Tag Page DeerHunting

#DeerHunting
paulcarol

Helping my friend shoot their first deer was eye-opening

I’ve been hunting for years, but stepping into the role of mentor completely changed the way I see it. Helping a friend shoot their first deer wasn’t just about passing on skills — it was a chance to slow down, rethink the process, and see the whole experience through fresh eyes. If you're mentoring a new hunter, here are a few things that truly made a difference for us: 1. Understand their "why" Most new hunters — especially adults from non-hunting families — are coming to it for the food. They want to butcher their own deer, wrap their own steaks. So before you offer to drop it at a processor, ask if they want to do it themselves. That part can be more meaningful than the hunt. 2. Talk goals early Are they imagining a quiet solo hunt? A big camp vibe? A crash course on setups? Aligning expectations upfront helps avoid disappointment. 3. Address their fears The top two concerns I’ve heard over and over: - Making a clean, ethical shot - Handling firearms safely Spend serious time at the range, ideally on quiet days. Dry fire, check eye dominance, let them try your gear if theirs doesn’t fit. Confidence starts with practice. 4. Practice in the stand Before the real thing, walk through shot setup in the stand. Let them adjust, aim, dry fire — it matters. They’ll be way less fumbly when a deer actually shows. 5. Don’t rush the shot Keep calm. No whisper-yelling. Let them breathe and feel ready. Confidence is everything. The goal is a good shot, not any shot. 6. Celebrate after Once the deer is down, go big with praise and storytelling. That post-shot energy — the hugs, the camp chatter — is often the part they remember most. Helping someone take their first deer isn’t about guiding every step — it’s about giving them the space and support to make it their own. For me, watching my friend gain confidence, ask thoughtful questions, and ultimately make a clean shot was as satisfying as any hunt I’ve done myself. Have you ever mentored someone in the field? What surprised you the most about the experience? #hunting #DeerHunting #NewHunters #HuntingTips

Helping my friend shoot their first deer was eye-opening
lolson

Ground blinds changed my hunting game

Last season I was strictly a treestand guy until a buddy convinced me to try his ground blind setup. First sit, I had a mature buck at 15 yards completely oblivious to my presence. That's when I became a believer. Here's why ground blinds have become my go-to hunting method: 1️⃣ Invisible movement - Deer can't see you fidgeting, drawing your bow, or adjusting position like they can in treestands. 2️⃣ Ultimate portability - Move with the deer patterns. No climbing, no heavy stands to haul. 3️⃣ Weather protection - Rain, snow, wind - you're comfortable and focused on hunting instead of surviving. 4️⃣ Scent containment - Your scent stays trapped inside instead of swirling around a tree. 5️⃣ Room to move - Stretch out, shift positions, stay comfortable during long sits. Set them up during pre-season so deer accept them as part of their environment. What's your experience with ground blinds vs treestands? #hunting #HuntingTips #GroundBlind #DeerHunting

Ground blinds changed my hunting game
tyler79

I used to judge other hunters until I realized this

I'll be honest - I used to silently judge hunters who weren't "serious" like me. Then I realized we're all just different types enjoying the same passion. After years in the woods, I've noticed we basically fall into these camps: The Gear Junkie 🎯 Always has the latest bow setup, newest trail cams, and can justify every $200 purchase. Spends more time researching equipment than actually hunting, but man does their setup look professional. The Minimalist Shows up with grandpa's .30-06 and still fills tags while we're fiddling with gadgets. Proves that skill beats gear every time, and somehow always has the most comfortable setup. The Meat Hunter Freezer full of venison is the only scorecard that matters - antlers don't taste good anyway. These guys know every butcher trick and can turn a doe into dinner for months. The Trophy Chaser Won't even draw on anything under 140" - patience of a saint but walls full of giants. Spends years tracking specific bucks and celebrates like they won the lottery when it finally happens. The DIY Guy Does everything himself from scouting to processing - hates guided hunts but loves the grind. Public land warrior who door-knocks private parcels and earns every single opportunity. The Know-It-All Has a theory for everything but somehow never seems to tag out consistently. Always sharing articles about wind patterns but can't explain their empty freezer. I'm honestly a mix of gear junkie and meat hunter - love new equipment but also love filling the freezer. There's no wrong way to enjoy the woods. What type describes your hunting style best? #Hunting #DeerHunting #Outdoors #HuntingCommunity

I used to judge other hunters until I realized this
lolson

Ground Blinds are the Most Overlooked Tool I Own

Used to be all about tree saddles until I tried taking my buddy hunting. Two guys fumbling around with saddles in trees? Total nightmare - loud, unsafe, and we bailed early. That evening I grabbed my ground blind instead. Set up in minutes, hunted comfortably until dark, and my buddy got hooked on hunting. Now I'm back to using ground blinds regularly: 1️⃣ Perfect for hunting with others - especially beginners 2️⃣ Complete concealment - deer think it's just another bush 3️⃣ Super mobile - wind shifts? Move in minutes 4️⃣ Weather protection - beats freezing your butt off in a tree Tree stands have their place, but ground blinds solve a lot of problems I didn't realize I had. Anyone else rediscover ground blinds after years of elevated hunting? #hunting #HuntingTips #GroundBlind #DeerHunting

Ground Blinds are the Most Overlooked Tool I Own
Tag: DeerHunting - Page 7 | zests.ai