Do you hunt in a tree stand?

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  • Ken The Kanuck
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 4094

    #1

    Do you hunt in a tree stand?

    I never have but one of my hunting buddies has been using them for a couple of years now and done well, he calls it his happy place. Nice cow he took a couple of days ago.

    Hunting season is here for us, I have a quick 7 day cruise coming up on Saturday and they back home and up to the cabin. Hopefully we will be lucky enough to get some deer and a moose.Alex tree stand.jpgAlex Elk.jpg
  • JohnMOhio
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 1545

    #2
    Never. I would sit down with my back to a large tree. Usually near a game trail and a flowing creek that would provide any cover so to speak for any noise I might make. Mainly hunker down, move as little as possible and listen to what is going on around me. Seemed to work for me many a time.
    Peace is that brief glorious moment in history when everybody stands around reloading.
    Author unkown.

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    • Art
      Senior Member, Deceased
      • Dec 2009
      • 9256

      #3
      I've done it both ways with success. The first deer I ever killed was with JohnMOhio's back against a tree method at the opening of a good looking draw. Got a fat 80 pound doe that day.

      The big advantage of a tree stand or free standing portable stand is it keeps your scent off the ground and you out of the animals normal line of site. The stand I hunted in was very basic, a floor with an old office chair in it, a slanted roof, a low wall or railing around it and that was pretty much it. Some down here are elaborate, including cooking facilities and heating.

      State "fair chase" laws vary on the ethics of stands. In Texas almost anything goes.
      Last edited by Art; 09-28-2023, 11:54. Reason: Accuracy

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      • Allen
        Moderator
        • Sep 2009
        • 10625

        #4
        That first picture is how I would be seeing things laying on the ground after falling out of a tree stand.

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        • lyman
          Administrator - OFC
          • Aug 2009
          • 11294

          #5
          coworker years ago bought a self climber
          and climbed up a popular, cause it was easy,

          but he did not set it correctly when he got to the desired height , and in about an hour it started climbing itself down the tree wth gravity assistance, and him in it,

          he then climbed up a pine and made sure to do whatever you do to secure it ,



          a customer of ours long ago, hunted with a M1A,

          tied a rope to his rifle, which he had a round in the chamber, and safety on, and proceed to oull it up to him wiht a rope around the barrel,

          got hung on a stub of a limb in a pine tree, and when he tried to shake it loose, that stub was in the trigger guard,
          relaxed the rope, safety off
          pulled on the rope, trigger depressed,
          he heard teh round go passed him, as he saw the flash

          then climbed down the tree, unloaded the rifle, and went home for the day

          Comment

          • Allen
            Moderator
            • Sep 2009
            • 10625

            #6
            Originally posted by lyman
            a customer of ours long ago, hunted with a M1A,

            tied a rope to his rifle, which he had a round in the chamber, and safety on, and proceed to oull it up to him wiht a rope around the barrel,

            got hung on a stub of a limb in a pine tree, and when he tried to shake it loose, that stub was in the trigger guard,
            relaxed the rope, safety off
            pulled on the rope, trigger depressed,
            he heard teh round go passed him, as he saw the flash

            then climbed down the tree, unloaded the rifle, and went home for the day
            I hate it when that happens.

            Comment

            • dryheat
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2009
              • 10587

              #7
              I come across quite a few oldtime tree stands. This was just a few months ago.

              DSC00295.jpg

              The next day I climbed a pretty steep (steep for my old age) hill and came across another one that was just a couple of 2 x 6's on a tree branch.
              If I should die before I wake...great,a little more sleep.

              Comment

              • Art
                Senior Member, Deceased
                • Dec 2009
                • 9256

                #8
                On pulling up a loaded rifle with a rope.

