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Thread: Do you sit in the same spot all week ?

  1. #1
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    Default Do you sit in the same spot all week ?

    Wondering if you guys set up multiple spots during the hunt or if you set up one spot and go to the same spot every day?

    I have 2 ground blinds this year. I'm thinking if setting them up in two different spots. Giving me an option on where to go.

    One spot would be in the middle of the bush in a clearing. The only problem with this spot is if the snow comes down hard ill have to walk through snow up to my waist to get there in the morning.


    My other spot is closer but in thick bush but is like a deer highway almost.
    but isn't that bad of a walk through the snow if it does end up coming down.



    Curious to know what you guys do.


    My dads always been one to sit in the same spot all week because he's been screwed over after moving to another spot and seeing deer infront of the spot he was the day before lol


    Any comments pictures etc are welcome

    Sent from my SM-G960W using Tapatalk

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  3. #2
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    I have 100 acres to my self. I have 4 spots I sit, all depending on wind direction so my wind isn't hitting the swamp/bedding area.

    Sent from my SM-G781W using Tapatalk
    "If guns cause crime, all of mine are defective."

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  4. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by SongDog View Post
    I have 100 acres to my self. I have 4 spots I sit, all depending on wind direction so my wind isn't hitting the swamp/bedding area.

    Sent from my SM-G781W using Tapatalk
    Same here, multiple stands built to accommodate wind direction and a couple of pop-ups for rain/snow days.

    Last year, I took a walk down memory lane for a few hunts. Went back to stalking and sitting randomly behind logs etc on my turkey hunting chair. It was quite fun and sure broke the boredom of staring at the same patch of bush, day in day out.

    I hate trail cams during hunt week, no one wants to see a nice young buck standing in front of one stand when you went to the other on that morning. HaHa.

  5. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by MikePal View Post
    Same here, multiple stands built to accommodate wind direction and a couple of pop-ups for rain/snow days.

    Last year, I took a walk down memory lane for a few hunts. Went back to stalking and sitting randomly behind logs etc on my turkey hunting chair. It was quite fun and sure broke the boredom of staring at the same patch of bush, day in day out.

    I hate trail cams during hunt week, no one wants to see a nice young buck standing in front of one stand when you went to the other on that morning. HaHa.
    hah tell me about it, had my trail cam beside my blind last year, as i was sitting in it i had a buck walk right past me but it was still 15 minutes until legal, buck turned around started yelling at me like a donkey snortted and then took off. my trail camera caught the whole thing. video is on my laptop, havent deleted it yet LOL. hopefully i get another chance at him this year.

    what you guys are saying about wind direction is a good idea. perhaps ill do something similar this year.

  6. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bowjob View Post
    what you guys are saying about wind direction is a good idea. perhaps ill do something similar this year.
    If you're sitting in the middle of a bush, you'll find the wind direction swirls around on the forest floor. I learned this burning scent sticks and watching the smoke trail change from left to right continuously, even 360 circles sometimes. That's where you want to be up high and have the best scent control you can and hope for the best. HaHa.

  7. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by MikePal View Post
    If you're sitting in the middle of a bush, you'll find the wind direction swirls around on the forest floor. I learned this burning scent sticks and watching the smoke trail change from left to right continuously, even 360 circles sometimes. That's where you want to be up high and have the best scent control you can and hope for the best. HaHa.
    fair enough, im surprised i seen as many deer as i did last year in the bush sitting on the floor. whats weird tho is after the third day it was a ghost town. which is why im thinking of setting another spot up, dont have the luxury of setting a tree stand on this property so hub blind is going to have to do. ill be putting it up fairly early and brushing it in well this year for sure.

  8. #7
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    There is no sure bet-deer does what deer do.
    One can sit all week, and catch a deer, or move ,and catch a deer.

    I have 10-15 spots,some for many years,some leaving then adding new every year(mind You-i hunt almost exclusively pay for use public-so i move some)

    I think ,especially in hard hunted areas,the best is to move.During the season as well.
    Deer will get patterned you out soon enough.
    There is a huge element of surprise if you move(even 50 yards up/down a trail).

    Pup up blinds/hub blinds are not the best for that-but nothing wrong sitting still on a right spot ,low on a turkey chair.
    Last edited by gbk; July 18th, 2021 at 07:48 AM.

  9. #8
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    I have 2 stands, my original on the outer edge of a soft maple swamp, in a cedar clump about 14 feet in the air. Got my first deer here, so that makes it special and I almost always do my first monday morning sit here.
    My other main stand is 100 yards further inside the maple swamp. This one is on a big maple about 22 feet up with a great view. From the ground it is hard to see anything 40 yards away, but from this height you can see almost 200 yards in some directions.
    Both stands are made with pressure-treated wood and steel roof as well as plywood walls, the higher up one having a good wooden ladder with deck block base for it to prevent any premature rotting.
    Both stands get a careful inspection every year at least once for integrity, and we have condemned 1 other tree stand we built about 20 years ago as the tree is starting to lean and die off.
    We have a few other box-style stands being used that are about 7 feet off the ground but I prefer higher up for scent control as we do not really have major trails, the deer tend to wander anywhere and from any direction so you need to keep your head on a swivel.
    Looking at putting a few bases in spots for doing stalk and sits as 1 hunter tends to get easily bored and likes to wander.
    John
    Last edited by johnjyb; July 18th, 2021 at 08:04 AM.

  10. #9
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    As others have said, wind plays a big factor in deciding where to sit. I also have stands on opposite sides of a field between 2 woodlots that funnel deer where the sun rising or setting decides which one I sit in so as not to be blinded at an opportune time. Other properties in controlled hunt area are strictly hunted hard during the early bow season and then left to settle down until the December hunt.

  11. #10
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    I would suggest setting up at least 2 stands. One tree stand and one ground blind is a good combo to take advantage of the morning thermals (the warm air rises in the AM). If you don't have a tree stand, I would set up one ground blind in a higher spot, like the top of a ridge for morning sits. The other one in a lower area for the afternoon/evening sit. Despite our best efforts to conceal scent, if the wind isn't right you will get busted. Obviously more of a factor for bow than rifle.

    Also just as important as your stand locations...are how you access those locations. Chose spots that don't involve lots of trailblazing. You need to sneak in and out undetected. And don't get too close to bedding areas or you will bump deer off the property.
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