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You can find great blacktail habitat and still never see the buck you actually want. That gap is what we call advanced locating: going beyond “thick stuff over there” and learning to identify the bedroom door, the specific access point and travel route that tells you where a mature buck spends most of his time and how he moves without getting exposed.
We talk through why the classic “52-acre range” idea helps and also hurts when you turn it into a neat square on a map. A buck’s real world range is made of usable acres: the cover, feed, and protection he will actually choose, plus the skinny green belts that connect safe pockets. We share a real example of a specific buck that only shows for a couple weeks a year, then use that story to explain why ridges are not hard walls, why hunters project their limits onto deer, and how tools like OnX LiDAR make benches and subtle terrain features easier to spot.
From there we zoom out to seasonal movement. Summer pattern is not hunting-season pattern, and everything a deer does is purposeful: water, nutrients, safety, and breeding all change the map. We finish with field-ready sign reading, including what to look for in tracks, dewclaws, solo travel, scat, and the difference between dominance rubs and annual rub lines, plus how habitat age can shift rub activity over time.
If you want to stop guessing and start making decisions that hold up in the woods, subscribe, share this with a hunting buddy, and leave a review telling us what part of locating you want to master next.
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By Aaron & Dave5
1212 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
You can find great blacktail habitat and still never see the buck you actually want. That gap is what we call advanced locating: going beyond “thick stuff over there” and learning to identify the bedroom door, the specific access point and travel route that tells you where a mature buck spends most of his time and how he moves without getting exposed.
We talk through why the classic “52-acre range” idea helps and also hurts when you turn it into a neat square on a map. A buck’s real world range is made of usable acres: the cover, feed, and protection he will actually choose, plus the skinny green belts that connect safe pockets. We share a real example of a specific buck that only shows for a couple weeks a year, then use that story to explain why ridges are not hard walls, why hunters project their limits onto deer, and how tools like OnX LiDAR make benches and subtle terrain features easier to spot.
From there we zoom out to seasonal movement. Summer pattern is not hunting-season pattern, and everything a deer does is purposeful: water, nutrients, safety, and breeding all change the map. We finish with field-ready sign reading, including what to look for in tracks, dewclaws, solo travel, scat, and the difference between dominance rubs and annual rub lines, plus how habitat age can shift rub activity over time.
If you want to stop guessing and start making decisions that hold up in the woods, subscribe, share this with a hunting buddy, and leave a review telling us what part of locating you want to master next.
Support the show

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