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News Service: Tips to Increase Your Deer Calling Success

INFORMATION SOURCE:  These articles, and others to follow, are written by recognized experts in their specific fields and offered to you free of charge. This will enable you to reach special-activity segments of your reading/viewing audience with authoritative editorial material on a wide variety of subjects.  
Please consider the items for print, website and blog use.

In this Issue:

  • Tips to Increase Your Deer Hunting Success

  • Doe Whitetail on Hind Legs at Licking Branch

  • Books are safe, and good, Christmas Gifts

Tips to Increase Your Deer Calling Success

By Gary Sefton

Be Ready

“You’re not going to believe this,” the excited deer hunter exclaimed.  “I hadn’t seen anything all morning, so I let my bow down and started to unfasten my safety belt.  I remembered my brand new, never used deer call and thought “What the heck”.  I let go with a couple of parting shots on the call before beginning to climb down, and the buck of a lifetime came boiling out of the brush like his tail was on fire.  He stopped broadside, 20 yards from my stand, and I’m holding 25 feet of rope with my bow tied on the other end. “He was huge,” he said, holding his hands about two feet apart.

I had this conversation at one of the early Deer Classics and have had many more like it since.  I believed him.

This hunter’s experience was not that unusual, especially for first-time callers or callers trying a new technique.  With no confidence in the call or the technique, he’s thinking “I never heard a deer make a sound like that” or “This will probably run off anything within hearing”.

He has no idea what he is saying when he makes the call.  He has no clue what it should sound like, and/or he has never had a deer respond to calling, so he has no real reason to believe his deer call will work. So he sets himself up for failure by making a call and not expecting anything to show up.

I began working with game call companies in 1986, doing field testing and research on every aspect of deer calling, including interpreting and dissecting unusual and possibly significant vocalizations.  There’s not much you can do or say to a deer that I haven’t tried for experiments’ sake and/or in hunting situations, and there aren’t many reactions to calls that I haven’t seen. This article is from my book CALLING WHITETAILS: Methods, Myths & Magic. It is available at www.targetcommbooks.com.

He's trailing and he's grunting!

I can’t begin to tell you how many tales of woe I’ve heard from seasoned deer hunters who missed out on golden opportunities because their brains were on pause when a buck showed up.  If you believe in something enough to buy it and haul it to the woods with you, then you should believe something is going to happen when you use it. You want the deer to come into the area to investigate the deer making the call.  He may come in hard and fast or he may slip in and be gone before you know he was there.

Make the call, then wait for him! Look for him!  Stay on ‘red alert’ for 15 to 20 minutes after you make the call.  Expect a response and anticipate success.  You will still get caught with your guard down from time to time, but you won’t feel so dumb about it.

Consistently successful callers (deer, elk, turkey, etc.) always anticipate success and prepare for a response.  This anticipation is what I call the confidence factor, and it usually comes from experience and a working knowledge of the language of the game you’re hunting.  You don’t have to learn the hard way.  Learn the language, and when you make a deer call expect a deer to show up.

When You See a Deer

Deer have big ears.  They are good at pinpointing the precise location of a sound’s origin, so my rule is: If you can see a deer coming toward you, let it come, even if it is dawdling and taking its time.

You are in good shape as long as it is headed your way.  If you make a sound while it is enroute, you will call its attention to your location and increase the possibility of getting picked off.

She smells a rat!

If the deer veers off in another direction, a soft doe or buck grunt could be the right invitation to bring it back on course.  You don’t have anything to lose in those situations.

When I’m in this situation (the deer is not heading my way) I’ll call to any deer I see wandering around, but I keep it soft and passive unless I see or hear a buck trailing a doe.  When that happens, I’m going to get more aggressive, with some heavy breathing doe bleats to try to turn his head.  I have called several bucks to me that were trailing does. They thought the bleating doe was the same one they were trailing.

When you are doing blind calling, always take a hard look around before you make a call, to be sure the immediate area is clear of deer that could bust you. If you get busted, let him go.  There’s no reason to call to a deer that you know you have spooked. He won’t come back once he has you pegged, and he might very well associate the call to human presence.  What do you think he will do the next time he hears a call?

Learn the Language

Before your start blowing on your deer call, be make sure you know what you are saying so you don’t say the wrong thing at the wrong time. Deer can’t change their language, so just be sure you are familiar with the basics.  Beyond that, you have to be the judge of what is right for you.  Knowing the right sound to make to trigger a specific response gets you in the game.  Making the proper sound in the correct sequence gives you a chance to score.

