The 10 Best Stand Locations for Hunting the Rut

  • EdisonKate
    Inactive
    Posts: 4
    #2160032

    The rut is the most exciting time to hunt—if you’re sitting in the right spot. Here are our picks for the top stand locations for the rut

    The rut is a phenomenal time of year to be a deer hunter. It’s when anything can happen at any time. Bucks are chasing does, and even those elusive mature bucks can be spotted on their feet during daylight. The drive to breed can push bucks to travel miles from their typical home range which gives hunters the opportunity to tag a giant buck that they’ve never seen before.

    However, the chaos of the rut can also make deciding where to hunt more challenging. If a big buck could show up anywhere at any time, it’s also true that he could never show up at the spot you’re hunting. And this leads to the biggest question when it comes to hunting the rut: Where should you sit?

    To help you make the right call, we’ve listed the ten best stands for hunting the rut. These picks are based on interviews with expert whitetail hunters, deer biologists, and from personal experience in the field.

    Buck Bedding Areas
    While this might seem like a surprising choice, sticking to thick bedding areas that bucks have been using all season long can produce during the rut. According to The Hunting Beast’s Dan Infalt, this is an excellent way to encounter mature bucks that rarely move elsewhere during daylight hours. He says these are the places that he kills most of his mature deer, even during the rut.

    Generally, these are the absolute thickest, nastiest areas around for bucks to live in. It gives them an advantage on seeing, hearing, or smelling danger before it reaches them. Hunting these in a strategic manner can produce solid results.

    Doe Bedding Areas
    One of the best stand locations for the rut is near doe bedding areas. This is a time when bucks are covering ground in search of does. The downwind sides of doe bedding areas can put a hunter in a good position to capitalize on cruising bucks.

    “I will hunt doe bedding areas that harbor bucks, or adjacent bedding areas near there,” Infalt says. “But I still kill most of my bucks in bedding, not in funnels.”

    Interestingly, according to recent research, you might even have new rutting does and bucks pushing through an area that weren’t previously there.

    “We’ve learned that females make forays outside their traditional home ranges in the breeding season,” says Duane Diefenbach, wildlife biologist with Penn State University. “The conventional wisdom was that it was all about males making mate selection choices. But females play a role in mate selection as well.”

    Pinch Points and Funnels
    Pinch points and funnels are probably the most classic stand locations for hunting the rut. These spots include stretches of timber or early successional cover that pinches deer down through a narrow area. Whitetails that funnel through such spots are easier to encounter and get a shot at. Other great funnels include creek, river, ditch, and fence crossings. Topographical funnels, such as hogbacks, ridges, and saddles, are great spots, too.

    That said, in heavily pressured areas, whitetails can begin to avoid such locations in favor of travel routes that receive less hunting pressure. This is especially true with mature bucks.

    “One thing I see with private land guys is that, a lot of the time, they’ll place stands in the best funnels and spots, such as food plots,” Infalt says. “They’ll rotate through those stands, and the bucks learn where they are. You’ll get on a mature buck’s tracks and watch him go through the whole woods without going past one of those stands. It takes a mobile move to get them.”

    Food Sources
    Throughout the year, food sources drive deer activity. If there’s food, deer will likely be there. If there’s bedding cover nearby, they will likely be there during daylight hours.

    “I think one of the things that gets me onto bucks the quickest, and it isn’t 100%, is food,” Infalt says. “This year, there’s a good acorn crop. In a lot of cases, they’re bedding near acorns. That can kill you in the hills and forests where oaks are everywhere. But in the swamps and marshes, oaks are isolated on the islands. I look for the beds surrounding those.”

    “Hunt food sources early mornings and evenings for the first part of the rut, as bucks will be out checking the does,” he says. “But by the first week of November, move to funnels and hunt hard during the midday, as the bucks will be up cruising going from bedding area to bedding area looking for that hot doe.”

    Benches
    Another excellent rut stand location is a bench. Quite simply, a bench is a long, relatively narrow strip of flat ground that cuts along a ridge. These areas are commonly traveled by bucks as they parallel ridge lines. Bucks use benches to scent-check does that are either above or below them.

    In the morning, when thermals are rising, bucks tend to travel higher-level benches. This allows them to smell does (and danger) below them. In the afternoon, when thermals are falling, they tend to hit lower-level benches. This allows them to smell anything up above them.

    Leeward Ridges
    Similar to benches, leeward (downwind side) ridge lines are excellent places to intercept cruising bucks. These are also great places for mature bucks to avoid danger, even during the rut.

    “A lot of these bucks are sitting up on top of a ridge where they can smell anything coming, and they can jump off and run down a very steep slope and be gone within seconds,” Diefenbach says. “To get to those spots is difficult. But if you can hike up to one of those spots, and set up during the day, you might catch one of those bucks walking. They’re going to get pushed by hunters to that spot. They’re going sit until maybe 10 a.m. If you can get there, you might intercept one.”

    Water Barriers
    Whitetails get pressured during the rut more than any other time of deer season. Once the human intrusion begins, bucks start slinking into areas that give them survival advantages. Oftentimes, this comes in the form of a water barrier.