                Pulling a rifle, or any firearm toward you is extremely dangerous. I have a friend who nearly died after being shot with a .22 while squirrel hunting with a friend. They sat down to rest, and when they decided to leave my friend's buddy grabbed the rifle he was using by the barrel and pulled it. Something caught the trigger and it fired hitting my buddy at the bottom of the rib cage. The bullet, a hollow point fragmented and pieces penetrated among other things, his liver, diaphragm and one lung. He still has a fragment under a shoulder blade. The ER people opened him up like a book. He is very, very lucky to be alive.

                When I climbed into a tree stand the rifle was empty and slung over my shoulder.
                Last edited by Art; 09-28-2023, 08:58.

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                • RED
                  Very Senior Member - OFC
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 11689

                  #9
                  I had 2 stands, one was equipped with bicycle wheels annd another that looked exactly like the one pictured, just a ladder with a platform on top. The one with wheels was for places you could not leave your stand plus you could use it to carry your deer out of the woods. I killed a lot of deers from both and was totally disabled falling from the one without wheels.

                  It was cold and drizzling rain that was freezing on the ladder but not on the wood seat. I stood up on the top step and turned around to face the ladder. I slipped and fell 8 feet and landed on my back. God was with me! There was a sharp stub from a small tree I had removed with a axe that I missed by a inch.

                  I knew I was in trouble. I could not move any thing except my arms. I was lucky and found my cell phone that had fallen out of my bib Carharts and called my wife and 911. She could have guided the EMTS to my location 3/4 of a mile from the house but they refused to let her ride in the ambulance. They found me almost 2 hours later and called in the helicopter.

                  I had a burst fracture of a lumbar vertebrae and had crushed the two vertebras under the burst one. No cure for the one that had shattered but they fused the other two and six months later and 36 days in rehab, I learned how to walk and drive a car, sorta! That was in 2004 and I am going to have another procedure on my back next week.

                  My advice, stay on the ground!
                  Last edited by RED; 09-29-2023, 03:39.

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                  • Ken The Kanuck
                    Very Senior Member - OFC
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 4094

                    #10
                    Interesting information gentlemen, most appreciated. Glad to hear that you got better Red.

                    Comment

                    • S.A. Boggs
                      Senior Member
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 8578

                      #11
                      Old men don't bounce well and I would be one of those. Locally some are using a small cabin style placed on 6x6's and about 15' high with amenities such as a latrine.

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                      • Allen
                        Moderator
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 10625

                        #12
                        Originally posted by S.A. Boggs
                        Old men don't bounce well and I would be one of those. Locally some are using a small cabin style placed on 6x6's and about 15' high with amenities such as a latrine.
                        That's what I see down here too. These stands are permanent structures so the deer get use to seeing them and aren't spooked.

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                        • bruce
                          Senior Member
                          • Sep 2009
                          • 3759

                          #13
                          Have enjoyed deer hunting for 43 years. Have used tree stands, some rustic and some almost penthouse affairs. Have used ground blinds. Have simply used a handy tree to lean against. Have even laid behind a convenient log which allowed me a very comfortable position for a hunting. Have also still hunted with success. Nowadays, I much prefer still hunting. Enjoy just easing along trying to get close. If I shoot, fine. If I just get close and then let the deer go, that's also fine. Have gotten within 3-4 yds. or so. At that distance, it's almost a sin to shoot anything. This year, will be using a 03-A4 replica w/ a little Weaver V1-4x scope. Figure I'll need to be ready for longer shots since the areas available to me new and unknown. Will use a stand b/c I prefer not to be on the ground when other fellows in the woods may or may not be disciplined shooters. Sincerely. bruce.
                          " Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."

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                          • S.A. Boggs
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 8578

                            #14
                            Some guys took their sleeping bags and put them among bundles of hay. Come morning the hunters looked out on the cut field to see some deer. While still in their sleeping bags they quietly racked a round, cross haired and took their shot.
                            Sam

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                            • S.A. Boggs
                              Senior Member
                              • Aug 2009
                              • 8578

                              #15
                              deer hunter.jpg
                              Another reason to spend a buck on a ticket!
                              Sam

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