Devenir un meilleur chasseur à l'arc.
J'offre à tout chasseur à l'arc ces 12 étapes clés pour devenir un meilleur chasseur cette saison. Voici donc révélé les secrets des meilleurs chasseurs.
1- L'observation virtuelle: Avec les photographies aériennes et les cartes topographiques disponibles sur l'internet, vous pouvez avoir toute l'information disponible sur la région que vous chassez. Avec cette information, vous pouvez racourcir énormément votre observation sur le sol à quelques heures.
2- L'observation au sol: Il s'agit de vérifier ce que vous avez trouvé sur les photographies aériennes et sur les cartes. Votre observation sur le sol sert à trouver le meilleur endroit pour installer votre poste d'affut, ainsi que déterminer les points d'entrée et de sortie sans déranger le chevreuil.
3- Chasser le vent: C'est une question primordiale. Bien des chasseurs s'entêtent à chasser une partie boisée même si le vent n'est pas en leur faveur. C'est comme si vous visitiez un quartier pour acheter une maison et soudain une odeur de purin de porc vous parvenait au nez. Vous quitteriez le quartier et vous n'y reviendrez pas. C'est la même chose pour les chevreuils.
4- L'élimination des odeurs: L'élimination des odeurs et chasser avec le vent en votre faveur sont même important quand vous aller et/ou revenez à votre poste d'affut. Il est préférable ne n'amener aucune senteur au poste d'affut.
5- Utilisez le bon ''treestand'': un poste d'affut que vous utilisez matin et soir ne doit pas être un poste d'affut auto-grimpant. Placez donc un poste d'affut fixe si vous pensez l'uitliser plusieurs fois.
6- Le placement du poste d'affut: Sachant que vous connaissez les sources de nourriture et les dortoirs des chevreuils, il est entendu que vous verrez pas mal plus de chevreuils.
7- Minimizez la pression de chasse: Si vous n'avez qu'un petit territoire à chasser, n'utilisez pas les mêmes postes d'affut à tous les jours. Même si vous changez votre poste d'affut d'emplacement de quelques mêtres, c'est suffisant pour éviter que les chevreuils identifient vos habitudes.
8- Connaissez vos distances: Prenez le temps de calculer vos distances avec des objects fixes comme les arbres le premier matin. Cette opération vous évitera de calculer rapidement la distance du chevreuil qui s'approche, si vous avez une chance de tir.
9- Apprenez à voir à travers les arbres: Procurez vous de bonnes jumelles comptactes. Les yeux naturels ne voient pas très bien à travers les arbres. Avec de bonnes jumelles vous pourrez voir à travers le sous-bois.
10- Ajustez bien votre arc: Bien des chasseurs pensent que s'ils frappent la cible au centre, leur arc est bien ajusté. En réalité la flèche peut bouger énormement quand elle quitte l'arc. Ce problème peut amener une flèche hors de la cible à cause de la perte d'énergie de la flèche.
11- Utilisez des pointes fixes: C'est certain que les pointes rétractables n'affectent pas la trajectoire de la flèche, mais si les pointes de chasse fixes sont bien utilisées elles sont plus précises.
12- La pratique fait le bon chasseur: Il est certain que plus un chasseur pratique dans plusieurs positions de tir, il sera un meilleur chasseur.
Profitez-en pour pratiquer vos tirs tout l'été. Vous vous appercevrez que vos groupement se resserreront au fur et à mesure que vous pratiquez.
C'était l'opinion du bloggeur en ce 24 juin 2014.
André Nanook Simard
J'offre à tout chasseur à l'arc ces 12 étapes clés pour devenir un meilleur chasseur cette saison. Voici donc révélé les secrets des meilleurs chasseurs.
1- L'observation virtuelle: Avec les photographies aériennes et les cartes topographiques disponibles sur l'internet, vous pouvez avoir toute l'information disponible sur la région que vous chassez. Avec cette information, vous pouvez racourcir énormément votre observation sur le sol à quelques heures.
2- L'observation au sol: Il s'agit de vérifier ce que vous avez trouvé sur les photographies aériennes et sur les cartes. Votre observation sur le sol sert à trouver le meilleur endroit pour installer votre poste d'affut, ainsi que déterminer les points d'entrée et de sortie sans déranger le chevreuil.
3- Chasser le vent: C'est une question primordiale. Bien des chasseurs s'entêtent à chasser une partie boisée même si le vent n'est pas en leur faveur. C'est comme si vous visitiez un quartier pour acheter une maison et soudain une odeur de purin de porc vous parvenait au nez. Vous quitteriez le quartier et vous n'y reviendrez pas. C'est la même chose pour les chevreuils.
