• Recover Deer by Identifying Every Sign

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    John’s Note: The little things that may seem insignificant can make or break your bowhunt. Here’s how to spot potential problems. A well-defined blood trail, tracks in soft mud and drag signs where a wounded animal has pulled itself through heavy brush are easy deer signs to read. But when the arrow doesn’t

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  • Questions to Ask Yourself on the Day You Plan to Hunt Deer

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    John’s Note: The little things that may seem insignificant can make or break your bowhunt. Here’s how to spot potential problems. To make the best stand choice on the day the late Clarence Yates (see Day 3), an avid, longtime deer hunter, planned to hunt, he didn’t overlook little details. According to Yates,

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  • Don’t Overlook Anything When You’re Scouting

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    John’s Note: The little things that may seem insignificant can make or break your bowhunt. Here’s how to spot potential problems. Most archers who scout for deer try and locate an area where the deer are feeding or a trail where these deer are moving to and from food to take a stand. But the …

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  • Pattern Your Bowhunting after the Greats

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    John’s Note: The little things that may seem insignificant can make or break your bowhunt. Here’s how to spot potential problems. I was fortunate enough to have met and interviewed one of the greatest archers who ever lived, Howard Hill of Harpersville, Alabama. Hill was a legend in his own time and set a standard

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  • The Importance of Checking All Aspects of Bowhunting Equipment to Take Deer

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    John’s Note: The little things that may seem insignificant can make or break your bowhunt. Here’s how to spot potential problems. The 4-point buck was standing broadside to me in a patch of sun that caused his ivory antlers to glow like neon lights. Since his head was up, I had no opportunity to draw. …

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