-
November 3rd, 2022, 04:04 PM
#1
Deer activity in warm weather?
I was hunting in WMU 85 near Goderich yesterday and the day before, and despite being out there in the bush for two mornings and an evening tree stand hunt, I saw no sign of deer activity whatsoever. There are tracks, but few droppings and no rubs or scrapes . I thought that the first week of November in Southwestern Ontario is normally the early rut time, but I got no response at all to my rattling and grunt calling whatsoever. Is the beginning of the rut delayed thanks to the warm weather or am I simply in the wrong track of land. I am not the most experienced hunter but I have sole access to 50 acres of private land owned by a colleague which usually holds a decent amount of deer. The controlled hunt starts next Monday and I am in a bit of a loss on how to go about it to find some success. Any tips you might have would be greatly appreciated.
-
November 3rd, 2022 04:04 PM
# ADS
-
November 3rd, 2022, 04:26 PM
#2
warmer weather has them moving less, lots of time hunker down in the swamps and lowlands. this gun hunt will be interesting but i expect with groups running the bush deer will be moving in southern ontario AG lands-- as most bushes will have the orange army out there.
rut will kick off regardless. mix of warm weather slowing down movement and rut kicking off, i expect mid november to be pretty crazy for deer movement. hoping to tag out by then and chasing ducks tho...
-
November 3rd, 2022, 04:27 PM
#3
Others may correct me, but I read an article, can't remember which one, some time ago that clearly stated that weather had nothing to do when the rut will start. The guy that wrote the article had done extensive research on this topic and said that moon phases and a calendar in their head were the key factors not the weather.
Guns have two enemies................rust and government
OFAH and CCFR member
-
November 3rd, 2022, 05:12 PM
#4
Hey dont let it fool you, I wake up at 6am to go to work every day and ill tell you it's col out there. Near freezing. Now if you hunt anywhere in 72 or 81 areas you would know that the weather changes in a instant. Only takes 1 below 0 night to get the cold air chill going. I was hunting turkeys in spring 1 year on a sunny day and I poop you not it started hailing HARD for like 2 minutes and then just stopped. It was still sunny out while it was hailing too. Weirdest thing I've ever witnessed
Sent from my SM-G960W using Tapatalk
-
November 3rd, 2022, 05:22 PM
#5
-
November 3rd, 2022, 05:27 PM
#6
I'll be hunting the river bottom at my camp next week. Lots of scrapes last weekend so not too worried.
The wilderness is not a stadium where I satisfy my ambition to achieve, it is the cathedral where I worship.
-
November 4th, 2022, 05:57 AM
#7
Last 3 days our group has seen more mature bucks and early in the afternoon then before it got warm,
-
November 4th, 2022, 07:17 AM
#8
Fifty acres is not a lot of land to “hold” deer. There’s a good chance that deer are elsewhere in their home range (350 - 650 acres). At this time of year, the does and fawns will be feeding heavily and the bucks will be cruising through those areas checking up on them. Study the land around your property. What crops and forage are growing nearby e.g. Soybeans, corn, grain, alfalfa, etc? How about fruit and mast trees? Maybe one of your neighbours dumped a big pile of bait? Understanding what’s going on and how deer use the larger area is important.
Last edited by Sam Menard; November 4th, 2022 at 07:21 AM.
A true sportsman counts his achievements in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport. - S. Pope
-
November 4th, 2022, 08:22 AM
#9
87 activity was slower than usual, it will pick up.
National Association for Search and Rescue
-
November 4th, 2022, 08:34 AM
#10

Originally Posted by
Jaeger
I was hunting in WMU 85 near Goderich yesterday and the day before, and despite being out there in the bush for two mornings and an evening tree stand hunt, I saw no sign of deer activity whatsoever. There are tracks, but few droppings and no rubs or scrapes . I thought that the first week of November in Southwestern Ontario is normally the early rut time, but I got no response at all to my rattling and grunt calling whatsoever. Is the beginning of the rut delayed thanks to the warm weather or am I simply in the wrong track of land. I am not the most experienced hunter but I have sole access to 50 acres of private land owned by a colleague which usually holds a decent amount of deer. The controlled hunt starts next Monday and I am in a bit of a loss on how to go about it to find some success. Any tips you might have would be greatly appreciated.
I hunt less than an hour from you and think we are definitely in the pre rut. My cameras have been showing way more buck activity the last week unfortunately mostly still after dark. But I did see a buck put the run on a doe a few nights ago. I've had no luck with the calling or rattling yet except for a fawn last night trying to act tough. He was on his own for nearly a half hour so maybe mom was off getting railed. I've also seen bucks sparring for 3 weeks already. The action is heating up, just stick with it