Plan Your Fall Whitetail Hunt Now

   04.08.14

Plan Your Fall Whitetail Hunt Now

If you are going to take a hunting road trip for whitetails this fall, you need to start your planning now. Here’s how to get started on the road to success.

The longest journey begins with a single step. If you are planning to travel to hunt whitetails this year, you need to take that first step right now. Tag application time is in the late winter through spring, and it’s also time to start doing your homework to increase your odds of coming home with a buck come fall.

The first thing that needs to be done is to make sure you can secure a deer tag for your destination state. Many states offer whitetail tags over the counter (OTC) but in many more, you must apply to receive one. Several states have drawings that award tags based on the number of applicants and preference points.

Each time you are unsuccessful in the drawing, you are awarded a preference point. For example, if you want to bowhunt in any of the good zones in Iowa, you will need at least two preference points. If you apply for three years, you will most likely draw the tag the third year. Most states offer the option of buying the point separately so you do not have to send in the entire tag fee when there is no chance of drawing a tag. If you want to hunt a state with a drawing in the future you should start right now buying a preference point each year. You can hunt states with OTC tags until you get drawn.

Whitetail and Bear Hunting Tag Application Information

State Application dates Preference point fee Nonresident tag fee Extra fees Total Link
Colorado March-April $40 $351 $10  $361  Click here
Illinois June $411 $63.25 $474.25  Click here
Indiana OTC $150  Click here
Iowa May $50 $426 $125 $551  Click here
Kansas April $22.50 $322.50 $72.50 $395  Click here
Kentucky OTC $60 $130 $190  Click here
Minnesota OTC $140  Click here
Missouri OTC $225  Click here
Montana January-March $20 $542 $10 $572  Click here
Nebraska OTC $209 $20 $229  Click here
North Dakota OTC $200 $15 $215  Click here
Ohio OTC $149  Click here
Oklahoma OTC $280  Click here
South Dakota Unlimited $195  Click here
Texas OTC $315 $7 $322  Click here
Wisconsin OTC $160  Click here
Wyoming January-March $40 $312 $30 $342  Click here

Once you have decided which state you plan to hunt this year, you will need to start looking at your hunting location options. Most do-it-yourselfers hunt on public land, and most whitetail states have plenty of it. These include state hunting lands, county areas, Army Corps of Engineers lands, and state forests. Many states offer a walk-in program of some sort, in which landowners allow the public to access their land to hunt. Most of these areas are geared at upland bird hunters, but I have found some real gems of deer hunting on these properties in both North Dakota and Kansas. Spend some time on a state’s wildlife agency website to find these areas. Most state websites have maps of public areas.

Start by analyzing these public lands on Google Earth to determine which ones look like they have good deer habitat. Check for areas that look like good bedding spots and funnels that will concentrate deer movement patterns. Make sure you try to determine where the food and water is found. Crop fields butting up against public forested land can offer some great possibilities. On many public lands, you will need to get off the road a ways because most people don’t hunt more than a half mile from their truck.

Once you get good at analyzing the terrain on these aerial photos, you can start to pick out potential treestand sites. Also look for good access points where you can get to and from the treestand with a minimum of impact on a deer’s senses.

A successful hunt starts from home in the spring. The author spends significant amounts of time analyzing public hunting land in aerial photos, looking for that next hunting hot spot.
A successful hunt starts from home in the spring. The author spends significant amounts of time analyzing public hunting land in aerial photos, looking for that next hunting hot spot.

I also spend some time on hunting forums searching for information on the particular area. Often just asking a question on a deer hunting message board will turn up some great nuggets of information. In one case I had a hunter from a state far away offer to drive me around and show me some areas. You can bet I took him up on the offer.

The next thing that needs to be done is get some firsthand information. Call up wildlife biologists, game wardens, and county conservation boards. Ask them specific questions about the property. You want to know how much hunting pressure it gets and what’s available for the hunter. Are their wildlife food plots planted? If so, what’s planted in them? Ask about the deer population and if there have been issues such as epizootic hemorrhagic disease (EHD) that could adversely affect the deer.

I try to call back about a week before I leave and ask them some of the questions again. Have the crops been harvested? Where have you been seeing deer lately? Are the bucks chasing the does or hitting the scrapes? Answering these questions are part of a public employee’s job, so don’t be shy.

Any time I can, I will get some trail cameras out to assess the deer population and check for trophy potential. A scouting trip in the spring or summer will help you learn the area and you can leave the trail cameras out for a month or more gathering information. In some of the states I hunt regularly, I have a buddy or two that will put trail cameras out for me a month or so before I arrive. I mail them the cameras then when I get there to hunt I have a lot of great information to go on.

My book for “road trip hunters,” The Freelance Bowhunter, goes into a great deal of detail on this subject. Your success during a fall road trip whitetail hunt begins in the spring. Start right now, and when the leaves begin to turn you’ll be rewarded for it.

Follow Bernie’s bowhunting adventures on his blog, bowhuntingroad.com.

Avatar Author ID 559 - 541616766

Bernie Barringer is a full-time outdoor writer and author of 11 books on hunting, fishing, and trapping. He travels North America each year hunting big and small game and fishing and blogs about it on his website www.bernieoutdoors.com. He is best known as a traveling "freelance hunter" with a bow. He has taken whitetails and bears with a bow and arrow in more than a dozen states and provinces. Bernie is a great resource for information that will make the traveling hunter more successful and he posts tips and articles on his website that help freelance traveling hunters be more successful.

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