5 Summer Projects for Killing Deer this Fall

   06.20.16

5 Summer Projects for Killing Deer this Fall

Like most deer hunters, I think about whitetails year-round, but most of my preparation activity is done just before the season opens, and most years I hunt from opening day right through the final bell. However, I’ve found that there are a few things I can do during the summer months that will significantly up my odds of shooting a buck in the fall.

Now, I like summer fishing as much as the next guy, but I will spend a couple weekends on deer hunting in the summer, and it pays off big time. I encourage you to take some time to do these five tasks, and I think you’ll agree that they are well worth it.

Trimming shooting lanes around your stand is best done in the summer when the disturbance won’t alarm deer. You can use the trimmings as barriers to guide whitetail travel patterns.
Trimming shooting lanes around your stand is best done in the summer when the disturbance won’t alarm deer. You can use the trimmings as barriers to guide whitetail travel patterns.
  1. Trim Shooting Lanes

Saplings and brush grows up around your treestands every year. If you wait till the last minute to trim it, you may alert the deer to your presence. They know their woods intimately, and some fresh cut trees lying around right before the season opens might put a mature buck on edge.

In the summer, you don’t have to worry about drops of sweat on the ground, and you can pile the trimmings in a way that will move the deer past your treestand. Using a pile of brush to gently guide movements works only if it has been done well ahead of time. It’s worth doing.

Creating individual whitetail beds might seem a little over the top, but this buck sure likes the idea. He’s lying in a bed created just for that purpose.
Creating individual whitetail beds might seem a little over the top, but this buck sure likes the idea. He’s lying in a bed created just for that purpose.
  1. Build Deer Beds

My friend and Iowa big-buck nut Jon Tharp taught me this one. Jon does his hinge-cutting to improve the amount of sunlight getting to the forest floor in the winter, but in the summer, he actually creates deer beds. That’s right, individual beds where he wants the deer to lie down.

Bucks do not like to lay on sticks and stones, so you can make a nice bed with a rake by clearing out a small area. Just like a big bass, bucks like to put their back against some kind of structure, so deer beds are best made with some kind of cover next to it. A downed log or deadfall tree is great; a brushpile works as well.

Bucks will bed where they feel secure, and you can create a feeling of security for them that will keep them from wandering over to the neighbors by making a group of individual beds that allow them to see what’s in front of them and have a barricade behind them. By doing several at differing angles, you allow the buck to use the one he prefers in various wind directions.

  1. Plant a Brassica Food Plot

You don’t have to be a farmer to plant a food plot. There are a couple that work very well with little effort. You can till up a small clearing in the woods and rake in some brassica seeds. The best time to do this is early August right before a rain. Once the sugar beets, turnips, radishes and rape gets established, it will grow there without much traffic. These plants become more palatable after a hard frost turns the starches in them to sugar. Then the deer pile into them during the archery season.

Another easy plot can be created by raking these seeds right between the rows of corn in front of your treestand. Most farmers will allow this if you assure them you won’t harm their corn. When the corn is harvested, the brassicas are sitting there ready for the hungry deer. These little secret spots are often at their peak in perfect timing for the October archery seasons.

Summer is the perfect time to begin a scouting cam inventory of the number and size of bucks in your area.
Summer is the perfect time to begin a scouting cam inventory of the number and size of bucks in your area.
  1. Use Scouting Cameras

Far too many hunters wait until just before hunting season to put out their scouting cameras. I have a half-dozen cameras working all summer. I have them on mineral sites and in bedding areas. Not only is it fun to watch a buck’s antlers grow and the fawns rapid daily maturing, but you can learn a lot about a deer’s preferred travel corridors. This is important information that will help you pattern the deer later on.

In the summer, you can be a little more aggressive about moving through areas the deer are using. While you might never consider violating a buck’s sanctuary during fall, you can safely check a camera in there every couple weeks during summer. Spray down with Scent Killer to reduce your intrusion and then check the cameras no more than twice a month.

Additionally, cameras help keep tabs on which bucks are in the area. By taking an inventory of them, you can make a “hit list” or at least have a feel for the property’s potential. Without a knowledge of what bucks are living in the area, you might decide to hold out for a 140-class buck or better when there aren’t any.  Don’t put the cameras away.

  1. Glass with a Spotting Scope

By the end of July, bucks have their headgear nearly fully grown. At this time, they may be more visible during daylight than any other time of the year. They readily feed on soybeans and alfalfa during the last couple hours of daylight. Find a high point where you can mount a spotting scope to your truck’s window and then watch their evening movements into the fields. This will help you keep track of the bucks and where they like to enter the field. Take note of the wind direction and where the bucks enter the fields during these conditions. This info will help you choose stand locations.

Bachelor groups of bucks are together at this time, and nothing makes your heart beat faster than seeing a bunch of mature bucks together in a field you’ll be hunting during the early archery season.

Don’t spend all your time laying by the pool this summer. You could be missing out on some important work that could pay off in a big way when deer season rolls around.

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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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