Good luck Species, hope you score. Keep us posted
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Welcome to the forum.
It might be another options but you might want to look at what you've been doing the last 3 years.
Is there Deer around?
Are you scaring them away.
Are you sitting in blind first thing and last light?
Are you sitting all day?
Are you moving in blind a lot and making noise?
Is your blind well positioned downwind from Deer travel?
If you don't see Deer, you will never shoot one regardless the method you hunt.
You need to figure out what your doing wrong then work on that.
Good Luck
My natural walk is quiet. Many times I’ve got to 25y on deer and bear.
Try getting on a fresh track in the snow and see if you can find the end.
I think you would need good skill sets to accomplish this type of hunt. You need to know how to navigate in the bush, you need to know the terrain, you need the physical strength to get a deer out of the wood's. Deer are experts at hiding that is why they have survived since the ice age and on the ground they have all the advantages. I have been hunting deer for 30 years or so and would not try this type of hunt, unless I got real bored. The perfect day would be a sunny bright late fall day with good tracking snow and I would give it a go for a while.
I would think you would be more productive setting up a tree stand on a pinch point and waiting things out.
Deer in central Ontario have had the absolute crap kicked out of them 5 of the past 6 years by brutal winters. They are only just now on the recovery. The last 3 years are not reflective of the norm in the areas you are hunting.
Been on these backpack deer trips in the past and most turn into a gong show. Rifle season in November you’re at the whim of the weather. One day in a t-shirt and next day I have woke up to 4-6inches of snow. Makes tenting and camping out backcountry a real chore and have never seen my success increase vs just a day hunt. I spent 10days on a backpack moose hunt in sept northwest Ontario...first two days were beautiful then dropped to -10 and heavy snow. Spent more time surviving than hunting LOL.
Remember the 5 P's.....prior planning prevents poor performance. If going on a camp out,back pack hunt,always assume it will be a winter hunt and go accordingly with proper equipment,the very least of which should have a prospector tent with a wood stove,a way to dry clothes and a bug out plan in case you get snowed in. The tent hunts I experienced were the best of my hunting adventures. If it wasn't for being a senior hunter (cold and damp is no longer an option) ,I'd dearly love to do it again. Good luck and keep us posted.