Food Plot Hunting Strategies For Serious Hunters

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*Hidden blinds greatly add to the chance that your efforts will reveal increasing daytime deer numbers as the season progresses, and not decreasing deer numbers. A great deer parcel will add deer numbers as the weeks of the hunting season tick by, which is why you need to take a deer censusin mid to late October, and not August or September. Poorly managed parcels will decrease in number after the season begins. Which does yours do?

5 Important Food Plot Hunting Strategies

What is the #1 rule of hunting a food plot? Never let the deer know that you are there. So it should be no surprise that these 5 tips revolve around making sure that you keep from spooking deer!

1. Defined Line of Deer Movement

Whether you are hunting on public land or private, a defined line of deer movement that connects daytime bedding to afternoon feeding opportunities, is critical. Once you have defined the line of movement, then it’s time to hunt!

Line of Deer Movement Quick Tips: Mock scrapes and waterholes are a couple of great ways to strengthen a line of movement between bedding areas and food plots!

2. Hidden Deer Blinds

If it isn’t hidden, I personally don’t hunt it. How can you expect to keep from spooking deer (and destroying your parcel), if your blind isn’t hidden alongside a food plot? In most cases I actually prefer a deer blind on the ground, for hunting adjacent to a food plot. Elevated positions are nice, but many hunts are ruined before they begin. Even though a hunter may access a location non-invasively, the actual climb into the blind or stand, often reveals their presence. While this may be less of a concern in extremely low hunting pressure locations, the majority of deer hunters in the country hunt in high pressure regions, and careful consideration needs to be addressed, when it comes to hiding their deer blinds.

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Hidden Deer Blind Quick Tips: Egyptian wheat, switchgrass, ridgelines, berms, conifers and low hinge-cut timber cuttings are all great for hiding your deer blind, and making sure that deer never see you enter or exit your blinds.

3. Low Impact Hunting Access

Rarely is it a great idea to hunt a food plot during the morning hours, unless the food plot is a small harvest plot located hundreds of yards away from traditional night time feeding areas. However, whether you are attempting to access a food plot blind alongside a morning hidey-hole, or are hiking to an afternoon feeding pattern, it is critical that your scent, sound or site is not exposed to deer. If you continually have to spook deer (even the ones 150 yards downwind of your access), alert deer or leave scent that deer will discover later on the way to your stand location, make sure to change the route or change your hunting strategy.

Low Impact Hunting Quick Tips: By creating bedding areas a 1/2 acre in size instead of several acres, you can be much more certain where deer are bedding during the hours of daylight. Also, using low quality park-like mature timber for access and a downwind, deer less scent catcher, is often much better than including that portion of your timber within your deer habitat creation program.

4. Downwind Deer Use Potential

The more defined the deer movement that you are hunting combined with low impact hunting access that you can blow your scent back into, the less likely you will be to spook deer while you are in your blind.

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Downwind Deer Potential Quick Tips: Heavily defining deer usage has more perks than just creating a movement to ambush deer from! Instead, the more you define deer usage in front of you, the more you define the lack of deer usage behind you.

5. Deerless Deer Blind Departure

I have experienced that while the deer that you spook while on stand and during your hunt are one level of potential impact to assess, the deer that you spook hours after your hunt, has just as much of a role to play in educating the local deer herd.

Deerless Food Plot Exit Quick Tips: Trail cams, evening scouting missions and observation stand locations can all let you know exactly where deer are piling into as darkness settles. Nearly every deer in the neighborhood should be on a quality food source by dark (hopefully yours!), so taking a wooded exit through bedding areas can often be a great way to sneak around large numbers of deer, aftern dark.

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Ethan Smith is a seasoned marine veteran, professional blogger, witty and edgy writer, and an avid hunter. He spent a great deal of his childhood years around the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest in Arizona. Watching active hunters practise their craft initiated him into the world of hunting and rubrics of outdoor life. He also honed his writing skills by sharing his outdoor experiences with fellow schoolmates through their high school’s magazine. Further along the way, the US Marine Corps got wind of his excellent combination of skills and sought to put them into good use by employing him as a combat correspondent. He now shares his income from this prestigious job with his wife and one kid. Read more >>