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I speak with Bruce Hutcheon from the former Whitetail Rendezvous podcast. Bruce gives us some tips to approaching those prairie deer in Eastern Colorado.Gear list Supported by:Facebook @I Hunt ColoradoOnX Hunt giveway - https://kingsumo.com/g/emeni0/co-hunting-hub-onx-membership-giveawayBranded bills https://www.brandedbills.com/ coupon code “huntinghub20”Wilderness Athlete 25% off coupon code “huntinghub” Big AgnesAntler and Mounts for sale website Contact Info:Instagram @co_hunting_hubFacebook @Colorado Hunting HubFacebook @I Hunt ColoradoEmail: clint.a.whitley@gmail.comPodbean - https://cohuntinghub.podbean.com/YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCpVnb95DnRIlGIlJyZXiyXQApple podcast - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/colorado-hunting-hub/id1507087118Insta: @what’s_your_wildBlog: agphotos.wixsite.com/mysiteEmail: drayagrangroth@gmail.com
Whitetail Rendezvous just celebrated its fourth anniversary on August 31. With over 500,000 listens and 600 guests from across North America, the podcast has undeniably reached and provided many valuable insights to so many people. However, the podcast has one more year to run without financial support. In order to keep growing and spread its […]
Whitetail Rendezvous just celebrated its fourth anniversary on August 31. With over 500,000 listens and 600 guests from across North America, the podcast has undeniably reached and provided many valuable insights to so many people. However, the podcast has one more year to run without financial support. In order to keep growing and spread its mission, Bruce has set up a Patreon account on his website for you to become a partner in this podcast. Join Bruce on his journey as he continues to share hunting stories, entertain every listener, and most importantly build a whitetail community with each of you.
Everybody has a passion for something. No matter what it is, you have to get it out there. Bruce Hutcheon says podcasting is one of the leading ways to get yourself out there because it's the fastest growing media distribution channel in the world. Bruce is the host of the Whitetail Rendezvous podcast where he interviews the nation’s leading experts on whitetail deer hunting all over North America and gives the inside scoop on all things hunting. He talks about finding a niche, building relationships, content creation, and shares how he was able to get 100 interviews in 100 days. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! Here’s How » Join the Podcast Peeps Community today: podcastpeeps.com Podcast Peeps Facebook Podcast Peeps Instagram Podcast Peeps YouTube
Everybody has a passion for something. No matter what it is, you have to get it out there. Bruce Hutcheon says podcasting is one of the leading ways to get yourself out there because it’s the fastest growing media distribution channel in the world. Bruce is the host of the Whitetail Rendezvous podcast where he interviews the nation’s leading experts on whitetail deer hunting all over North America and gives the inside scoop on all things hunting. He talks about finding a niche, building relationships, content creation, and shares how he was able to get 100 interviews in 100 days. Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share! Here’s How » Join the Podcast Peeps Community today: podcastpeeps.com Podcast Peeps Facebook Podcast Peeps Instagram Podcast Peeps YouTube
The interviewer becomes the interviewee in this episode! Bruce Hutcheon is host of the popular Whitetail Rendezvous Podcast. He is a fantastic host and a friend of ours. In this interview he takes us back to his early days of hunting and how he was able to shoot his first buck! It's a great history lesson and a great story. (Also check out Buckwild Coffee if you're looking for a great tasting cup of Joe!)
