For most people the answer to this question is when they can. It is dependent primarily upon the legal hunting dates. When you can get off from your job may be relevant too. There are hunters who work around deer-hunting seasons and there are hunters who hunt around their work schedules. Some people hunt year-round and others hunt only an hour or two. There are those who travel across states and around the world hunting deer at all times of the year, taking advantage of different climates and seasons; there are those who scout and observe deer year-round even though they may actually hunt only one day or a couple of weeks each year. Most people must take time to hunt. They are not likely to allow anything to interfere with their hunting time.

Hunts in all states are organized to allow the deer ample time off from hunter pressure to bear their young and nurse them. Hunting from February through August is virtually non-existent for this reason. Full-blooded Native Americans have the right to take deer anytime regardless of the season as part of their ancestral rights.

Deer seasons are scheduled in the fall throughout America. There are several reasons for this. The rut is well advanced, which makes the bucks less cautious and creates an advantage for the hunter. Also, it is only during the fall and early winter months that deer sport antlers, which most hunters prefer. In old times it was when most of the farm work was done that deer-hunting took place. The hunt season was also governed by when meat would not spoil and could be laid in to provide food for the winter months. Fall hunts were usually when there was a good tracking snow, making it easier to hunt and also to locate wounded deer. Animals were fat in the fall, having feasted on acorns, crops, and other mature mast food. Roads are frozen over, making them more accessible. Fawns are well developed and most does are bred. In the autumn there is a sharp increase in deer activity which peaks in late fall with the breeding cycle and maximum acorn availability. All these conditions helped to establish the tradition of fall deer hunting.

Quite apart from the biological reasons, the convenience of the hunter and the traditions of hunters are the chief factors in the establishment of the hunting season. The legislature is out to please the public, which is the voting public, of course, and they are the elected “public servants.”

Some farmers and entire communities keep Saturday or Sunday Sabbaths on which they do not hunt and allow no hunting on their lands. It is always best to respect these local traditions. In some locations, Sunday hunting is not only shunned but forbidden by local law in the form of ordinances. It doesn’t make for good hunter relations with the public when a Sunday morning church service is interrupted by gunfire on the ridge behind the churchhouse.

DAWN TO DARK

The majority of hunters like to be in position to hunt deer before daylight. Some anxious hunters are so intent upon early light hunting that they enter the woods at midnight and sit quietly until dawn in hopes that they will be undetected by the deer moving into the area and be able to see deer in the vicinity as soon as the sun comes up. This is, of course, going too far for most people, but getting there early might put you right on top of deer when daylight comes. I am the type that likes the woods more than my urban life. It is no problems for me to enter before dawn and exit after dark. There is seldom a rush to get back home. Daylight has found me perched in a tree with deer bedded beneath more than once.

The hunter who has prepared himself properly to enter the woods under cover of darkness to go to his hunting spot and wait for sunrise has the most intensely exciting hunt. Spotting the stately dream buck as he becomes visible through the fog and filtering light is dramatic. Arriving at a stand in darkness without alerting the deer in the area can indeed mean that deer are right under your nose. Quietly entering the woods with deer-like footsteps and with a flashlight held pointed to the ground and used minimally can really be the first step in the greatest of hunts.

Proper scouting allows hunters to enjoy the most success with the least effort in the least amount of time.

If you take your deer in early morning, you will have the whole day left to enjoy the after-hunt experiences, dress and preserve the deer, or hunt for another deer.

Remember not to shine your car lights into the area and not to slam your car doors.

It is important to carry a flashlight whenever you are in the woods in darkness, but keep it aimed at the ground so as not to arouse the deer but to notify other hunters of your presence. Never presume that there are no other hunters about! You can bump heads with another hunter in the most unexpected places at any time. Simply that there were no other vehicles about means little. If you could avoid the flashlight when entering the woods pre-dawn it would be to your hunting advantage. Safety must come first. Carry a flashlight. There is no deer worth dying for.

The transition from the darkest hour before the dawn into the slowly increasing light is one of the best experiences in deer hunting. It is majestic. It is a new dawn. The whole woods is resonant with the sounds of good morning.

During gun season, and especially on opening morning at sunrise, you will hear guns going off in the hills that excite the imagination and may stir up visions of the Civil War.

