Hi everyone, quick question on the things taught in this DVD. Do these lessons apply where there are less pronounced hills? Say rolling farmland where there are ridges and cuts, ditches and smaller hillsides.
In your opinions and knowledge can these be used in places were elevation is more subtle??
Thanks!
Hill Country DVD
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Re: Hill Country DVD
stringpuller wrote:Hi everyone, quick question on the things taught in this DVD. Do these lessons apply where there are less pronounced hills? Say rolling farmland where there are ridges and cuts, ditches and smaller hillsides.
In your opinions and knowledge can these be used in places were elevation is more subtle??
Thanks!
Yes... But the "hill bedding" DVD covers that rolling type terrain better in my opinion.
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Re: Hill Country DVD
Just finished watching this dvd. My favorite so far learned a ton. Thanks.
When will you do a rut dvd with all the terrain you cover.
That would be VERY nice to have "hint hint" lol
When will you do a rut dvd with all the terrain you cover.
That would be VERY nice to have "hint hint" lol
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Re: Hill Country DVD
stringpuller wrote:Just finished watching this dvd. My favorite so far learned a ton. Thanks.
When will you do a rut dvd with all the terrain you cover.
That would be VERY nice to have "hint hint" lol
Eventually. It is part of the series.
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Re: Hill Country DVD
Thanks man i have one more question. In the segment about J hooking bucks you talked about entering your stand similiar to a buck. You said it quickly and i didnt quite catch what you meant.
You try to enter your stand like a buck with wind to nose? Or with the wind?
Dan can you elaborate briefly for us on that?
Thanks
You try to enter your stand like a buck with wind to nose? Or with the wind?
Dan can you elaborate briefly for us on that?
Thanks
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Re: Hill Country DVD
Nevermind. I found this quote in a rut interview you did published on the web. Does a Big Buck enter a cattail bedding the same way? Or marsh?
""When a mature buck enters his bed, he almost always circles around and comes in from downwind, gets to the bed, then faces his scent trail. It's a great access because there is only one line of scent. His scent trail, and wind are in the same line. What we can learn from this is that when we access a stand, if we go straight into the wind to the tree (when possible obviously) our ground scent and wind scent will be in line and therefore a deer can only bust in one area, rather than two. ""
""When a mature buck enters his bed, he almost always circles around and comes in from downwind, gets to the bed, then faces his scent trail. It's a great access because there is only one line of scent. His scent trail, and wind are in the same line. What we can learn from this is that when we access a stand, if we go straight into the wind to the tree (when possible obviously) our ground scent and wind scent will be in line and therefore a deer can only bust in one area, rather than two. ""
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