Welcome to another episode of Whitetail Rendezvous with your host Bruce Hutcheon, and I'm heading to La Crosse, Wisconsin. And I've got a fondness for La Crosse, Wisconsin because I attended the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse, played a little football, then a little track, met my wife of 48 years. And I got a friend […]
Welcome to another episode of Whitetail Rendezvous with your host Bruce Hutcheon, and I’m heading to La Crosse, Wisconsin. And I’ve got a fondness for La Crosse, Wisconsin because I attended the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse, played a little football, then a little track, met my wife of 48 years. And I got a friend there, Jeff Vance, and Jeff is the Head of State for Bucks of Wisconsin, and it’s a division of Bucks of America. Jeff, welcome back to the show. Jeff was number 160-something a number of years back. So, Jeff, I’m excited to have you here and I’m sure looking forward to spending a few days hunting with you this coming year. Jeff: I’m looking forward to it and it’s great to be back, Bruce. Listening to your podcast throughout the last couple years has been great. I got several of them bookmarked from Mark Hammer, those podcasts are always really good. And then…Mark puts down a monster…
We’re heading up to “O Canada.” I love to go north of the border, I’ve had some great hunts up there and with some great people. And Chris is no exception, he runs Cedar Ridge Outdoors and he’s just kind of sort of getting going in this whole program, and so he and I connected on social media and we’ll be talking Deer Hunting and Discover Cedar Ridge Outdoors. And I love to have new guys and guys that hunting in Southern Ontario on the show. So, Chris, welcome to Whitetail Rendezvous. Hey. Well, thanks for having me, I appreciate the opportunity. Yeah, we were kidding in the warm-up that you live in Southern Ontario, I fish in Northern Ontario quite a bit. And I call it the suburbs, and you kind of came back to me and said, “Well, it’s not that bad.” And so let’s just tell the people, you know, what you’re hunting, what type of land are you hunting in Southern Ontario? For the most part, like, there’s a fair bit of hardwoods and stuff around, we got some cedar swamps, but it’s a lot of farmland. There’s a lot of big fields, a lot of farmland. The deer is plentiful, like there’s a lot of crop for them to eat. So it is what it is. Hunting is hunting, I guess, and at the same point you got to have a little luck behind you, too. The deer population is there. In my area where I am right now there’s a lot of guys hunting, so I’ve noticed in the last couple years the deer population has dropped a little bit. But that’s why I do what I do and I try to keep the herd healthy. Hunting is hunting, I guess, and at the same point you got to have a little luck behind you, too Now when you talk about agriculture, what kind of food are they growing? So do you need to put in your own food plots? Where I am I haven’t got a whole lot of farms around me. Like there are quite a few in the general area, but a lot of guys are growing beans, corn, a lot of stuff for cattle and that, oats. And they…but I like to put my…get my food plots and try to do what I can for the herd, keep them healthy and just keep them in my area, too. So it’s… Now you’re running on public…pardon me, private land, how many acres you have access to? I’ve got, personally myself that I own, I’ve got 300. And, but there’s a good friend of mine right next door that he’s got 400, so I kind of hunt about 700 acres for the most part. But it’s a lot of acreage, but we do all right with it. Yeah, what are we talking about, what does the DNR say about, you know, deer per acre, or deer per square mile? To be honest with you, I really haven’t looked into it. Like in our area it’s…you go 10 minutes south, the deer population when you get down closer to where there’s a few more big farms and that, like, you see a big jump in the deer population. And back where I am right now, if I had to guess, I’m going to say five, six, maybe seven deer kind of within 100 acres or so. Like it’s a pretty healthy population.
Friends of Whitetail Rendezvous podcast host Bruce Hutcheon and Be a lion Outdoors, CJ (Christopher James) had a digital campfire where they discuss the reason Why they Hunt. The discussion took many twists and turns throughout the evening and by the time the embers were glowing they all reached common ground. We hunt because we […]
Friends of Whitetail Rendezvous podcast host Bruce Hutcheon and Be a lion Outdoors, CJ (Christopher James) had a digital campfire where they discuss the reason Why they Hunt. The discussion took many twists and turns throughout the evening and by the time the embers were glowing they all reached common ground. We hunt because we love the challange, the journey to far reaches of the earth, the relationships forged, the life lessons learned and the enjoyment of organic meat.
Deer Hunting – HutchhasaLittleHope – Casey & Hope Hutchinson. Just a great time in our lives to start sharing our pursuit of happiness out in the field! Come follow us and our crazy adventures and other shenanigans!https://www.facebook.com/pg/Hutchhasalittlehope/about/?ref=page_internal Hope is a women whose heart exceeds the all outdoors. Casey is the wildfire fighter who loves Hope. Together they hunt the Midwest and the Rockies. They bring folks together to all reach common ground. Special appearance by Whitetail Rendezvous host Bruce Hutcheon on the condition of hunting today in America.