One drawback is that it is usually quite cold in early morning, and sunrise does not produce expected warmth. It is during this transition period that shivers can make you shake and spoil your steady shot. Take it easy in your early morning trek, being careful not to get heated up. Lighten up on the clothing for the trek in, and put more clothing on when you reach your waiting place in order to avoid the handicap of shivering.

Most states stipulate that the hunter may take deer no earlier than one half-hour before legal sunrise and no later than one half-hour after legal sunset. It is a good idea to find out just what time legal sunrise and sunset are for the given day of the hunt. This is particularly true for hunts on tightly regulated government lands. Terrain differences allow sunlight to filter in later or earlier in some locations than others. Deep valleys have later sunrises and earlier sunsets. The rising sun in the east may be delayed by an hour or more by some topographical obstruction such as a hill, and the same may be true of the sunset. Overcast days are slow lighting and quick darkening.

In some popular hunting locations such as the public hunting areas of state forests and military installations, especially those where hunters are monitored by check stations upon leaving for the hunt and departing, officials are equipped with a device which can determine almost the exact time that an animal was shot. The test is reputed to gauge the time of kill within 15 minutes with accuracy. When it is suspected that an animal was shot before legal hunting time, this test can be administered and used in court as evidence. All game wardens are capable of applying this test.

Albie Berk enjoys hunting and sharing what he has learned and any successful tips he can with others. He enjoys South Carolina hunting and usually stays at Island Plantation

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Melissa asked:


Is there a movie that is still in production or soon to be released that you just can’t wait to see?

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Snow Dragon Princess asked:


I’m curious… I love to watch movies. I wonder how many movies have been releasing to movie theater in a year?

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beatrice asked:


I watched this movie and I remember it being good. it was some kind of a special police training on an island and people in the group started being killed by someone inside the group by freaky traps (one got frozen in this abandoned shop, there was something with poisoned coffee, and a flood and electricity)
Does anyone know which movie I’m talking about? I tried google and imdb, but no luck! It’s driving me crazy!

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MGT asked:


I have a friend who was named after it and would like to know what movie it is! Thanks!

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Sam asked:


Nothing about the devil please. - I don’t like those movies.
I want to see a movie that will scare the crap out of me. I’m always the one at sleepovers when everyone else is screaming I’m cracking up. I never get the point of scary movies they aren’t scary at all to me. I just want to find a movie that will scare me. I’m 13 :), so something age appropriate I guess? Actually screw it my parents leave me home w/ unrated movies all the time, I think I’ve seen it all XD.

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Judge asked:


I remember seeing a movie in which a person goes back in time and stays in a hotel. His task is to insert a coin in a parking meter just outside the hotel. This simple task of inserting the coin in a parking meter prevents an important person from getting a ticket and prevents this person from doing something drastic in retaliation for getting the parking ticket. Throughout the movie the person who is supposed to insert the coin in the parking meter debates over and over again on whether or not he is going to insert the coin in the meter or just let the events that he is trying to prevent unfold. In the end, I believe he inserts the coin.

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Solar Maximus asked:


I’m a professor and I am suppose to pick a movie to show to my students with the hope of instilling upon them the value of offering oneself to community service. Which movie could best help me out? Thanks guys.

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ysamluvsfi asked:


We just moved to a developing community that is far away from the city and about 30 minutes from the nearest movie theater. The subject came up about the demand for a movie theater in the area. How realistic is the prospect of opening a movie theater? It doesn’t need to be huge. Just a few screens. If there is anyone who has opened their own theater, how much does it cost to do something like this?
I said it doesn’t have to be huge, meaning not a megaplex. I didn’t say it had to be small. There are plenty of smaller profitable theaters in other areas that are similar to ours.

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Laura M asked:


I have a midtern for my intro to acting class, we have to act out a movie in ten minutes. The thing is me and my group are totally stumpted. Can anyone think of a movie that would be easy to act with two girls and two guys? Girls can play boys and vice versa. We were thinking a comedy or action. Preferably something not too difficult to understand. Nothing lame, something recent. We also don’t want to do something that’s already been done. Such as zoolander, wedding crashers, 40 virgin, those are just some of the past. My group is desperate, and if anyone can think of anything it would be greatly appreciated.

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