Leaves rustled in a consistent cadence, a hint that a buck was headed my way. Weeks of unseasonably warm weather had the freshly fallen leaves as crispy as Corn Flakes and the sound of a buck on the prowl was unmistakable. I’d been grunting periodically which may have lured the deer toward my location.
The hoof steps grew continually louder and I finally got a glimpse of the deer and a large flash of white well above it ears. The buck was locked in on my grunts, no doubt eager to tangle with lesser animals, when it suddenly stopped and turned sharply up hill. I had shot a doe half an hour earlier and I suspected the blood from the carcass spooked it.
As the deer moved up hill, I grunted loudly yet it had no effect. Grabbing a rattling bag from my pack, I crashed it wildly and saw the buck stop, still barely visible at 100 yards. I crashed the pine planks again, grunted, and the buck took several steps toward me. I grunted and it moved five yards closer, then stopped and scanned my direction for the sight of deer.
Luckily I was in a tree stand above a dense patch of greenbriers and a buck fight could easily happen out of sight. Again the animal took a few steps and stopped, a signal that it was time to wait and not allow it to further pinpoint my location. As with wild turkeys and elk, once an animal has committed, let it approach without further calling.
As the buck closed to 75 yards, I could see wide sweeping beams well beyond it’s ears with a 10-inch first tine. I knew not to look at its antlers, yet couldn’t resist as it repeatedly searched and listened. Finally, the buck approached an opening where I could get a solid reading. The rangefinder said 45 yards, a long shot, yet I’d just killed a doe at 32 and the Excalibur bow was dead on. Resting the bow on the stand’s shooting rail, I watched the buck step into the opening, mouth grunted to stop it, and misread the scope reticles, shooting at 35 instead of 45 yards. The arrow passed just under its chest. The arrow buried into the earth, spooking the buck back up the hill and no amount of coaxing would turn it.
The Power of the Grunt
Bill McKinley found himself in a similar situation two days earlier as he watched a buck follow a doe into the woods 100 yards away. With the deer moving away, McKinley gave a single grunt on his tube causing the buck to stop, turn, and come directly toward him. McKinley killed the buck at 15 yards and it barely went out of sight.
If these two anecdotes haven’t convinced you to use a grunt tube, consider the buck I saw just after daylight. It moved along the opposite side of the ravine I hunted. I gave several grunts and the animal turned, walked down a steep slope, splashed across the stream at the bottom, and walked to within five yards. The young 1.5-year-old didn’t meet the QDM standards of the club, or my hunt would have ended right there.
Rattling
Rattling doesn’t often work, yet it only has to once (Unless you miss). The advantage of rattling comes from the distance it can be heard. During the rut, buck are often on the prowl and banging antlers or using a rattling bag every half hour or so could lure a big buck to your location that would have otherwise gone elsewhere.
Patience-
I grunted the 6-point in at 9:30, killed the doe at 2:00 and lured the big buck at 3:00 despite very warm weather. Deer movements in the early and full rut are very unpredictable, except that deer move frequently during daylight hours. If you are finding does, the bucks will follow so be patient. This is the time of the year, where it’s better to spend quantity of time on stand than quality. Normally the first hour of daylight is golden, yet if getting up in the wee hours burns you out for the day, follow your normal sleep cycle and be “on duty” by 8:00 with plans to spend the morning and the full day if possible. Grunt, rattle, and be there- three keys to rut success.