Smokehouse: Anyone who climbs into a tree stand without a safety harness on is just asking to be crippled for life, or make a one way trip to the morgue. One of my best friends fell out of a treestand as he was climbing down, without his harness still secured to the tree, and broke several ribs and fractured a vertebrae. I bothered him all the rest of his life.
Ron: Two ways to stalk deer in open areas. Use a small tree or bush as moving cover, and crawl forward at an oblique angle when their heads are down, or use a horse, as cover and walk very slowly, stopping frequently for the horse to also feed, while you close the distance. Both work because deer and antelope can't count, and don't recognize danger from a PLANT, as long as its not moving when they look at it. Even then, they will be curious more than frightened. Of course, both methods require a mountain of PATIENCE, and in the case of using a moving blind, crawling through scrub- and maybe even cactus in some locations. I know of a couple of MLers who spotted antelope, and found small cutbanks they could crawl up to close the distance. They got kill shots at 35 and 50 yds. respectively doing this.
I had a personal friend who belly crawled down the rows between corn stubble, here in Central Illinois to get into position about 50 yds. from a Windrow( windbreak) in time to watch a large group of does and bucks walk down the row in front of him. The biggest buck was last in line, and he killed him with one shot, after laying on a piece of tarp on the cold ground for more than an hour. None of the deer were aware of his presence until he fired his shot. He had the head and should mount on his wall in his law office.
So, these kinds of stalking techniques can work under a variety of conditions, and terrains. You simply have to practice, and scout the ground with the idea of learning the routes you can take to close with your game unseen. No one said its EASY. Otherwise, everyone could do it. :shocked2: :hmm: :thumbsup: :thumbsup: