Either way I will have to mark the trees so the schmuck poacher can't say "Duuhh....I didn't realize that old fence line was a land boundary." Even though he had to cross his own fence to get onto the land, or if a person was given permission, they have to shoot across a boundary and then cross that boundary to get their deer....it's still poaching.
I've been there more than 10 years, and have always respected the boundary. I've passed up a couple of shots in the past when the area wasn't so overgrown, because the deer were on the wrong side of the fence, even though by about a few feet. I could easily have dragged the deer back onto my side without anybody seeing....but didn't....
LD