Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Early season is a good time to harvest a buck
Early in the season is the best time to bag that record-buck. Photo: Joe Lacefield
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Kentucky's statewide archery deer season begins Sept. 6. Despite the
and mosquitoes,
early season is prime time for buck hunters.
"The first 5-10 days of the season are the best time if you're going to harvest a mature buck in velvet," said Bill Mitchell, the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources' management foreman at Taylorsville Lake Wildlife Management Area. "Bachelor groups of bucks are frequenting clover and alfalfa fields. They're getting that last shot of protein into their antlers."
Bucks are still in their summer patterns this time of year. It's not uncommon to see them coming into food plots and pastures just before dark, or even earlier if the weather is mild.
"They're probably the most vulnerable they're going to be, in September and early October," said David Yancy, a wildlife biologist in Kentucky Fish and Wildlife's big game program. "They haven't gone secretive yet. They are much more visible, reliable and predictable. When they start to peel the velvet off their antlers and female deer come into
in mid to late October,
the predictability starts to fall off."
Yancy recommends that hunters set up along paths that lead to fields or food plots, rather than on the edge of the opening itself. "It would probably be better to set up on a trail back into the woods," he said. "Try to pattern them, and find trails going in and out of pastures. Work back from those trails and find a place where two trails come together and merge into one, then set up there."
Mitchell said setting up on trails that lead to fields allows hunters to catch deer before dark. "They'll wait till that last bit just before dark and they'll start stirring," he said. "If the deer are waiting for dark, you can intercept them before they get to the field."
Setting up in these areas also reduces the chance a hunter will spook deer when climbing out of a tree stand.
"If you spook them one time, more than likely the older deer will become more nocturnal," Mitchell said. "Then you just undid all of your scouting."
Early morning and late evening are the most productive times to hunt. Just like people, deer don't want to move around during the
of the afternoon.
"They spend the hot part of the day in the shade," said Yancy. "In the cooler evening, they'll wander down the trail and out into the field. If the weather stays pleasant like it's been lately, they'll be coming out while there's still some shooting time left."
Successful early season hunters should be careful to get their deer meat cooled down quickly. Mitchell cautions that simply putting a bag of ice in a deer's body cavity isn't enough on a hot day.
"I would advise prior to going on a hunt like that, be prepared to immediately skin that deer and get him in the cooler within an hour; two hours at the most," he said. "You've got to get it cooled or you're going to lose that meat."
Before going after their early-season buck, hunters should be sure to review a copy of the 2008-09 Kentucky Hunting & Trapping Guide, available wherever hunting licenses are sold. The guide details complete regulations on bag limits, licensing, hunter education and equipment restrictions.
Author Hayley Lynch is an award-winning writer for Kentucky Afield magazine, the official publication of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. She is an avid hunter and shotgun shooter.