Hey, folks, this is the last segment of the “Whitetail Rendezvous” spring series on land management and food plots. And I crisscrossed the world, I’ve got some friends down in the south, Atlanta at Legacy. I’ve got friends out in Nebraska at Reck Agri. And I’ve got friends in Madison, Wisconsin with Grandpa Ray Outdoors and John O’Brion. And John’s gonna wrap up this whole series and, you know, it’s gonna be fun to see where the thing goes. But having said that, Grandpa Ray sets expectations for being a 365 food plotter. John, what the heck does that mean? John: Well, the last time I checked, deer eat every day and if your goal is to try to increase the deer numbers on your property, pull them throughout the whole year, there’s got to be food there. There’s got be bedding there. There’s got to be water. It seems pretty simple but yet the wildlife industry in the whole focuses on about, oh, maybe one or two seasons a year. Usually the focus is from when opening day of hunting season starts to when it closes and, again, that’s bad science. That is not where your brain should be wired and we would want to do our best, as a goal, to have something there every day. The short-term and long-term success. Bruce: So deer need, you know, well just January, February, March the bucks have been through the rut. Those are either bred or…not bred, so bucks are tired and does throw a lot of food to a growing, you know, fawn. So what do we need during those months to make sure bucks and doe are getting the right nutrition? John: Yeah, no matter if we’re in north of Madison, Wisconsin, Tallahassee, Florida, or Oak Way out in Colorado, you know, there’s Mother Nature that comes into play in the northern climates where you get cruel at times with the 2 feet of snow, 20 below zero. You know, you even have higher [inaudible 00:02:28] challenges there. So, you know, my focus is, you know, when hunting season is done do you have sources of supplemental stock piles to forage. Which in the industry, I mean, you know so many people are familiar with turnips but are they familiar with other species of forages like rutabaga, maybe sugar beets, fodder beets, weeds, things like that. Things like grain store gums. Thinks like millets can also, which aren’t as desirable during the fall season, all of a sudden, you know, when a deer is having a hard time walking through that deep snow and wants to eat whatever is the easiest at that point in time. You know, there’s certain things that we can focus on to give that energy that’s really needed in those really stressful conditions. And, again, so many people think, you know, if their goal is to grow healthy, big deer they focus on the fall. Well, when that buck has dropped its antlers and it could be January, February in many areas or even before then. Backing up, you mentioned, you know, when the ruts done. Guess what? That buck’s reserves are tapped out. You know, he’s drained and then the big thing is you want to keep it maintained or replenish it. The main goal I throw at people is we do not want a deer, no matter buck or doe or fawn from the previous fawn [inaudible 00:03:58] our goal should be to reduce the amount of weight they lose throughout the winter. Next to impossible no matter where you live to put on weight. If you don’t lose as much weight and body condition, guess what’s gonna happen? They’re gonna…the term’s called compensatory gain. So instead of having to replenish those bones, you know, with the calciums and the proteins and our nutrients, they’re able to…if you don’t have to worry about…if the deer doesn’t have to replenish itself, guess what’s gonna happen with those added nutrients that are out there? Whether it be from browse or supplemental sources, going towards antler development.
Hey, folks, this is the last segment of the "Whitetail Rendezvous" spring series on land management and food plots. And I crisscrossed the world, I've got some friends down in the south, Atlanta at Legacy. I've got friends out in Nebraska at Reck Agri. And I've got friends in Madison, Wisconsin with Grandpa Ray Outdoors […]
Well there’s a pro and a con with the industry. The pro is is you get more selection to choose from. There’s more species that are being introduced. The con is everybody and their brother sees a window of opportunity. I mean that’s the American way. It’s capitalism. You know, they see a quick buck. They’re like, “You know what? I could make a quick buck. I’ll put a fancy bag together, put a deer on it, maybe get a celebrity endorsement, and I’m gonna sell it and make some money.” Sounds great, right? And, again, my thing is is I see so many poorly formulated products. So many products on the market that are not nutritionally sound. They’re not actually balanced mixes. Some mixes contain a bunch of cheap seeds that deer do not prefer to eat. Big price point, big profit margin. So, again, what’s happened is the industry as a whole, so many people are confused. Some people don’t even know what to buy. Everybody’s got the best seed. Everybody’s got a great story but marketing 101, the guy that helped was involved with one of the most famous marketing campaigns in the United States for beer manufacture. [inaudible 00:04:58] You know, I’m like, “Well what do you appeal to the average consumer?” In