Self-filming whitetail hunts isn’t easy, especially on a dead-calm morning with a big 5x5 spitting distance close.
With ice fishing season getting started in the northern United States, it’s time for a reminder about the four most important safety items to carry on every hard-water adventure.
Unfortunately, the decision to back out of the woods at dark and wait to trail an arrow-hit whitetail in the morning can result in losing venison to coyotes.
As bowhunters, we’re taught to take shots at broadside or slightly quartering-away big game animals only, but are there times when it’s okay to break this rule?
Thanks to well-placed trail cam, an epic after-dark battle between a 180-class non-typical and another monster whitetail was captured on video.
It’s critical for deer hunters – especially archers – to understand deer anatomy. It’s a fine line between a quick kill and a marginal hit.
Mature whitetail bucks don’t often give bowhunters second chances, but his one did, thanks to a well-placed deer decoy.
After extensive searching for an arrow-hit whitetail, a hunter and his buddies use a drone — legally — to find the buck in a thick swamp.
Recent studies show that mowing perennial food plots actually reduces the total amount of high-quality forage for whitetails.
Just because most bowhunters take shots while standing, that doesn’t mean it’s the best method.