I find hunting Kaimais between December to February very difficult. Noisey underfoot, deer beded down in the thick stuff, and blowies constantly in your ears. All other times of the year are good.
I find hunting Kaimais between December to February very difficult. Noisey underfoot, deer beded down in the thick stuff, and blowies constantly in your ears. All other times of the year are good.
Another thing - use the "corner of uour eye" - staring intently both spooks animals (body language) and your focus is usually to far away.
you got close to success there mate.next time that happens in thick stuff do not move forward to close the distance and Get eyes on you'll 99/100 times be to noisy if its not nice bush.that deer would have heard you and known you were there but not what you were, deer a inquisitive and like to see what noise is if they haven't smelt danger.you should have given hind or fawn call and stayed still,8/10 times it will move to try and get eyes on you.
My instinct is the deer was grazing, or else it would have bolted (if it had seen you) or barked ("not sure what's going on here") at first contact. Next time you find yourself in that situation trying standing dead still for 10 minutes. Just listen, listen, listen. Particularly if it's tight, the only thing in your favour is picking up their movement or noise. I've learnt this with a dog on point. It works. They ninja through the tight supplejack like a tiger might - crouched low to the ground. I've caught out young animals and stags literally at 2/3 height snaking through the tight. And no, they are not always silent. Be still. Particularly at this time of year when every foot placement is noisy. Conversely, in the scenario where I've had a big hind "stone cold dead" feeding 5m away, placing one step to get a better shot angle set her off - gone - no one home. Just stay dead still. Wait. You'll see. And if they have fed off a little way, and are unaware, the next 10 foot placements are worth investing in quietly.
"Death - our community's number one killer"
Having spent a reasonable amount of time in the Kaimais, a somewhat counter-intuitive method when you are getting barked at is to "bark" back (your best impression anyway). In many cases deer will hold position and keep barking, allowing you to stalk in, or on other occassions you'll confuse another animal that you didn't know was there and it'll inadvertently wander in your direction. Like every hot-tip, it doesn't work everytime, and you've got to weigh up if you want to risk disturbing the area further - but in many cases I found, it doesn't hurt to try.
https://www.nzhuntingandshooting.co....aimais-102634/
I'd start by covering as much ground as you can to discover the best spots heavy in sign, and return with the slow and steady approach once you've got some trails to stalk.
Light rain is always great for bush stalking in there so see if you can line that up safely.
as a lot have said you are hunting the most difficult piece of bush in North Island next to Pureoras and then Kaimanawas - Te Urewera is great bush hunting - when you have a deer barking at you climb and try to cut them off they will generally climb - you can cut them off - neat when you can very satisfying fooled the old bitch you are for the BBQ
What elevation was it at?
You might enjoy doing the HUNTs course at your local deer stalkers club. They'll teach you some more skills.
Once you can find the deer, the next problem is shooting them before they bugger off.
Good work!
Above 500m, assuming my GPS was accurate. Yep, hunts course is on the list of things to do. Hopefully I can tee up a few things in the new year when people are all back from the break.
Bookmarks