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Are the glory days of deer hunting coming to a close?

I was listening to Lee lakosky talking about his strategy for buying land and he kept harping on neighbors. Which i totally get. But that’s a ballsy strategy to base almost everything on. Every piece of property is for sale for the right price, so even the best neighbors could sell. Now if you talking bordering a military base or state park or giant river/lake, I get that but individual landowners are unpredictable.

@Hoytvectrix this guy is must be getting “help” from neighbors. I would love to think even the perfect 400 would hold mature bucks but those deer are definitely wandering around the neighborhood. Obviously his track record speaks but while 400 is big for an individual, it’s a hop skip and jump for a buck
How does @Native Hunter do it on much smaller then?
 
I learned a long time ago that trying to only target mature bucks in my area, with 3 months of consecutive firearm seasons that span all phases of the rut, was a futile effort outside of controlling thousands of acres or getting LUCKY with your neighbors.

Instead of challenging myself with the age and size of a deer, I chose to challenge myself with my weapon of choice. Spend a few years hunting with traditional archery equipment only and I promise you, that 130" 8pt that you don't care much about now, will be magically transitioned to a very real trophy animal.
 
Are the "glory days" of deer hunting over? Considering the numbers of mature, better-racked bucks today - NO, the days are better now than many of my early hunting years. It's not even close! Spikes are fewer here (they used to make up the majority!), and bigger bodies / bigger racks are the norm. AR & trigger restraint have made a difference. Speaking for Pa.
 
I also see bigger bucks in Vermont. I have to give management some credit, but mostly I attribute it to fewer hunters and less land access for hunters.
 
That book and the Dbltree posts are really all a guy needs to know damn near everything necessary to successfully foodplot.

Ed was way ahead of his time on diverse plantings too.
I admired both of those guys. Good information with out all of the fluff and bragging.
 
Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder........

You get a few years into this, you want more deer. A few more than than better deer. A few years after that, you see time going by and just want to enjoy the outdoors like you did when you started.

I get something easy to obtain in the freezer early........ Takes the stress of getting the one you want vs getting one in the freezer out of your system.

Im kind of in double creek's mindset. I make the harvest itself a challenge. I brag how close I shoot them. Often go in the woods with traditional iron sighted flintlocks. Have no problems with 100 or 125 yard shots when the wind and animal is calm though. So, not soo limited.

Alot of issues is camera technology and the internet. It is very discouraging for a lot of hobbies, not just hunting....... Only cool hotrod is a twin turbo LS, rust free, frame off restoration...... Cant catch a good fish unless you got a triple 350 horse offshore boat.

Happy just hunting with my old marlin lever gun and no cameras up. Enjoy my humble little mustang. Have a great time on the inlets with my old penn reels, or in the lake with my 6hp Evinrude and basic fish finder........

Grass is always greener somewhere...........
 
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