Morning or evening deer hunts?
This question pops up every year like morel mushrooms after a warm spring rain. People have heard good and bad things about hunting mornings and evenings, and many beginning hunters are curious about the topic.I have 20 acres just outside my back door, but rarely will I hunt with a bow in the morning. For me, it isn't so much a problem of rising early as it is getting to a stand ahead of the deer.My answer to the question can be easily summed up with one word: Evening. It is the best time to hunt because the deer have moved around and returned to their bedding area hours before. It's possible to get into a stand, and if done quietly and without being winded, the odds of seeing deer are greatly improved.
What success I've had hunting mornings has happened later in the morning -- anywhere from 8 to 10 a.m. -- and it certainly beats trying to move into a stand in the dark and run the risk of busting deer.Mind you, I get around fairly well in the woods but it's very easy to bump deer while walking to a stand before sun-up. The deer may not snort and run madly off, but they can be curious. I've found the odds of spooking deer in the morning go up if you have to walk very far in the dark to reach a stand.Morning hunting can and does pay off during the rut, but in most cases a hunter can have a late breakfast, and climb into a stand about 9:30 a.m. Hunting from 10 a.m. until 2 or 3 p.m. can be a dynamite time to hunt because few other hunters are afield at that time and the bucks are moving well.It's the evening hunts that appeal to me and many other hunters. We move to our stands during daylight hours when most deer are still bedded down. The woods and fields have an opportunity to quiet down after our passage, and unless we leave a heavy human scent trail behind, there is little to spook deer an hour or two hours later.Late afternoon and early-evening hunts are less frantic. Morning hunts find us hurriedly rushing against the coming dawn to a stand we have trouble seeing. We get all sweated up, and find ourselves hurrying and making mistakes in the dark. We trip over tree roots, step on twigs and branches that snap, eventually turn on a flashlight to make any needed correction in our travel route, and all of this can scare deer.
