Tuskegee,
Alabama
Every outdoorsman that takes on the adventure of college enjoys the challenge of finding time to
stay outdoors. For me, this was a very hard challenge. There were limited ways
to fish and even less public property to hunt. Towards the end of my
college years, I found the time to check out the local public hunting property
at the Tuskegee National Forest. Here are a few of my stories from the Tuskegee
National Forest. I was not able to take a deer or turkey on the property but I
had several encounters with both.
November
6, 2011
After an unsuccessful
start to my bow season back home I decided to begin hunting at the Tuskegee National Forest. The conception of any hunting strategy for an unfamiliar
property begins with scouting and studying. While I was scouting the new property I was able to find a
couple of fresh deer scrapes.
November
10, 2011
I decided to go back to
the creek bottom where I found the fresh scrape a few days earlier. I got in the woods around 3:15 PM and the deer trail that I was hunting was so heavily used
that it smelled of deer. The leaves were still wet from a rainstorm the night before and
provided ideal conditions for a ground stalk. I moved east, up the creek bottom and spotted three doe. One of the deer spotted me and quickly ran through the leaf litter making no noise. I stood there motionless watching the remaining deer quickly work into the thick underbrush and out of sight.
I went back to the
creek bottom at the national forest this afternoon after school. I backtracked the
doe that I saw yesterday which led me to an area of the national forest that I had not yet explored. I
found an area where there was high grass creating a boundary between a swamp and a strip of hardwoods. This swamp was heavily traveled and I thought I could easily spot deer moving out of the swamp and into the strip of hardwoods at this location. I found a nice 60 yard shooting lane and began my hunt. At 5:00 PM it was too dark for a shot but I had a deer working in on
me through the high grass. My ScentLok clothing allowed the deer to get within 30 yards when I had to leave. I stood
up and the deer ran then stopped and looked back. I took one more step, the deer blew once and bounced out of hearing
distance.
November
17, 2011
I went down to what became my
favorite creek bottom this afternoon. We had a pretty bad storm yesterday
afternoon and it brought colder weather with it. I thought with the falling
temperature that the deer would move. I was wrong. The large temperature
change brought high winds with it. The wind was swirling in the bottom
all afternoon. I was fortunate to have it blowing in my face most of the time. Unfortunately, the high winds had the deer in the their beds all afternoon. I was able to spot a flock of turkeys on my hike out.
Hunting public land can be challenging and requires a commitment to the outdoors in order to become successful.