the wildlife industry, you know, it’s get a celebrity endorsement. Right? But it’s because why? Why plant that mix? How does it work? And those are the things that people do not know because very few people in the industry are willing to educate and that’s why I came into the industry using my background to try to educate people. To have them make a sound long-term, not short-term, sound long-term investment with their wildlife management program. Bruce: Wildlife management, land management and we’ve got six, we’re going on nine hours of this discussion. Why? Because everybody thinks they know everything about it and, yeah, that’s tongue in cheek but sometimes we’re our own worst enemies because we’re sitting at the bar, we’re playing Euchre, darts, pool and somebody says, “Well I’ve got blah blah blah, and look at the dear I killed last year.” And neither of them know what the heck they’ve got. And so education, education, education as we go forward at “Whitetail Rendezvous.” You know, we’ve got to educate people and by educating people, then you get to say, “Hey, you know, you ought to listen to this series from ‘Whitetail Rendezvous’ and we’ll go from there.” You know and so the, you know, when you buy a bag of seeds, here’s what I understand from especially big box stores. On the tag it says inert matter and, you know, really 25 pounds of seed, living, breathing, germinating seed, you know, 90% seed, you really don’t know what you have because a lot of that, 25%, 30% of that weight of that bag is nothing but that inert matter. Could be coating. Could be, you know, weed seed. You just don’t know. So how’s a guy really know…guy or gal really know what the heck they’re buying? John: And that’s one of my little pet peeves, one of those little things that I try to educate by going on social media and various sites. That’s the pro and con of dealing with Facebook and other online hunting related forum areas. I can use my education and show pictures, observations, teaching tools on how to calculate pure live seed, things like that, but then the downside is you get people that just post the picture of a really nice deer, like you mentioned. “I used this seed mix. That’s all you’ve got to do in your property.” Not so simple. Every property is unique. Your properties that you’re on, Bruce, are unique. Bradbury’s Farm property is unique. We’ve got another…your piece of land that’s on the opposite side of…my piece of land on the opposite side of the road from my mom and dad’s house. Same farm, right? Unique. Look,
Bruce: Hey, folks, welcome back to Whitetail Rendezvous, the special edition with Rackology. We're heading up to Eric and Jason's shop up there in Loup City, Nebraska and this is the final segment of food plots. And we're going to talk about planting 365, and that kind of encompasses everything we talked about with these […]
Bruce: Hey, folks, welcome back to Whitetail Rendezvous, the special edition with Rackology. We’re heading up to Eric and Jason’s shop up there in Loup City, Nebraska and this is the final segment of food plots. And we’re going to talk about planting 365, and that kind of encompasses everything we talked about with these guys this week. And, you know, we started off with the land management and looking at the land, getting hard eyes on it, you know, fresh set of glasses, however you want to call it, and then figuring out where we’re going to do things. And then we talked about the food plots and seed, what they are, what they’re not, and what they can’t do now. You know, we’re going to wrap it all up into a 365-day planting and growing session, if you will. So, guys, let’s bring forth some knowledge and share. And in the break we just had we just talked about does are stressed. And I threw in my two cents. You know, the doe is bred in November, November 10th, she goes through December, January, February, March. Then she’s, you know, sometime in the springtime she’s going to, you know, have the fawn. And the better you can help them carry that fawn, the better deer herd you have. And that’s what this is all about, is helping deer become healthy deer, liking your place to live on, and living there 365. So, guys, take it away. Eric: Right. Well, you hit it right on the head. I mean the first key in planting a year-round program, whether it be feeding or food plots, when we talked about the land management, we kind of go year over year. We don’t just do this year and we’re done and we’ll see you next year and we’ll just start a new game plan. Knowing the life cycle of what you’re hunting or what you want out there is very important. I mean Jason has taught me so much being, I mean, with his knowledge of not only biology but and specific with deer herd development and deer herd health. I’ve learned, I mean, by just soaking in like a sponge next to him hearing him talk to people and just asking questions. And knowing…of anybody, knowing…and he knows really well that life cycle of a doe, the life cycle of a buck, and where you’re going to be able to take the stress off of those animals. And like we were talking before, if there’s more of a visual key to understand and see, you know, the stresses that these wild animals go through on a given year. Because every year is not the same, on a dry year versus