So I was hoping you guys could help me understand deer a bit better. I started hunting a year ago, and we are nearing the end of my second season with very little to show for it. I have spent quite a few days out there, and while I love being in the outdoors, it is getting pretty discouraging to spend all this money on gas, tags, ect ect and coming home empty-handed every single time.
I am wondering how they tend to react to the cold and the snow. I tried to do some research online on the topic, but everything is about White Tail deer out east, and Im trying to hunt Mulies out west.
Specifically, I spent Friday night/Saturday morning outside of Pemberton. It was well below freezing, -7 to -14 or so. The only thing we saw in about 7 hours (2 Friday night and 5 Saturday morn) was a single bobcat. That was around 11am, when I was headed back to the truck to head home. We also spent about 4 hours driving around Friday trying to find places to hunt, but the truck couldn't get into the spots we had wanted to go to due to the snow.
So I guess my question is two-fold. When is it too cold for deer, and when is the snow too deep for deer? I feel like the snow wasn't the issue (it was only a foot deep or so) but I think it was too cold. Especially for the morning in a valley, where the sun doesn't reach until noon...
Im thinking when its that cold (-10ish), they are not in the valley bottom so much as on any south-facing slope? And they probably spend most of their time bedded down? Is elevation a factor? Higher slopes are colder, but they get the sun earlier and for longer? Is there an approximate temperature that is too cold for them all together?
As an aside, do bears hibernate based on temperature? Or is it more based on time of year? The point of this trip was to try and fill a bear tag (ends tomorrow) but deer was also on the menu if it presented itself... And we didn't see either of 'em...
I am wondering how they tend to react to the cold and the snow. I tried to do some research online on the topic, but everything is about White Tail deer out east, and Im trying to hunt Mulies out west.
Specifically, I spent Friday night/Saturday morning outside of Pemberton. It was well below freezing, -7 to -14 or so. The only thing we saw in about 7 hours (2 Friday night and 5 Saturday morn) was a single bobcat. That was around 11am, when I was headed back to the truck to head home. We also spent about 4 hours driving around Friday trying to find places to hunt, but the truck couldn't get into the spots we had wanted to go to due to the snow.
So I guess my question is two-fold. When is it too cold for deer, and when is the snow too deep for deer? I feel like the snow wasn't the issue (it was only a foot deep or so) but I think it was too cold. Especially for the morning in a valley, where the sun doesn't reach until noon...
Im thinking when its that cold (-10ish), they are not in the valley bottom so much as on any south-facing slope? And they probably spend most of their time bedded down? Is elevation a factor? Higher slopes are colder, but they get the sun earlier and for longer? Is there an approximate temperature that is too cold for them all together?
As an aside, do bears hibernate based on temperature? Or is it more based on time of year? The point of this trip was to try and fill a bear tag (ends tomorrow) but deer was also on the menu if it presented itself... And we didn't see either of 'em...




















