4- L'élimination des odeurs: L'élimination des odeurs et chasser avec le vent en votre faveur sont même important quand vous aller et/ou revenez à votre poste d'affut. Il est préférable ne n'amener aucune senteur au poste d'affut.
5- Utilisez le bon ''treestand'': un poste d'affut que vous utilisez matin et soir ne doit pas être un poste d'affut auto-grimpant. Placez donc un poste d'affut fixe si vous pensez l'uitliser plusieurs fois.
6- Le placement du poste d'affut: Sachant que vous connaissez les sources de nourriture et les dortoirs des chevreuils, il est entendu que vous verrez pas mal plus de chevreuils.
7- Minimizez la pression de chasse: Si vous n'avez qu'un petit territoire à chasser, n'utilisez pas les mêmes postes d'affut à tous les jours. Même si vous changez votre poste d'affut d'emplacement de quelques mêtres, c'est suffisant pour éviter que les chevreuils identifient vos habitudes.
8- Connaissez vos distances: Prenez le temps de calculer vos distances avec des objects fixes comme les arbres le premier matin. Cette opération vous évitera de calculer rapidement la distance du chevreuil qui s'approche, si vous avez une chance de tir.
9- Apprenez à voir à travers les arbres: Procurez vous de bonnes jumelles comptactes. Les yeux naturels ne voient pas très bien à travers les arbres. Avec de bonnes jumelles vous pourrez voir à travers le sous-bois.
10- Ajustez bien votre arc: Bien des chasseurs pensent que s'ils frappent la cible au centre, leur arc est bien ajusté. En réalité la flèche peut bouger énormement quand elle quitte l'arc. Ce problème peut amener une flèche hors de la cible à cause de la perte d'énergie de la flèche.
11- Utilisez des pointes fixes: C'est certain que les pointes rétractables n'affectent pas la trajectoire de la flèche, mais si les pointes de chasse fixes sont bien utilisées elles sont plus précises.
12- La pratique fait le bon chasseur: Il est certain que plus un chasseur pratique dans plusieurs positions de tir, il sera un meilleur chasseur.
Profitez-en pour pratiquer vos tirs tout l'été. Vous vous appercevrez que vos groupement se resserreront au fur et à mesure que vous pratiquez.
C'était l'opinion du bloggeur en ce 24 juin 2014.
André Nanook Simard
White-tailed
deer are creatures of habit. If they weren’t, hunters would never see
them and put themselves in position to kill deer with such
regularity. After all, we base nearly all of our scouting and hunting decisions on where deer have been.
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
White-tailed
deer are creatures of habit. If they weren’t, hunters would never see
them and put themselves in position to kill deer with such
regularity. After all, we base nearly all of our scouting and hunting decisions on where deer have been.
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
d
deer are creatures of habit. If they weren’t, hunters would never see
them and put themselves in position to kill deer with such
regularity. After all, we base nearly all of our scouting and hunting decisions on where deer have been.
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
White-tailed
deer are creatures of habit. If they weren’t, hunters would never see
them and put themselves in position to kill deer with such
regularity. After all, we base nearly all of our scouting and hunting decisions on where deer have been.
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
Trails, rubs, scrapes and distinct browse lines allow hunters to pattern deer to some degree. Although observations point us in general areas for improved deer sightings, can big, mature bucks really be patterned to the extent that so many experts have claimed over the years? Yes. And no.
To become a buck hunter, you must make the pledge to seriously study deer and deer behavior. There’s little luck involved. The most successful buck hunters in North America didn’t earn their stripes overnight. They were deer hunters first and foremost and eventually turned the corner.
Too many young hunters watch the popular hunting shows and think they can achieve big-buck stardom by studying buck sign and hunting hard through the rut.
And, truth be told, today’s burgeoning herds and a shift toward quality deer management has helped some of these upstarts taste occasional success.
To do it consistently especially on big deer requires many seasons of trial and error. You can, however, shave years off that learning curve by absorbing every word in what many critics are calling the best, no-nonsense whitetail hunting book to hit the shelves in years.
Do you want to jump on the fast track to buck-hunting success? Follow these five rules, and you’ll be well on your way.
1. Keep an open mind.
2. Shrug off bad advice.
3. Read and understand buck sign.
4. Become a trail wizard.
5. Set realistic goals.
- See more at: http://www.deeranddeerhunting.com/articles/bagyourbuck#sthash.8mRaRqt3.dpuf
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