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If
you’ve been a serious bowhunter for a while, you may remember the
late-great Ottis "Toad" Smith. Ol’ Toad was a true
outdoorsman, a character and a pioneer in the archery industry. Toad was
also one of the first archers to make popular the tactic of hunting
whitetail in the standing corn.
Most
of what I know about stalking whitetail in the standing corn I attribute
to Toad. When he first told me of this technique, kidding around I
remarked, "Toad, that’s just because you live in Iowa. There are
NO trees in Iowa! The deer have to live in the corn - there’s nothing
else for them. Where I’m from, they live in the woods like normal
deer." Toad just chuckled and said, "Try it sometime."
I’m
here to tell you "it works no matter where you’re from." If
you think about it, whitetail love corn and they want to find a spot
where they’re as undisturbed as possible. After the farmer makes his
last pass through, man usually doesn’t enter the area until it’s
harvested. While everybody is pressuring the deer in the woods, the
standing corn becomes a secure home for them.
I
have found that this works great with the BioLogic BioMaxx that I plant.
The addition of the soybeans adds excellent ground cover and a secure
bedding environment for the deer. It works best when planted with a
row-planter. They will bed in broadcasted plots but the rows make it
much easier to stalk.
Other
crop fields can hold whitetail too. I’ve seen times that for a three
to four week period in the fall whitetail may spend the majority of
their daylight hours in sunflowers, flax, canola, wheat or other types
of grain fields. As long as the crop is tall enough to mostly conceal a
bedded whitetail, it can’t be overlooked.
Some
corn fields hold deer while others don’t. And usually within these
fields, there are certain areas that hold deer and others that won’t.
Trial and error is about the best way to find this out. Watch for tracks
and beds as your stalking through. If you spook a deer before you get a
shot, log that spot in your memory! There’s something about that area
he likes and chances are he’ll be back again. After a while you’ll
know where to concentrate your efforts.
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