When she talks, they listen!

Set Up to Call

An important but often overlooked aspect of calling success is in the caller’s location and set-up. Do your calling in a high-deer-use area where deer are comfortable making and responding to calls.  You are not going to call many deer when they are alarmed or distressed.

“What do you do when a buck comes almost close enough to shoot and won’t come any closer?” I wish I had a quarter for every time I’ve been asked that question.

The reason he won’t come any closer is because he can’t see the deer he’s been hearing.  He wants visual reinforcement to the audio signals he’s been getting. A warning – if you call to him while he’s looking in your direction (he usually will be if he’s responding to a call), he’ll most likely look you right in the eye and the hunt will be over. Your best bet is to let him walk, then try to call him back when he gets out of sight.

If you plan to call, try to position your stand on a rise or in thick cover so the deer will be in range when he comes into view.  Don’t forget: if you’re going to do aggressive calling or horn rattling, always try to set up with a natural barrier downwind of your stand.  If you can keep a buck from scent checking your position when responding to your calling, your chances for success are much better, especially with older, smarter deer.

Gary is an expert caller of deer and turkeys and has been so for a long time.  A competition caller as well as an active hunter, he won the 1993 and 1994 World Deer Calling Championship and has conducted far more than 1,000 deer calling seminars throughout the U.S. to help hunters understand and successfully communicate with deer. He has written articles for Deer & Deer Hunting magazine and other regional and national outdoor publications.  He has appeared on nationally syndicated radio and television outdoor shows and is featured on several DVDs.

His book – CALLING WHITETAILS / Methods, Myths & Magic --is a no-nonsense, back-to-basics guide to calling deer, and other deceptions to help. Chapters include whitetail deer practical vocabulary, deer calling basics (why deer respond to calls), calling during the rut (mating anticipation), antler rattling, other deceptions (scents, blinds, decoys), tips to increase your calling success, be familiar with your calls, and have a plan. CALLING WHITETAILS is available at www.targetcommunications.com



Doe Whitetail on Hind Legs at Licking Branch

This highly interested doe rubbed her head all over a licking branch that several bucks had paid sincere attention to.  The bucks broke two forked branches so they hung in a loose mass.  Bucks mouthed the branches, licked them and twisted their antlers through the assembled broken branches.  There was very little chewing.  More than one doe visited this spot, but none was this athletic or enthusiastic as the bucks, although this doe came close.  Peak activity was November 2-5.

We zoomed in tight to check this deer’s head.  Couldn’t see any sign of antlers, not even itty-bitty ones between the ears.  Did notice, however, that the doe’s ears are rimmed in black hair.  I remember a doe years ago with black-rimmed ears.  Tried to put my tag on her three straight years, but nothing doing.  Conclusion:  If you want a supreme hunting challenge, go after a big old doe.  She’s seen it all...and avoided all, and taught her offspring to do the same.


Books Are 'Safe' Christmas Gifts; Get Them Now

Books make 'safe' Christmas gifts when you are uncertain what gift to give to the hunters and archers on your Christmas gift list.  They are 'safe' gifts to be given by a person who knows very little about those activities to someone who knows quite a bit and is active in their chosen sport.

“Now is the time to determine the hunting and archery interests of each person on your gift list, the game hunted and the hunting arms (firearm, bow and arrow) they use,” notes Glenn Helgeland, president of Target Communications Outdoor Books. “We're coming into the peak of big game and small game hunting seasons across the country, particularly for deer, and interest is running high in their minds.

“They may be surprised you expressed interest, but you don’t need to tell them why” he adds. “They’re thinking in the moment, not about Christmas. Even better for you, of course, would be already to know that information.”

Once you have the necessary details noted for each person on your gift list, go to www.targetcommbooks.com to check out the 'safe' gift ideas.  You will find titles on these subjects: 1) bow tuning and shooting, 2) mastering the mental side of bow shooting (target and hunting), 3) deer hunting, 4) deer calling, 5) turkey hunting, and 6) wild game cookbooks.  Each book’s cover photo is shown, along with a description of the book’s contents, price and ordering information.

Stocking up on “safe” gifts now gives you enough time for wrapping and placement under the Christmas tree.

Merry Christmas, outdoor people!

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