Here's some (maybe too much!!) info:
Small public state park, which consistently holds deer in a 6-acre thicket which is surrounded by open overgrown grass fields, and small chunks of woodlots, leading to larger woodlots, and some lakes.
Runways literally everywhere, and all the brush in the thicket, as far as the grasses go, are at least 4' tall right now, or higher.
The deer don't seem to consistently come in/out in one exact spot, as far as I've been able to tell, for the last few years I've hunted it. They don't even seem to be influenced by the wind direction in relation to their travels, at times anyway...
I've been on them for 3 nights now with no shots. I've been busted once, and had a doe blow from deep within the thicket last night, but not sure if it was at me, or something else.
Small game hunters come thru at times with no regularity or specific direction of travel, so the deer are relatively used to being pushed out.
I am on the ground, and usually set up a stool embedded a few yards into a thicket and brush myself in. They typically don't come out unless the weather is very cloudy and cold, or it is getting right near dark.
I've even started to take a handful of corn in a baggie, and toss a handful in a shooting lane, hopefully to at least stop something in my lane, which can be very narrow. If they take a few steps out of it, I risk shooting into thick grasses, which I won't do. Works for the yearlings, but has yet to work on mature animals; however what little I do throw out is always gone by the next night.
I'm also not leaving a bait pile out there, which is legal, but alerts more idiot public-land hunters to my presence so they can come set up right next to me after they find out I know where the deer are at....has happened many times out there.
And you can walk into this "thicket" starting 3 yards off a major road in the park. The deer can be bedded in there as close to 15 yards from the road, and out to about 150 yards before the end of the thicket. Then it parallels the road for about 200 yards.
You can hear people's conversations as they walk by on the road...and the music in their cars, etc...but hey, this IS where the deer are!
So I guess here are some questions:
Should I try a low bleat?
Should I abandon the corn idea to stop them in a lane?
I would "rest" the area for a few days, but I know small game hunters won't! Ideas?
Should I set up further away?
Should I try and sneak into the very deep spots?
If it's wet, I can...if it's dry, not so well...
Any thoughts and ideas would be great!!
Thanks All!!!
Marc