a wet year versus a cold winter year where you’ve got 20 snowfalls and 40 inches of snow. Those deer are out there, they don’t get to go inside and relax and refresh and regroup for the next day like we do. But knowing that life cycle of the animal is huge when it comes to planting 365 year-round stuff. And, you know, a lot of people will see deer out there and not know how much stress that they’ve got on them and they might just say, “Oh, they’re eating out there, look at all of them out there. They’re just walking around and enjoying themselves and they’re fine. You know, I don’t need to do anything.” Well, looking at trail camera pictures from closer than 50 to 100 yards you’re going to start picking up, like Jason just showed me, some things to key in on on, “Okay, is that doe, you know, is she”… I mean she’s got… You know, what we don’t know about the deer, I mean there’s a lot of times they have twins and triplets and that’s a lot of stress and vitamin and mineral and protein that that doe has got to do to get to that fawn, whether it be a fawn that’s a doe or a fawn that’s a buck. And if you want them bucks to develop and to be their genetic potential, they need to hit the ground running and they need to be efficient. So a lot of times with food plots, the ones you have on your land and water,
https://www.rackology.org/ Bruce: …Rackology, Eric Fitzgerald and Jason Obermiller, and your host Bruce Hutcheon with Whitetail Rendezvous. We joined up and we’re sharing some ideas about, you know, land management and food plots. And why are we doing this? Because there’s a lot of misinformation out there, there’s a lot of advertising out there, there’s a lot of promotion out there, there’s a lot of sponsors out there, people who are being sponsored by XYZ, you know, company. And we go, “Wow, I’m going to buy some of that.” Well, you have no earthly idea why you’re buying it except that there’s a green field behind the person, you know, shooting this wonderful [Inaudible 00:00:40] saying, “I use X.” That’s marketing, I get it. But when you start drilling down into it, you know, what are food plots, what aren’t they, you know, food plots start with, you know, with seed. Some sort of seed has to come out of the ground so the deer are going to eat it, and there’s a lot of prep work that goes into that. So, guys, let’s jump into it. We get about a half an hour to share with our listeners what food plots are and what they’re not. Eric: All right. Well, I guess, looking at food plots, they are, as the name implies, they’re either…they’re a plot that you plant that bring wildlife there for mainly two reasons, food and cover. And some animals will use the same food plot for food that others use for cover. And what you’re trying to do is centralize the wildlife on your property and also provide something that maybe not…wasn’t there to either increase your odds at, you know, harvesting a buck or a doe, or it might be a turkey or pheasants, you know, hunting pheasants. So, and it’s also there if you’re just enjoying wildlife and want to give back a little bit. Because, as we all know, habitat in the United States has shrunk immensely for wildlife, whether it be urban development or what might be happening. But, so any time…a little goes a long way when it comes to wildlife, habitat, and food plots. And so that’s, I guess in my opinion, what they are in a nutshell. They’re nutrition, they’re cover, and they’re sanctuary for wildlife. Jason: Well, you can look at food plots also from a standpoint of, you know, if you go out into nature, into the trees, you know, wherever you’re hunting at, it may be grassland area, you know, like out in Western Nebraska, and you look at the quality of forage that’s available. You know, I’m not knocking Mother Nature, you know, nature, per se. But the forage quality out there, the amount of nutrients that’s naturally available in nature just doesn’t compare to what you can bring to them in a food plot. You know, if a person can only afford to do just a little for your deer and you had to decide whether, “Do I put out some feed or do I put out a food plot?,” and the answer there is the food plot is where you’re going to get the most bang for your buck, no pun intended. Because you’ve got a growing time from spring that they can start eating through the fall months and into the winter months even on some of the…you know, the perennials, like we have. Now, you know, is feeding, you know, mineral and feeds like that, is that beneficial? Of course. I mean, you know, as I stated, you know, a few months ago in a podcast we did with you, I mean February, March, and April, a lot of people don’t realize this, but February, March, and April are, like, huge months for fawn and antler growth. The bucks are storing the minerals on their skeleton that they’re going to use to grow the antlers in the summer months. And those months are when there’s hardly any food available over the winter months. And when you’ve got…you know, let’s say you can put out a sizable food plot, even if you can’t afford to, you know,
https://www.rackology.org/ Bruce: ...Rackology, Eric Fitzgerald and Jason Obermiller, and your host Bruce Hutcheon with Whitetail Rendezvous. We joined up and we're sharing some ideas about, you know, land management and food plots. And why are we doing this? Because there's a lot of misinformation out there, there's a lot of advertising out there, there's a […]
