
By Brandon Ray

The ranches and farmland of the Lone Star state and its neighbors have some tremendous deer, and Rut Reporter Brandon Ray is an expert on the region. Ray was born in Dallas and shot his first deer with a bow in Central Texas at the age of 15. The full-time freelance writer manages his family’s Texas Panhandle ranch, is a licensed New Mexico guide, and last year took a 184 gross P&Y nontypical trophy. States covered: TX, OK, NM
Oct. 1: This is sure to be a memorable season--for several reasons.
First, it has rained. Across most of Texas an extended drought ended this year with above average moisture in most counties. So there’s more vegetation, meaning more food for deer. More cover for newborn fawns to hide from predators. More cover for newborn turkey poults and quail chicks. More feed so does stay healthy as they nurse fawns. And more food so bucks stay fit and have all the nutrition they need to reach full potential on their headgear. As one biologist told me, “When it rains, it makes all wildlife biologists look good.”
The second thing... [ Read Full Post ]
By Rich Landers

Whitetails grow big in the riverbottoms below the peaks and in the northwest woods. West region Rut Reporter Rich Landers, a native Montanan and life-long hunter, is the outdoors editor for The Spokesman-Review in Spokane. He has written several books about the western outdoors and has hunted whitetails all his life. States covered: WA, OR, ID, MT, WY, CO
Overall Activity Status: Oct. 1: Groups of bucks are grooming while does are keeping their normal distance, said Hal Meenach, a wildlife manager in eastern Washington. Unusually hot weather throughout the West may have contributed to coaxing bucks into a nocturnal mode during the first week of October, but look for a change now that weather has returned to normal, especially in the mountains where frosty nights have returned.
Hard-horned bachelor groups are evident in the Panhandle region of northern Idaho, said Jeff Strauss of Sandpoint.
But mature buck sightings have been rare in the warm weather, said Keith Miller of Montana Whitetails.
Fighting: Light sparing and bucks pushing each other around was reported as early as the third week in September in northeastern Washington by... [ Read Full Post ]
By Bill Vaznis
In that frantic period just before the peak rut, when does are running in every direction from prying noses, calling bucks away from their playing-hard-to-get girlfriends may seem like a waste of time. But in fact, the chase phase is one of the best times to talk a trophy into shooting range.
Not quite ready to breed yet, does bolt away when suitors get too close. Invariably, some bucks lose contact with the objects of their affection—and become very susceptible to your calls. Suddenly alone, they use all their senses to relocate a doe, turning your estrous bleats and contact grunts potentially deadly.
What if you don’t have a grunt tube or bleat call handy? No problem. During the chase, a handful of unorthodox sound-making methods can lure these bucks. [ Read Full Post ]