Welcome to TriState Survival. Please log in or sign up.
Total Members
4
Total Posts
4,134
Total Topics
4,132

Ask Mrs. Zombie


  • Two Deer Calls You Can’t Be Without
    Started by Booed Off Stage
    Read 494 times
SHARE This Post - Click Here!
Two Deer Calls You Can't Be Without

The 120-class 9-point stepped within 10 yards as I gazed through the bows of a small pine tree.  It was barely shooting light on the first morning of the hunt, and the mature buck had come directly to my grunt calls.  It was a good buck, but could I shoot before the hunt’s first sunrise?  As the deer stood upwind, I heard a wheeze —the only time I’ve heard that in the wild —and an indication that this was a dominant buck.  Nonetheless, I didn’t raise my crossbow and allowed the deer to walk.  What a memory!


HS is bringing back the original True Talker, shown here with my original, which is 30 years old.

Don’t Leave Home Without It


I carry a Hunter’s Special “True Talker” grunt tube whenever I hunt deer and especially during late October and through November, whether I’m sitting in a stand or sneaking through the woods.  My “talker” is 30 years old and not in production today, but its predecessor, the OG, is available on Amazon, and I love it for its deep guttural sound.  Grunting sounds don’t travel very far, whether made from a buck or a caller, due to the low pitch of the sound, so louder is usually better.  If a buck is close, you can blow into the call more softly to lower the volume.


Available on Amazon, don’t be without this caller.

Do No Harm


The thing I love about a grunt tube is its almost universal acceptance in the deer woods.  When blown in the occasional “contact grunt” form with a puff every couple of seconds, a buck will either stop and look, approach, or ignore the sound and walk away.  Although rarely touted as a benefit, a grunt tube can also calm down a doe that has seen you, and I’ve had this work on several occasions.  On one hunt in South Dakota, we had a day of 20-40 mph winds that howled out of the west, so bad that everyone but me stayed in camp.  I believed that grunting from downwind of a thick bedding area would lure out a buck.  On my second try, I heard a doe snort and began grunting aggressively.  Kneeling under a batch of cedars, I soon had white antlers coming right for me.



Estous Bleat


On an Illinois rut hunt, I watched a buck follow a doe atop a ridge, just out of range.  Using a Wood Wise estrous bleat call, I lured the buck away from the doe and under my stand.  Unfortunately, it was a 120’s deer on a property with a 140 minimum, and I watched it walk away, wishing I was back home where I’d have been happy to launch an arrow.  Primos sell the “can call,” which is the easiest bleat sound to make.  Last fall, I had a buck show up under my stand by randomly using the bleat, and allowed my grandson to take his first buck with a crossbow.


 


 


 


 


Here’s the Message on Video



Source: Two Deer Calls You Can't Be Without

  Link
Two Deer Calls You Can't Be Without

The 120-class 9-point stepped within 10 yards as I gazed through the bows of a small pine tree.  It was barely shooting light on the first morning of the hunt, and the mature buck had come directly to my grunt calls.  It was a good buck, but could I shoot before the hunt’s first sunrise?  As the deer stood upwind, I heard a wheeze —the only time I’ve heard that in the wild —and an indication that this was a dominant buck.  Nonetheless, I didn’t raise my crossbow and allowed the deer to walk.  What a memory!


HS is bringing back the original True Talker, shown here with my original, which is 30 years old.

Don’t Leave Home Without It


I carry a Hunter’s Special “True Talker” grunt tube whenever I hunt deer and especially during late October and through November, whether I’m sitting in a stand or sneaking through the woods.  My “talker” is 30 years old and not in production today, but its predecessor, the OG, is available on Amazon, and I love it for its deep guttural sound.  Grunting sounds don’t travel very far, whether made from a buck or a caller, due to the low pitch of the sound, so louder is usually better.  If a buck is close, you can blow into the call more softly to lower the volume.


Available on Amazon, don’t be without this caller.

Do No Harm


The thing I love about a grunt tube is its almost universal acceptance in the deer woods.  When blown in the occasional “contact grunt” form with a puff every couple of seconds, a buck will either stop and look, approach, or ignore the sound and walk away.  Although rarely touted as a benefit, a grunt tube can also calm down a doe that has seen you, and I’ve had this work on several occasions.  On one hunt in South Dakota, we had a day of 20-40 mph winds that howled out of the west, so bad that everyone but me stayed in camp.  I believed that grunting from downwind of a thick bedding area would lure out a buck.  On my second try, I heard a doe snort and began grunting aggressively.  Kneeling under a batch of cedars, I soon had white antlers coming right for me.



Estous Bleat


On an Illinois rut hunt, I watched a buck follow a doe atop a ridge, just out of range.  Using a Wood Wise estrous bleat call, I lured the buck away from the doe and under my stand.  Unfortunately, it was a 120’s deer on a property with a 140 minimum, and I watched it walk away, wishing I was back home where I’d have been happy to launch an arrow.  Primos sell the “can call,” which is the easiest bleat sound to make.  Last fall, I had a buck show up under my stand by randomly using the bleat, and allowed my grandson to take his first buck with a crossbow.


 


 


 


 


Here’s the Message on Video



Source: Two Deer Calls You Can't Be Without
  •  

Similar topics (5)