Post-Season Scouting For Deer

February 1, 2021 greg wagner

If you’re a deer hunter in Nebraska, you have wrapped up your seasons. Now, the fun begins.

It is time to post-season scout for deer.

Say what? Post-season scout for deer?

So, you’re thinking: Why in the world would a deer hunter scout immediately after a season ends through the winter? After all, the next Nebraska deer hunting season doesn’t open until Sept. 1 (archery), right? Plus, deer will completely re-pattern in spring, summer and fall.

Hear me out.

I have always said deer hunting is a year-round process and post-season scouting for deer is an important part of it!

As a young man, I had an old-timer from my hometown of Gretna, NE, Chris Grell, tell me once that “deer season never really ends.” It was easy for me to understand what he meant by that. He was focused on white-tailed deer no matter what the season or what the weather was doing. He was always in his woods. This is what made him one of the most successful deer hunters I have ever known. I was fortunate that he let me tag along with him on many occasions.

There are definitive reasons to scout for deer after the last season closes besides making you a better hunter.

Deer sign is very vivid and concentrated from February through late March. Deer typically “yard up” or group together and are centered on high-energy food to eat, dense thermal cover to bed and ice-free water to drink. Additionally, post-season scouting makes you better understand the habits of deer, whether white-tailed or mule.

Post-season scouting allows for a good, thorough evaluation of available deer immediately after the hunting season(s), too. That being stated, let’s dig into this a bit deeper.

An antlerless white-tailed deer is photographed in the snow cover of a Nebraska winter . Photo courtesy of NEBRASKAland Magazine/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

TRANSPARENCY. Main trails, feeding areas, bedding sites and open water sources are defined and easy to see this time of year. There is no leafy understory cover or heavy vegetative ground clutter to obscure or block views of deer sign either.

DEER ACTIVITY/SIGN. Active deer trails and beds are quite evident, as are buck scrapes, rub lines and even new tree rubs in woodlands. Deer tracks and droppings in snow cover or mud, disturbed forest litter or harvested crop fields — all can easily be spotted and all tell a story. The primary signs of deer in an area are specifically hoof prints and pellets. Examine them closely. They can indicate the sex, age and size of deer plus the direction of deer travel. Look for a broader trail that’s being well-used by several deer coming and going from food resources to bedding areas. A sole trail that has larger tracks (approximately 3 to 4 inches across and 4 to 5 inches long) should not be overlooked. Watch for drag marks of a buck’s front hooves in fresh or powdery snow. When it comes to droppings, look for a variety of them, but remember that adult deer tend to have bigger droppings or piles of clumped droppings over and inch and a half in diameter.

An adult white-tailed deer doe track up close in the soft mud of a crop field edge in mid winter in rural Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

FOCUS ON BEDS. Luke Meduna, Big Game Program Manager for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission based in Lincoln, emphasizes that hunters scouting in the post-season should focus on locating deer beds. “You can tell a bedding area for does and fawns versus bucks. Does and fawns bed in groups while bucks normally bed singly and have larger-sized depressions. Bucks prefer to bed up against something on a hillside or higher spot where they can use the sharp senses they possess to their advantage.” Meduna adds that now is the best time for a hunter to identify these kinds of things.

A white-tailed deer doe is seen bedded during the daytime in winter in Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Katie Stacey/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

FIND SHEDS. Shed antlers found in after-season deer scouting ventures can disclose what bucks most likely made it through the hunting season(s) and how big they might be. The bonus of post-season scouting for deer is acquiring a few shed antlers for your collection. Keep an eye out for those just off busy deer trails near lower-hanging tree limbs, in thickets, over fences, across creeks and near deer beds.

Close up of the pedicle of a shed white-tailed deer deer antler found in the snow just off of a main deer trail in late winter in rural Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.
A shed deer antler is located just off of a main deer trail in late winter in rural Sarpy County, NE. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

GLASS. Use your binoculars when scouting and survey what I call: “The bigger picture,” that is, how active deer trails interconnect, relate to the terrain and form deer corridors. Natural funnels and pinch points can be more clearly observed with good optics.

HANDY CAMERAS. Strategically placed motion-activated game or trail cameras sure come in handy in the wintertime to assess  the size and health of deer remaining in a given location, even though deer may relocate or move depending on the herd’s size or composition, doe numbers, availability of food, etc. You can even come to identify individual deer. Also, use the camera on your Smartphone or iPhone to capture all kinds of images or video from your after-season scouting expeditions.

A white-tailed deer buck with one antler trots in the woods on a winter day in rural Saunders County, Nebraska. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

USE TECHNOLOGY. From the high-tech, satellite imagery of Google Earth to the latest hunt/land feature apps such as OnX, these types of technology offer the deer hunter great visual references and GPS coordinates. This information can assist in marking terrain features and main deer trails, noting distances between stands or blinds, and bringing into focus potentially high deer usage areas. The use of modern mapping software saves time and helps to narrow down spots to thoroughly scout on foot.

STEALTHY SCOUTING. When scouting in the field, be sure to treat it as you would a still hunt for deer. Wear camouflaged clothing and a little blaze orange (for safety to be seen), practice scent control, play the wind, slow down, be as quiet as possible and minimize contact with deer. Do not repeatedly disturb them!

Off-duty Nebraska Conservation Officer, Rich Berggren of Waterloo, walks slowly and examines deer tracks on a game trail at his deer hunting land in southeast Nebraska. Photo by Greg Wagner/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

TREESTAND PLACEMENT. For the deer hunter, winter is also the perfect time to select straight, sturdy trees for treestand placement since there are no leaves present. Furthermore, this time of year is a good one for clearing shooting lanes since there aren’t any bugs around and the temperatures are quite cool.

TAKE NOTES. Keep and organize notes of your post-season deer scouting jaunts and visits with landowners or wildlife biologists about deer movement. Record-keeping is important, whether done on your computer’s hard drive and backed up with a thumb drive, or jotted down in a notebook. Remember, each trip to your hunting area is unique reveals something new about deer in the landscape.

THE QUOTE. National Football League Hall of Fame quarterback and Vietnam veteran, Roger Staubach, once was quoted as saying: “It takes a lot of unspectacular preparation, to get spectacular results.” I believe this quote directly applies to post-season scouting for deer as a hunter. If you are willing to put in the time, hard work and analysis throughout the year, including during the post-season, the odds of harvesting deer, especially high quality bucks, dramatically increase.

Here is is a nice, Nebraska adult white-tailed deer buck that I (your blogger) harvested during the 2020 firearm deer hunting season in the southeastern part of the state after much  scouting. Photo courtesy of Rich Berggren/Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

The post Post-Season Scouting For Deer appeared first on Nebraskaland Magazine.

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