Welcome to a special edition of "Whitetail Rendezvous," and we're traveling up to Loup City, Nebraska. Now, I've got a couple friends up there that own Rackology. If you don't know what Rackology is, well, if it's a double helix, it's a double helix chromosome...is that true, Jason? https://www.rackology.org/ I'm talking to Jason Obermiller and […]
Welcome to a special edition of “Whitetail Rendezvous,” and we’re traveling up to Loup City, Nebraska. Now, I’ve got a couple friends up there that own Rackology. If you don’t know what Rackology is, well, if it’s a double helix, it’s a double helix chromosome…is that true, Jason? https://www.rackology.org/ I’m talking to Jason Obermiller and Eric Fitzgerald. Eric’s a agronomist, been in the business a long time, and then Jason teaches school, and they got together a few years back and created some products, and now their business is growing. And I’ve asked them to be part of the “Whitetail Rendezvous” Spring Series, talking about land management. “Whitetail Rendezvous” Spring Series, talking about land management. Well, appreciate you having us on here, Bruce. It’s great to visit with you again and see a familiar face, again, here. We…I guess, when it comes to land management, I think that a lot of people don’t understand how important it is, especially if you own or lease, or even get the rights to hunt a piece of property, and how important land management is to your success if you’re hunting. And it doesn’t matter if it’s whitetail deer, pheasants, turkeys, or if you just want to have an abundance of wildlife out there, land management is crucial. This day and age we’re seeing a lot more land being developed, especially in our neck of the woods, and has taken some of the habitat out. And so, that leaves less areas for wildlife to go and to use as their home range, and so something as simple as a food plot, or setting up, you know, a feeding station in the off-season could really increase your odds of harvesting the buck that you want to harvest, or just going out with your family and seeing wildlife, land management is crucial, and it could be something simple. And that’s what we’re trying to educate at Rackology, is how simple something could be, do it yourself, and, I guess, produce the results that you’re looking for. And that’s what we’re trying to educate at Rackology, is how simple something could be, do it yourself, and, I guess, produce the results that you’re looking for. Jason: Yeah. And I know, like, in my classroom I get…you know, growing up here in a rural area, I got a whole bunch of kids that are farm kids, and, you know, we’ve got a lot of type [SP] places in this area where they plant right up to the fence rows, and you get asked all the time, “How come we don’t see any pheasants? You know, where’s the wildlife?” And, you know, a big thing that I point out, and I do this carefully, of course, is, you know, when you plant up to the fence rows, and it’s all a monoculture, like corn, once the season is over and it’s been combined, and it’s gone, there’s really no habitat left for those deer or anything to really hide in. Not only that, if you have a little strip of grass along the fence, what occurs is called the edge effect. So if you do have any birds or game that’s using that grass for cover, coyotes and predators, you know, they’ve got a very narrow area to hide in, and so it prevents them from, you know, having any type of hiding, any type of escape. And so, you know, when we get into land management, talking in one of my Wildlife classes, we discuss this, “How can we manage our land for wildlife, but, at the same time, you know, accommodate what brings a lot of money into this community, that’s agriculture?” And they can both work very well together, so long as both sides are willing, you know, to do a little give-and-take. And there’s people that, you know, that land management doesn’t necessarily mean shooting 160 or 180-inch deer. Receive a …
Welcome for the final segment of Land Management: Land & Legacy presented by Whitetail Rendezvous, and I’m here with one of the owners, Matt Dye. He and Adam Keith own Land & Legacy. And we’re gonna talk about, “The Plan,” the first part, first segment. If you haven’t listened to it, listen to it at whitetailrendezvous.com, and the second part with “Boots on the Ground.” Listen to that. Now we’re gonna wrap it up with Matt, “The Plan.” So, you’ve done all this work, you’ve been on the ground, now what happens? Matt: This is where we get down to the nitty-gritty, Bruce. This is where really our recommendations become written form. And, as we’ve talked in the past, Bruce, when we got started with Land & Legacy, we wanted something, our product, to live on and influence people. We want to share information that’s going to change people’s, honestly, lives, and change properties because there’s such a draw to land and to people. People want to be a part of it. It’s so natural, it’s so raw, so real. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link
