Whitetail
Hunting Tips: How to Use Deer Calls, Scents, and Decoys
Nebraska Trophy Whitetails - Trophy Whitetail Deer
Hunts
EARLY SEASON▶ Scents: Basic doe urine is all you want to
use now. It will reassure deer as they move through an area that all is well in
that part of the woods, especially as they travel about on the feeding patterns
that are common now. If you go with an estrous scent early, you’ll only spook
deer, as they will know that isn’t natural for this time of year.
▶ Calls: A
grunt tube is essential. It’s good all season long and is really the only call
that should be used in the early season. If your tube is adjustable, make the
grunt less deep and guttural so that it sounds more like a young buck. This will
be less intimidating to other bucks at a time when they are not yet challenging
each other too hard.
▶ Decoys: Try using a subordinate (or smaller) buck
decoy now, as young groups of bucks are still moving together and might become
curious about the new kid on the block. With deer still locked on feeding
patterns, it seems a doe, with doe scent placed around her, might act as a
confidence tool, but it’s best to save that trick for later in the
season.
PRE-RUT
▶ Scents: Bucks are getting ramped up
for the coming rut, and now is the time to challenge a big boy’s dominance. Buck
urine, used either in high-traffic travel corridors or in conjunction with a
scrape, can bring a bruiser charging in.
▶ Calls: Now is the time to break
out a medium to heavy set of rattling antlers or a rattling bag. Bucks are
beginning to seriously challenge one another, and even the more passive ones
will be curious about who is doing battle. Start slowly and work the antlers
into a loud clash for two to three minutes, staying alert to any bucks that may
rush in. Take a break of 15 to 30 minutes between each set. When rattling, mix
in some grunts or rake a tree or the ground for added realism. As the rut
approaches, rattling will only be more effective.
▶ Decoys: Now is the time
to go with a standing subordinate buck and place it 20 to 25 yards out from your
stand, where deer approaching from different directions might spot it.
Angle
the fake buck so that it’s looking perpendicular to you or looking past your
stand at an angle (never at you) so that an approaching buck offers a broadside
shot or quartering-away shot when it faces off with the
decoy.
RUT
▶ Scents: Within two weeks of the peak of
the rut is when you want to bust out a top-dollar doe estrous scent. When you
start seeing those first bucks—either in person or on a trail camera—running
loopy through the forest on the trail of a doe, spread the scent liberally
around your best stand on three or four wicks. Mix in a little tarsal gland to
fuel a dominant buck’s jealousy at the same time. Use both on drags going in to
your stand.
▶ Calls: When you spot a buck cruising in search of does during
the peak of the rut, three or four short, quick doe bleats will make it think a
willing doe is nearby. If it’s already on a doe’s trail or slipping through and
doesn’t hear the bleats, throw a single, loud snort-wheeze its way. That can
stop a buck in its tracks and bring it stomping back toward you. Keep rattling
and grunting during the peak, too.
▶ Decoys: A good buck decoy, with tarsal
scent hung right next to it, can serve to irritate territorial bucks on the
prowl and bring them in when you combine it with a snort-wheeze or grunt. Up the
ante with a doe decoy used in conjunction with the buck. That combination can be
deadly.
POST-RUT
▶ Scents: With rut activity winding
down, a whitetail’s thoughts return to food, especially in regions where winters
can be tough. Generally, it’s time to return to basic doe urine to put deer at
ease. About 28 days after the peak of the rut, the second rut should kick in and
you should get back to using estrous scent. Because second-rut intensity is
lower, don’t expect it to work the wonders it did a month ago.
▶ Calls: The
battles and challenges of the rut are winding down, deer have been run hard, and
hunting pressure is at its peak. Every sound you make now should be about
reassuring a buck that the environment is safe. Occasional doe bleats to mimic
those final estrous does can be helpful, but for the most part just stick to
light, occasional contact grunts when you actually have your eyes or ears locked
on a deer moving nearby and just need to draw it in a little closer.
▶
Decoys: Food has moved back up the hierarchy of needs over breeding, so use a
feeding doe decoy out in the open to instill hunt-weary deer with confidence.
Don’t use a buck decoy now, as bucks may still be skittish. Place estrous scent
around a doe decoy and offer occasional bleats to add to the fake’s appeal.
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