You're hitting on something I've been paying a lot more attention to in the last 10 years or so, Art. I don't pretend to have learned enough to fully understand it, but there is no doubt in my mind that deer density impacts deer behavior a ton more than we realize.
One of the big things I've noticed is that deer activity increases as deer densities increase. When you have stupid high deer numbers, you see a significantly higher % of all age classes and dominance levels moving during daylight. My belief is that the more subordinate bucks and family groups are forced to move earlier and earlier to get their crack at the better food and water sources for the doe groups and any chance of breeding for the bucks. It may sound cheesy, but I believe the higher level groups of deer and bucks then see the lower doing this and assume it's safe for them, as well. It sort of becomes a snowball rolling down a mountain after a while.
Obviously, how safe the deer do and don't feel on a property impacts all of this, as well. That said, one of the stupid big pieces of ground I manage had deer entering plots at all hours of the day when numbers were ridiculously high, but dropped off to about normal when numbers were decimated by disease, and pressure was actually a bit less on the low deer numbers years. Now that numbers are climbing again the deer are entering the wide open earlier and earlier along with the numbers increases. I've noticed this link on a handful of different properties over the last 10 years or so. I'm sure there is more to it that I just described, but equally sure that's a major factor in it.
We are on foot on our place almost exclusively. From time to time we'll have a wheeler out there doing stuff, but it's in and out, and at slow speeds. A.
You don't want to surprise your deer. Senses are sight, smell, and sound.
Sometimes its best to let the deer hear you on a machine and let them get out of your way vs surprise them with your presence. If you are not careful when you walk the deer can smell you for hours after you pass by. That means a wheeler may be the way to go.
Stealth has its place but noisy machines can be part of a good plan.
I have thought about a bicycle. Quiet, little ground scent, and you might just move fast enough that a deer just watches you.
You don't want to surprise your deer. Senses are sight, smell, and sound.
Sometimes its best to let the deer hear you on a machine and let them get out of your way vs surprise them with your presence. If you are not careful when you walk the deer can smell you for hours after you pass by. That means a wheeler may be the way to go.
Stealth has its place but noisy machines can be part of a good plan.
I read some books by Dr. Ken Nordberg where he discusses how hunter behavior causes deer to spook. Act like a predator and they spook. Move right along at a steady pace and many are not bothered.
The curious thing is that the shooting they DO hear is from the immediate surrounding camps. Our guys are driving the deer off our land & onto the neighbors' camps and THEY shoot the deer !!!
And those deer at the edge of the BWCA probably react differently than our deer.I buy that. But I always feel like you need to fool the deer into knowing you are not there. If they see, hear or smell you twice, they assume that is your turf and are not comfy there. I like them comfy where I expect them to be.
Two or three years ago, we just would not see a deer in the daylight, period. Practically year around. Up to 8 doe tags, open country, and rifle zone.We drive by deer on our golf cart regularly. Also on a wheeler......but it does seem that any erratic moves will spook the deer - and moreso on the wheeler than the electric cart. I don't think they know the cart is moving.....it's so quiet and un-obtrusive. I "deliver" our hunters to the stand on our cart....if at all possible. It's much faster.....and keeps the scent and human footsteps and noise to a minimum.