Welcome for the final segment of Land Management: Land & Legacy presented by Whitetail Rendezvous, and I'm here with one of the owners, Matt Dye. He and Adam Keith own Land & Legacy. And we're gonna talk about, "The Plan," the first part, first segment. If you haven't listened to it, listen to it at […]
Matt Dye of Land & Legacy …https://www.landandlegacy.tv/ And I’m on with Matt Dye this morning, he’s with Land & Legacy. He and Adam Keith started Land & Legacy a while back and they’re just doing gangbusters. And they do land management, but it’s a heck of a lot more than that. So we just got together and said, “Let’s do a little series this spring,” and that’s what we’re doing. And today is Part 1 and this is land management, Part 2 is going to come up later on and we’re going to talk about food plots with Land & Legacy. But today we’re going to break it down in three parts. We’re going to break it down into, one, why land management. Two, boots on the ground. And, three, the plan. And it will be a 30-minute segment, so I’m going to break them up into three different segments for your listening to make it easier so you don’t have to listen to the whole thing straight through and wonder, “Oh, I want to get back to that place.” So we’re going to make it easy. A native of Virginia, Matt Dye got his start in the outdoors at a very young age. His family’s farming and hunting background has guided him through his education and career dedicated to land and wildlife management. Matt’s goal is to educate others in land conservation while reaching folks through the enjoyment of God’s Creation. Land (n): ground or soil of a specified situation, nature, or quality ”Harmony with land is like harmony with a friend; you cannot cherish his right hand and chop off his left.” – Aldo Leopold Legacy (n): something received from an ancestor or predecessor or from the past. “Jesus shows us how to leave a legacy, a legacy of glory, His glory, not ours. If, by His grace, we become humble, dependent, proven, focused, persevering, obedient, and faithful men and women who focus our lives on making the Father known to those He gives to us, we will leave a legacy of glory. Not our glory, but His, the glory He wants to give to the Father through us.” What greater legacy could we leave? “The legacy we leave is the life we lead, the life of Christ in us and through us passed on to others in the power of the Holy Spirit.” (www.bible.org/article/leaving-legacy-glory) Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link. Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Your Guns Guns Guns Ace Luciano…”And I have to tell you, Bruce, I, right now today, am as concerned as I have ever been. I’m gonna read you some headlines. This is today’s headline. I’m very dialed in on the news, Second Amendment news and such right. So, one in five Americans want the Second Amendment to be repealed. Retired Justice Stevens argues for repeal of Second Amendment. Supporting both Second Amendment rights and “sensible gun control,” gun rights advocate rallies part of the liberal plan to weaken the Second Amendment. Can the Second Amendment be changed? A former Supreme Court Justice, you know, weighs in. The courts say, “The Parkland kid’s agenda is largely compatible with the Second Amendment.” Well, I have to tell you that headlines like that could scare every single person that hunts deer with a gun. It should scare every person that owns a gun, whether that’s for hunting, or recreational shooting, or personal protection, or anything, this is, right now today, one of the biggest assault we have ever seen on the Second Amendment. And they are throwing children up as the head of the attack on the Second Amendment. And, Bruce, I have to tell you, I can’t help but look back in history, and there was another attack on firearms rights many, many years ago, in the ’40s, that also involved a lot of children. And you might recognize the name Adolf Hitler, right?” Ace’s transcription will be available at a later date at http://www.aceluciano.com/ or leave a comment here with your email address. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Petersen’s Bowhunting Magazine with editor Christian Berg… From covering the hunting and fishing scene in the Leigh Valley, to covering the world of archery for bowhunters across the nation, Christian Berg’s outdoors career has really taken flight over the past decade. The outdoors writer for The Morning Call from 2002-’08, Berg is now the editor for Petersen’s Bowhunting magazine — a position that takes him near and far while covering the sport of archery hunting for bow and arrow enthusiasts from coast to coast. “Whitetail hunting is the heart and soul of my bowhunting,” “Whitetail hunting is the heart and soul of my bowhunting,” Berg says. “Whitetails are the animal that sparked my passion for bowhunting and they’re still my favorite thing to hunt. [It has been a thrill] just having a chance to hunt whitetails all across America; to see the different kinds of habitat they inhabit, all the way from Florida to the Pacific Northwest, and of course, the classic Midwestern rut hunts. “I’ve [even] been up to the bow zone outside of Edmonton, Alberta to hunt giant whitetails up there. It is cold, cold, cold up there in late November — like minus 20, minus 30. I can’t even tell you it’s a lot of fun to wait on stand in those conditions, but when you see a