Bucks that just show up......


toddyboman

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What is everyone's thoughts on bucks that just randomly show up. No not during the rut but NOW when it is snowy and cold.

EVERY year I have good bucks show up on my property this time of year and it drives me crazy......

I run my trail cameras almost all year long. Spring/summer they are either on food plots or mineral sites. As the hunting season comes along and mineral activity stops I will move my cameras to scrapes and still on food plots. AFTER all seasons are over I start dumping corn. To help determine what deer/bucks are still around and when bucks start shedding.

Our seasons have ended and I now have started feeding/dumping corn.

And so far just like the last few years I have nice/good bucks start to appear. Why is it that as soon as I start dumping corn these better bucks show up but I DO NOT get a single picture of them during the previous 10 months.......

Is my property their LATE winter home range? Do deer travel miles this time of year in search for food and that brings them by? Have they just avoided my cameras all year until now? But seems to happens EVERY year for the past 5 years or so........

What is everyone's thoughts on this? I know it is driving me crazy each year.

???????????????

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Deer tend to wonder far from home for 2 main reasons. Love and food.

In the rut we always get a few nice surprises showing up and it's the same in the winter if you put out food, or have a food source of some kind.

It always amazes me when I see a brute that I've never seen before, and may never see again.

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Don't know Todd. Some deer just seem to know how to evade the cameras. I have seen bucks on our property that never got their picture made. At one time I was running 5 cameras along our small property at key places and would have bucks show up never to be seen again, some never show up on cams that I saw either hunting or when I was out, and some show up only at certain times and then disappear and show up again months later. With bucks older than 2.5 it seems more common here that they have no set pattern and don't show regularly like the younger bucks do at places like mineral sites.

Think this time of the year for the most part deer in places where food is short that they would be searching for food. Guessing the secondary rut in your area probably hits in early December, guess it could be possible there could still be a late doe or two in the area, but think it more likely the deer are looking for food and finding your corn.

Talked with my oldest the other day about maybe putting out some corn out in front of a cam here to see if we might get a few more to come around the cams, just hate to do that because it seems to bring in mostly raccoons and I hate the idea of feeding them.

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Seems like most of the question has been answered. I can add that I put out corn and a camera two years ago in view of my office window. A large buck I had never seen or captured on camera was coming in for some corn. He spotted the camera and froze. I never did see him again or got his picture.

You would think a free meal is a free meal, however not so with all big bucks. I think the key to every answer is big bucks. You just can't depend on them to do what you think they should.

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Thanks for all the input.........

I completely agree and understand that this time of year deer are in search of food. And with all the snow we have now they really are looking. But it really boggles or maybe frustrates me that every year this time of year (after season) I get pictures of better bucks than I have all year........I would like to think they have been here all year and simple just have been avoiding the cameras.......but I don't know.

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I'm seeing a couple bucks recently I haven't seen all year too.

If he was there all year you would have a picture of him. I think deer..bucks especially..shift home ranges at different times of the year. Right after the summer and before the rut being the most common time you see this shift. This time of the year you see the shifts also because of the changes in weather/food patterns.

I have the ability to keep a pretty close eye on many properties all within a few miles and its really interesting the subtle changes in patterns of some bucks throughout the year. I think thats what you are seeing now.

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That's a good deer. I know around here I fed corn all summer around the food plots, and got several pictures of a decent 8 point traveling the property but nothing consistant. As it got closer he became more consistant and had a rub line going through the middle of our property. I personally believe that the food source kept him close so when he finally decided to choose a home for the winter he stayed there even after the corn was gone.

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If you feed them, they will come. They will stay as long as there is food and they do not feel threatened and then, when the new green growth of spring begins, they will leave. Next winter, should they survive til then, they will remember and return for more easy grub. You need to find their home turf and hunt them there.

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We have this happen a lot too. Our land always holds more deer in the winter than during season because we have the only food around. I also think too that those old deer are good at avoiding the cameras. Somehow it seems, they just know. The biggest buck that we had around here spent time on our property and our neighbors about a mile away. In four years, he only showed up on camera six times and only twice during the season, every other time after season or before. Even with all the cameras we run, it still seems like they know how to avoid being seen.

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I've discussed this with friends of mine that have the same thing happen.

I personally believe that these smart mature bucks are not where my friends cameras are during the summer/fall because my friends are in the woods checking frequently, scouting, or putting up stands. The deer get bumped out (and stay out). They find those places where no one hunts and stay there until the food is gone in that area forcing them to move to other locations they avoided in the summer/fall due to human scent and presence. Generally this occurs in January.

I shot the biggest and oldest whitetail I've ever seen on January 17th as he was following does into a field at dark. It was the first time that deer had been seen. He was run down from the rut and weighed only 175 lbs.

I don't think he was interested in love, but following the does to the food.

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I shot the biggest and oldest whitetail I've ever seen on January 17th as he was following does into a field at dark. It was the first time that deer had been seen. He was run down from the rut and weighed only 175 lbs.

I don't think he was interested in love, but following the does to the food.

That's a cool theory fly. Holds a lot of merit IMHO. I shot the 2nd biggest of my life on December 28th. He came right into a Tinks wick, kind of always figured he was out looking for does that hadn't been bred yet...maybe I was wrong all along. :D

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I've discussed this with friends of mine that have the same thing happen.

I personally believe that these smart mature bucks are not where my friends cameras are during the summer/fall because my friends are in the woods checking frequently, scouting, or putting up stands. The deer get bumped out (and stay out). They find those places where no one hunts and stay there until the food is gone in that area forcing them to move to other locations they avoided in the summer/fall due to human scent and presence. Generally this occurs in January.

.

That does make sense......I have tried to place my cameras on the "edge" or somewhat near my stands so I don't have as much disturbance.....but you have an interesting point...

And I usually leave them in the same areas just because I am afraid if I move them around ALOT then I will spook more and more deer on my property by consistently checking them in different areas.....

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