Tag: Hunting season

  • Hunting Season Tune-up

    Hunting Season Tune-up

    Hunting season is upon us. That means its time to get your equipment ready for whatever game you hunt.

    Depending on where you reside, some seasons are already open. For this area, the month-long nonmigratory Canada goose season is open through the end of September and a few wildlife management areas have a two week special deer season.

    Let’s start with your hunting clothing. Hopefully, you washed it all at the end of last season and stored it away where it wouldn’t get moth eaten or whatever.

    First things first, dig it all out and check to make sure it all still fits and serviceable. Now is the time to figure out if the zippers all still work and you can actually get it zipped up, not at 0430 on opening day as you’re heading to your stand or blind.

    The next step is to launder it. I recommend you use a detergent with no added scents or UV brighteners. Most game animals see in the UV spectrum, and clothes washed in detergent with brighteners will stand out to them. I like Sport Wash, but there are many good detergents that don’t contain brighteners.

    While we’re on the subject of detergents, at this stage I wouldn’t worry too much about cover scents. Just be sure there isn’t any fragrance in your detergent. You can worry about scents and such later. Like when your clothes are clean and dry.

    I store my hunting gear in a dedicated tote with a sealing lid. After the preseason wash, it all goes back into that tote. I usually toss a couple of pine or spruce boughs in there with all my gear. The scent from the boughs is a good natural cover scent, though id you don’t hunt in an area with that kind of tree, it may not work for you.

    As far as cover scents and odor eliminators go, I don’t use them besides the above. Do they work? I don’t know. I have seen evidence that they don’t, but, if it’s something you have confidence in go for it. They cant hurt.

    I don’t use many attractant scents either. There was a time when I did a lot of bow hunting and I used a lot of different attractant scents then. However here in NY, the archery season for deer coincides with the rut generally, and the gun season, at least in the area I hunt, does not. So attractants aren’t nearly important or effective.

    If you are a bow hunter, you should have been practicing all summer. If you haven’t, shame on you, archery is a highly perishable skill that requires constant honing. Anyway, get your bow tuned up well before the season. That gives you a bit of time to shoot it before the season both to fine tune your aim and to make sure everything still works the way it should. Be sure to shoot some of the broadheads you intend to hunt with. The may fly quite a bit differently than your field points. And don’t forget to sharpen the cutting edges on your broadheads. Dull ones don’t do the job the way sharp ones do.

    Now for you gun hunters, and it doesn’t matter if you’re going after big game, small game or birds, pull out you gun and give it a good scrub and a once over for loose screws, broken parts and other deficencies. Just for reference, scope base screws should be loctited and torqued to 20-25 inch pounds and ring screws should be torqued to 18 inch pounds.

    Hopefully you have the ammo you need. It looks like its going to be another tough season for hunting ammo, although supply seems to be loosening up some.

    If you’re shotgunning, a simple function check should be all you need to do. Load up your magazine tube and let a few rounds fly just to make sure everything works as expected.

    For you riflemen out there, it’s time for a trip to the range to check your zero. With the ammo situation being what it is, do not assume the (whatever caliber or manufacturer) ammo you find on the shelf will shoot to the same point of aim/point of impact the (whatever weight or manufacturer) ammo you used last year. It likely will not.

    I can, and likely will, write an entire article on how to zero a rifle, but this isn’t the place for that.

  • Let’s Get Ready to Hunt

    Let’s Get Ready to Hunt

    Its just turned August and it’s time to start getting ready for hunting season. Here are a few things to consider as you prepare for the upcoming seasons.

    First up, make sure you have enough ammo. In a typical fall I go through around 3 boxes of ammo for each of the rifles and slug guns I plan on using. Two and a half for sighting in and range practice, the remainder for actually hunting.

    Given the current conditions, you should pick up ammo any time you find it. Keep in mind, between all the panic buying and the ammo plants in the northeast being closed for several months, ammo is scarce. And going into this election, I doubt it’s going to be more available later.

    While we’re on the subject of scarcity, good luck picking up a new gun for this fall. The same factors come into play as with the ammo.

    Hopefully you cleaned your guns before you put them away last year. If you didn’t, shame on you. Regardless, pull out the rigs you’re planning on using, give them a scrub, make sure they function properly and check the screws in the scope mounts. Once that’s done, make sure any accessories like slings and bipods are secure and don’t make excessive noise.

    Once you’ve laid in your ammo supplies and checked your equipment out, it’s time to head to the range. Check your zero. Then get off the bench and shoot from more realistic positions. Prone, kneeling, standing off-hand and standing supported. Let be honest, I’ve never shot a deer or bear from a bench rest, and I’m pretty sure none of you have either.

    The same can be said for you archers out there. You should have been practicing all summer. It’s not too late to start if you haven’t. But, you should mix up your shooting, try it from your knees or sitting. If you primarily hunt from a tree stand, get up in the air and shoot from there. Trust me when I tell you that your point of impact changes from a tree stand. (Don’t ask me how I know this, I just do OK?)

    While we’re on the subject of archery, go get your bow tuned up. A good tech can get your bow perfectly set up, and make it shoot better.

    Now is a good time to make sure you still have access to your favorite spots. If you hunt on someone else’s land, stop by and check. If you hunt state or federal land, make sure you can still get in. There’s a move afoot to restrict access to a lot of public lands, and that road or trail you used last year may be closed this year.



    The last thing we’re going to discuss is hunting clothing. Dig it all out. Make sure it’s all serviceable, and throw it in the wash with some scent free, UV brightener free detergent. I personally use the Scent Killer brand, but there are a lot of different brands out there.

    The biggest plus from using these types of detergent isn’t the lack of scent, although that’s good, it’s the lack of UV brighteners found in regular laundry detergent. Most game animals see more in the UV spectrum, and clothes laundered with brighteners just stand out more.

    Got any prep tips? Anything you think I missed? Let us know in the comments below.