Hey all,
I set a goal for myself to take a deer this coming season (next year) with my .54 Hawken. I’m new to hunting, and to Alabama, and am hoping to get some advice from this knowledgeable community as to how to go about finding land to hunt and tips for stalking whitetail with a muzzleloader.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance!
Well I have no idea what your skill level is, so I'm not trying to talk-down at all, especially if you've taken a lot of deer with modern stuff. I can tell you what I did.
I started seriously hunting whitetail with a flinter in the 1990's. I had a series of mishaps, such as a ball hitting a 1" diameter branch between me and the deer
..., a "clatch" (no spark but the lock noise will spook deer), and a flash-in-the-pan (no
BANG
but a puff of smoke from the lock that will spook deer), and a wife who decide to call my cell phone just when I was leveling my sights on a fat doe (did you know that the buzz of a cell phone on vibrate will spook deer?
). Otherwise, I could NEVER get close enough for a shot, my area being modern-growth forest and abandoned farm meadows, etc.
So first, I obtained a very accurate rifle, and practiced a LOT. So the malfunctions and such were pretty much eliminated. Then I had to learn about deer and getting close.
I read
The Still Hunter by Theodore S. Van ****. (WOW the filter is set on SUPER SENSITIVE) Theodore S. Van Deyek (phonetic spelling) Now he was using a modern lever rifle with modern ammo BUT the ammo was revolver ammo, so it was as though he was using a muzzleloader when it came to effectiveness and distances. PLUS if you pass over his instructions on snap shooting and multiple shots, he walks
close to deer, wearing moccasins, and sets up. How he does this is he understood what alerted deer when it comes to noise, and, he understood scent and the wind. He understood where deer like to hide, and why. He had no fancy store bought gear, no scents, no tree stand, and was such a good hunter that he worked for a while for Teddy Roosevelt. Read it and apply it, would be my recommendation.
I learned how to move very quietly, and how to get very close
I learned how to know which way the wind was blowing, and use it to my advantage
I learned how to get close, and then set up and wait
I learned how to see deer in brush
I learned to hunt all day. No back and forth from my hunting spot due to a "lunch break"
As a result, I've gotten deer, both doe and bucks. I'm no genius (my wife will confirm that) SO if I can read a book, and try out what it teaches in the Spring and Summer and get good enough to bag a deer with a flinter, SO can you.
LD