scoot52
5 year old buck +

That the same as myself. I enjoy my land year round, but I'm sure if I stayed out of my woods till September I'd surely kill or have the chance to kill better deer, but my experience on my place does not stop the day deer season ends. I'm always taking my boys and stowing them a type tree they didn't know or a different bird sound or just to look at God's creations right in front of us with nothing man made in sight.I actually mainly try to attract the deer during the season. I like to enjoy our property by 4 wheeling, camping, etc. during the off season. My strategy is standing crops when all the surrounding crops are harvested. We also have 10 acres that we stay out of. Corn, beans, radishes, peas and oats will be the main attraction for us this yr.
Most of us will never "hold" a mature buck solely on our land so the goal is to get the buck to spend the most time possible on our parcels. For me, a year round food source is #1. When a buck knows that whenever he rolls through there will be something attractive for him to eat, whether it's rye in April, buckwheat in July, turnips in November, or woody browse in February, the "stops" will become more frequent and of longer duration. Combine that with quality bedding cover and low pressure and he may even lay his head there from time to time. As the rut starts to ramp up, this buck will have no problem finding doe on the food sources which he has been sharing with them for the previous months and even years. He should become more visible and therefore killable on the parcel during this time.just wanted guys opinions on the number one improvement a guy can make to hold mature bucks on his parcel. To me its having a sanctuary. I only own 40 acres and half of it I only access in the spring for trail and bedding maintenance. This is a pic of a great buck leaving a sanctuary and heading for a plot and water hole.