One of my favorite winter and early spring (before green up) activities is scouting for last fall's deer sign. I don't know about your area, but usually scrapes, rubs, bedding areas, trails, feedings areas, etc. used by deer remain fairly constant unless there is a major change or disruption. Even though many of the deer that made that sign are now dead and in someone's freezer, the next generation of deer seem to pick up where the last one left off.
This year, in SE MN, we had almost zero snow...bare ground mostly. Scouting has been great! Last fall's scrapes and trails stick out like a sore thumb. No bugs, skeeters, or ticks. I grab my longbow & some stump arrows or my .36 flinter squirrel rifle and hit new areas to explore.
How about you?
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Think they are crossing this river here?
Scrapes have been abundant. This trail paralleling the river had a lot of them.
Never saw field corn in Coyote droppings before! Not sure if he ate a gut pile or actually ate some field corn, but clearly it wasn't digestable!
And sometimes you find last season's "unclaimed" warriors that you wish had made it another year. Wish these two had made it!
This year, in SE MN, we had almost zero snow...bare ground mostly. Scouting has been great! Last fall's scrapes and trails stick out like a sore thumb. No bugs, skeeters, or ticks. I grab my longbow & some stump arrows or my .36 flinter squirrel rifle and hit new areas to explore.
How about you?
...............................
Think they are crossing this river here?
Scrapes have been abundant. This trail paralleling the river had a lot of them.
Never saw field corn in Coyote droppings before! Not sure if he ate a gut pile or actually ate some field corn, but clearly it wasn't digestable!
And sometimes you find last season's "unclaimed" warriors that you wish had made it another year. Wish these two had made it!
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