Thanks to The Hunting Beast, this season I had great results hunting leeward ridges. I hunt norther LP of Michigan. Before this year I had never hunted public. Last ysshb spring I scouted some big ridges and found some spots for different winds in deep to setup during the rut.
2 hunts on these public ridges (1 bow November 9th, 1 last day of rifle) 2 bucks down over 2.5 years old. Needless to say, I've been looking all over for more good leeward ridges deep in public within a reasonable drive so I can scout it.
I've scouted a couple more ridges.. big ridges, fairly strait with no change in direction, and no intersecting ridges, and both ridges are over 2 miles long. Super deep in public LP Michigan. Flat ground on top, and swamp on the bottom on both ridges. Both run ridges run north south which is great for the prevailing fall west winds.
I've found lots of sign on top of these ridges, and tons of sign in the miles of swamp, inslands, and riverbottom below (swamps run for another 2-3 miles east of the ridges, so not just concentrated sign along the bottoms).
The thing is, both ridges are crazy Steep. I'm talking "don't climb up directly behind me while we climb up the ridge because I don't want a Rick slide to take off your face."
Back to my question; anyone have expierence with bucks traversing crazy steep hillsides? I want to try s couple spots this year, but man, it's crazy steep and little Sig on the leeward side. Thanks for your input
How Steep is too Steep?
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
They go up and down those like nothing. If there is a flat spot along the side of the ridge like a bench or old skidder trail those make awesome buck cruising spots during the rut because of the ease of travel. They are usually littered with scrapes from my experience.
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
I see them all over ridges I can't stand on and have to use my hands to help climb cause there so steep. I like to hunt right at the point where the steepness gets manageable near the top.
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
So how would you scout for beds in this terrain? Without wearing yourself out. I've walked some steep stuff in elk country. Without a decent trail your ankles get tired and sore fast. Plus the chance for slipping and falling is greater. Not thinking of getting hurt. It's just alot of work constantly getting back on your feet.
My thinking is it would be similar to marsh and swamp bedding. I'd walk near the top where it's still kinda easy. Looking for the larger trees in the 1/3 area. Then slide down to see if it has a flat spot for a bed behind it. The bigger trees would seem to have flats behind them more often. Since the small amount of erosion over the years. Would cause a slight build up of dirt. Cause the bigger trees would act like a dam.
Or can you rely on there being a decent trail to walk on in the 1/3 thermal tunnel area? Then look for the larger trees from there.
Granted you'd still miss some beds but I think this would be a good way to start in a new area.
My thinking is it would be similar to marsh and swamp bedding. I'd walk near the top where it's still kinda easy. Looking for the larger trees in the 1/3 area. Then slide down to see if it has a flat spot for a bed behind it. The bigger trees would seem to have flats behind them more often. Since the small amount of erosion over the years. Would cause a slight build up of dirt. Cause the bigger trees would act like a dam.
Or can you rely on there being a decent trail to walk on in the 1/3 thermal tunnel area? Then look for the larger trees from there.
Granted you'd still miss some beds but I think this would be a good way to start in a new area.
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
If there is a good population of deer there is usually a trail along the thermal elevation you can walk on. Trick to it is to try not to give up elevation. Up and down will wear you out
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
dan wrote:If there is a good population of deer there is usually a trail along the thermal elevation you can walk on. Trick to it is to try not to give up elevation. Up and down will wear you out
Yeah out west it seemed alot of game trails would move slightly uphill or downhill. Only a few seemed to stay at a constant elevation. Many would suddenly just peter out. If you were trying to still gain elevation you'd have to claw your way uphill abit to find a new trail to follow. Sometimes it would be a downhill one and then you'd have to claw your way uphill again. Some of the grasses were tough and slippery. Which increased the difficulty of your clawing.
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
Following tracks after a nasty rain or a 2-3" snow was really eye opening to me. Also finding bedding after a snow. It's like cheating. After I did that, bedding and trails stick out like a highlighter.
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
pewpewpew wrote:Following tracks after a nasty rain or a 2-3" snow was really eye opening to me. Also finding bedding after a snow. It's like cheating. After I did that, bedding and trails stick out like a highlighter.
After snowmelt is good too. Packed snow on deer trails remains and can be seen from a long distance.
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
around here there's so much diversity in terrain. If bluffs, you can stay up at the top, but I have found beds lower where there is a crossing...so you have to go up and down to find them. I've also scouted steep terrain that's not bluffs and if you stayed up where it starts to drop you wouldn't find many beds as they're bedding down lower on benches....these benches may only be 50 yards wide or so, so it's gonna take leg work going up and down. Then of course I've also been around bluffs and normal hills where I find them along elevation. It can be tough that's for sure
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Re: How Steep is too Steep?
On board w/ pewpew...spent some time in the woods w/ snow on the ground. Followed a set of larger tracks to a ravine/ditch that was deeper than wide, he didnt hesitate at all. I slid down to the bottom and used tree roots to climb the other side...steep AND greasy. And also if I'm right, a buck bedding on a north facing point w/ a south wind to his back will j-hook in which means he may be walking up to that bed to minimize his scent stream...possibly climbing uphill to get there. If that is true, hes making a big climb. New guy, so let me know if I'm mistaken.
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