    “I go anywhere other people don’t go,” Infalt says. “People leave behind scent that can last 10-15 days, perhaps longer than that. A deer can detect they were there. Deer really use water as a buffer. They bed in thick areas that are wet. They love high spots surrounded by water. Islands, oxbows, peninsulas, and coves are good. In marshes and swamps, I’m looking for islands and points in remote areas.”

    Water Sources
    But don’t forget that whitetails drink … a lot. And they drink even more during drought conditions, which much of the country is currently facing. They also drink more water during the rut. Cruising bucks must stay hydrated, drink upward of 5 quarts per day, and a secluded watering hole can be the ticket to a big, rutted-up buck.

    Weird Spots
    Throughout most of the year, whitetail bucks inhabit the spots you’d expect them to — the best available habitat. Rarely do you see them bedding or living in what we hunters perceive as subpar areas. That said, if ever there was a time for mature whitetails to inhabit a weird spot, it’s during heavily hunted seasons.

    Diefenbach says mature whitetails grow old because they’ve found a place to survive and avoid human encounters. They have a spot where they aren’t disturbed.
    “I think of one example down in the Gettysburg area,” Diefenbach says. “It’s highly developed — either crop land or human development with small woodlots. This one buck would just lay down along a powerline in a blackberry patch. That’s where he stayed from an hour or so before hunting opened for most of the day. They’re just smart like that.”

    Of course, during the rut, bucks commonly push does to weird areas to get them away from the bulk of the deer herd. Such spots include sinkholes, small woodlots, pockets of CRP, and other areas where they can avoid other whitetails.

    Trail Intersections
    Lastly, consider trail intersections. Hunting where two or more well-used trails intersect is a solid choice during the rut. Bucks cover a lot of ground in search of does.

    “There was a deer in Missouri that went 180 miles,” says Kip Adams, chief conservation officer with the National Deer Association. “That was the longest range movement that we know of in whitetails.” It traveled that distance over the course of 22 days during the 2017 rut. Picking main deer trail intersections gives you a chance to intercept one of the transient bucks.

    Regardless of where you decide to hunt, just get out there.

    deertracker
    Posts: 9253
    #2160079

    You are the smartest robot I know.
    DT

    CaptainMusky
    Posts: 23371
    #2160082

    Be sure to wear a cover scent so the mature bucks do not mistake you for a breedable doe. That could end up badly.

    BigWerm
    SW Metro
    Posts: 11889
    #2160089

    Be sure to wear a cover scent so the mature bucks do not mistake you for a breedable doe. That could end up badly.

    Unless you have your helmet and knee pads! rotflol

    MX1825
    Posts: 3319
    #2160095

    Wasted space as far as I’m concerned. doah Thanks for nothing EK!

    JEREMY
    BP
    Posts: 3971
    #2160103

    Now I know im gonna hunt the thickest poop down wind of a bedding area that no human has ever seen before. Gonna set out a 5 quart bucket of water and it should be game on. As long as i can get up by 10 AM.

    Bearcat89
    North branch, mn
    Posts: 20815
    #2160106

    If your in a stand does that mean you are safe from prey and wild dogs that bite your hand

    tswoboda
    Posts: 8721
    #2160144

    Hunting during the rut is a good way to get violated by the prey

    Iowaboy1
    Posts: 3827
    #2160147

    Hunting during the rut is a good way to get violated by the prey

    Yup, just like this guy.

    Pailofperch
    Central Mn North of the smiley water tower
    Posts: 2956
    #2160245

    But what brand of hand warmers am I supposed to use??? bawling doah

    Iowaboy1
    Posts: 3827
    #2160254

    POP, hand warmers get in the way of using a spud bar checking the ice while crossing a body of water to get to the bedding areas where them turdy point bucks are.

    Pailofperch
    Central Mn North of the smiley water tower
    Posts: 2956
    #2160263

    I think I smelled one of them turdy one’s tonight. I thought I was right outside the bedding area. I mustve been in the toilet area without knowing it.

    Iowaboy1
    Posts: 3827
    #2160265

    I think I smelled one of them turdy one’s tonight. I thought I was right outside the bedding area. I mustve been in the toilet area without knowing it.

    Speaking of which I saw no mention of how to determine the difference between buck bedding areas and doe bedding areas, sure, the thickest narliest stuff was for buck bedding areas but is the OP certain on that?
    Many years of hunting deer has taught me that bucks tend to drop logs whereas does tend to blast their area with what looks like someone had blown up a hersheys morsel factory.

    If you happen to walk into a thicket and hear a bunch of moaning and grunting and you trip over a what looks like a king size baby ruth most likely you are in a bucks bedding area, however, I’ve heard those kinds of noises emitting from a wooded area only to discover that a robust doe who was identifying as a buck had taken over the place and,,,,,,,,,,,,, uh, carry on.

    Iowaboy1
    Posts: 3827
    #2160267

    I forgot to mention that in areas where bucks tend to roam and they empty their bladder it will look like a small post hole bored into the ground and if it is fresh enough a small pond will surround the post hole.
    When does have to empty their bladder a lot of bark will be missing from the trees and surrounding flora will stink to high heaven.

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