np307
Well-known member
Yes, they wear their full coveralls with long johns for the whole distance in.Can you even get a sweat going in 247 yards? Comments on there make it sound like an Everest expedition...
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Yes, they wear their full coveralls with long johns for the whole distance in.Can you even get a sweat going in 247 yards? Comments on there make it sound like an Everest expedition...
I can only speak to upstate NY, but the mountainous areas there generally have poor soil, crappy nutrient content, and very low deer densities.I feel like many didn't read the post or look at the graphic. You don't have to get defensive. There are these large sanctuaries that no one is hunting because there's a hill in the way.
Yah not near as much food as there is around crops or subdivisions.I can only speak to upstate NY, but the mountainous areas there generally have poor soil, crappy nutrient content, and very low deer densities.
I thought having lived in Montana I’d go be Benny bad-ass, hike way back, and go kill some big mountain buck. Never really saw much for sign let alone deer. Trail camera would turn up a occasional errant doe.
Meanwhile you’ll see multiple dozens by the highway in any given suburb of NYC. NYSDEC hands out nearly unlimited OTC doe tags in those areas because there’s such an over abundance that they’ve caused a profoundly negative effect on local ecosystems.
Not sure Georgia is known for it's "mountainous areas"...I can only speak to upstate NY, but the mountainous areas there generally have poor soil, crappy nutrient content, and very low deer densities.
I thought having lived in Montana I’d go be Benny bad-ass, hike way back, and go kill some big mountain buck. Never really saw much for sign let alone deer. Trail camera would turn up a occasional errant doe.
Meanwhile you’ll see multiple dozens by the highway in any given suburb of NYC. NYSDEC hands out nearly unlimited OTC doe tags in those areas because there’s such an over abundance that they’ve caused a profoundly negative effect on local ecosystems.
Army Ranger mountain phase of ranger school is in GeorgiaNot sure Georgia is known for it's "mountainous areas"...
You forgot #keephammeringThanksgiving week rut hunt in Montana makes the eastern hunters look ambitious. #lacethosebootsup
So what yet saying is you were hunting water...My laziest hunt in NC on Shearon Harris game lands. I was 75 yds from the highway, 50yds from people in bass boats on the lake I was hunting, and 200 yds from the marina where they were actively launching boats. Took 2 fat does from that location
the lake point made for a great funnelView attachment 297550
One really big stock tankSo what yet saying is you were hunting water...
Shoot, western man. The Chattahoochee National Forest from the post is pretty darn hilly, if not mountainous. It’s the southern end of the Blue Ridge Mountains that run up through Great Smoky Mountain and Shenandoah National Parks. There’s even a few native brook trout left in them Georgia hills.Not sure Georgia is known for it's "mountainous areas"...
Fair enough, my comment was inaccurate. It's has some mountainous terrain. Certainly more so then the MidwestShoot, western man. The Chattahoochee National Forest from the post is pretty darn hilly, if not mountainous. It’s the southern end of the Blue Ridge Mountains that run up through Great Smoky Mountain and Shenandoah National Parks. There’s even a few native brook trout left in them Georgia hills.
I turned on the GA OnX layer to look at the area and do see some areas I’d check for deer off the road if I lived down there. Though those topo lines are pretty tight.
View attachment 297569
North GA mountains are nothing to sneeze at.Not sure Georgia is known for it's "mountainous areas"...
Yep, old one closed off and gated, courtesy of the Nature Conservancy.Heli logging area ?
That’s a lot of knobs. Just saying.Shoot, western man. The Chattahoochee National Forest from the post is pretty darn hilly, if not mountainous. It’s the southern end of the Blue Ridge Mountains that run up through Great Smoky Mountain and Shenandoah National Parks. There’s even a few native brook trout left in them Georgia hills.
I turned on the GA OnX layer to look at the area and do see some areas I’d check for deer off the road if I lived down there. Though those topo lines are pretty tight.
View attachment 297569
Oh of course! Dick’s Knob is legendary, and quite the sight I’ve been told!They sure do love their licks and balds and knobs o'er yonder.
I don't think one has truly done the Georgia mountains until they've clawed their way up old Dick's Knob.
View attachment 297645
Wonder how close that is to the Salt (y ) Gap?They sure do love their licks and balds and knobs o'er yonder.
I don't think one has truly done the Georgia mountains until they've clawed their way up old Dick's Knob.
View attachment 297645