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When it comes to hunting a specific buck, a lot of factors have to be taken into consideration. You are trying to scout him in the summer, you are setting up scrapes to try and put him in an exact location, you are trying to replay your past encounters with him, and you are going over your trail cam history with that buck. For summer hunters, there can always be a target buck that slips through the cracks, even though you have trail camera photos in numerous spots on your property. There is one issue with those photos, they are not in day light hours. On this episode of the Raised Hunting Podcast, we got a topic request from a listener asking how to pin down a target buck that is "nocturnal". We take our experiences that we have had past target bucks that have been "nocturnal" and tactics we used to pin them down!
By Raised Hunting4.9
204204 ratings
When it comes to hunting a specific buck, a lot of factors have to be taken into consideration. You are trying to scout him in the summer, you are setting up scrapes to try and put him in an exact location, you are trying to replay your past encounters with him, and you are going over your trail cam history with that buck. For summer hunters, there can always be a target buck that slips through the cracks, even though you have trail camera photos in numerous spots on your property. There is one issue with those photos, they are not in day light hours. On this episode of the Raised Hunting Podcast, we got a topic request from a listener asking how to pin down a target buck that is "nocturnal". We take our experiences that we have had past target bucks that have been "nocturnal" and tactics we used to pin them down!

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