giant buck up there it is really amazing.” http://www.bowhuntingmag.com/ Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Chad Bales was very blessed he was not hurt worse….you might not be. Back in 2016 I had a treestand accident that really opened my eyes on tree stand safety and has made me want to strive to help teach others more about it! Even with my accident in 2016 I still managed to get out and put two nice bucks on the ground for the year! My 2017 however was a tougher season… only seeing a few small bucks and a few nice bucks but never got a shot.. You owe it to yourself, your family, your friends, your wife, your kids, your buds and everyone that yuor life touches to be safe, be connected and never assume but check your gear. I strive to be the best bowhunter I can, I strive to be the best bowhunter I can, and my outlook is the trophy is in the eye of the bowholder. To me a big wise old doe is just as much of a trophy as a big buck! Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Jordan Howell All 3 have unique stories. I truly believe I was successful because of the amount of time I invested into harvesting each deer…not during the actual hunt, but the weeks and months before. i actually hunted fewer days in 2017 than I ever have since I started hunting. 2 of the 3 bucks I killed the first-time in. The other took 10 days, but 7 of those were spent hunting other areas waiting for the right conditions. I am a fanatical trail camera user. they are a huge part of my success. That has led to me now working for Radix Trail Cameras. I also spend lots of time studying weather data and comparing it to trail camera photos. I am also a hardcore shed hunter. I have picked up over 70 so far in 2018. I don’t hunt large acreage, just small, many times marginal farms (fence-rows, cattle pastures, etc), I just get creative and work harder than anyone I know. 2 of the 3 bucks I killed the first-time in I live and breathe the deer that I hunt. I do not own any land. I hunt on permission, leased, and some public land. To date, I have taken 20 pope and young class or better whitetails. I took 3 bucks in 2017, scoring 165, 158, and 150 inches. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Trophy Bucks of Iowa featuring Brandon Dahms… I have also had the pleasure of being an active partner in Trophy Bucks of Iowa over the last few years and have really watched it grow from a small up and coming Facebook page into a well-known brand. The entire idea of TBI is that a trophy isn’t about the inches of antler, but what that harvest means to the hunter. Trophy Bucks of Iowa … https://www.facebook.com/trophybucksofiowa/ And it has been amazing to see so many first time hunters, from youth to middle aged adults, just from getting excited about what they see on our page. We currently are growing on Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat and it has been a humbling experience to be a part of. My personal Instagram is @bdahms77 Trophy bucks of Iowa IG – @iowatrophybucks Trophy bucks of Iowa Snapchat – trophybucksofia Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Mission Outside….At 27, another buddy, Will Newton, who had begged me for 2 years to go to his “honey hole,” convinced me to get up early to hunt my first deer. During that life changing morning, I shot and cleaned my first deer, and the seed Brandon planted began to bloom. https://missionoutside.com/ Little did I know at the time, Will would pass away the following month. While he may be gone, his passion for hunting was passed on to me the day of November 10th. He changed the course of my life so much so, that my wife and I decided to use William for part of our son’s name. Since that time, I’ve spent most free moments and some not so free moments (as my wife can attest to) either in the woods or thinking about being in them. Over the past few years, I’ve often thought of how I could give back to the outdoors, impact more lives, and pass on this unbelievable lifestyle and friendships made in the outdoors to others. When we had our daughter, my wife and I have always made it a priority to get her outside as much as possible. Watching her enjoy the outdoors, nature, and all the critters running around over the past 2 years has really been the trigger that connected the dots for me on what do next. From those thoughts and experiences, Mission Outside was born. Mission Outside is an organization focused on getting kids outside, through camps that introduce them to hunting, fishing, and conservation. We are particularly focused on kids who would not otherwise be introduced to this lifestyle. We will fund these camps by 4 ways – 1. Selling Products with a Purpose (our lifestyle clothing brand) 2. Outdoor Sponsors & Partners 3. Donations 4. My wife and I Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Backwoodslife Since 2004, Michael Lee and Kevin Knighton have been blessed enough to bring outdoor television into the homes of loyal viewers each week. The guys work hard to bring their life, personalities, and experiences to the viewers that show what the average person goes through each year trying to fill tags and their freezers. The Backwoods Life® shows even more of an inside look into who Michael and Kevin are as well as the rest of the Backwoods Life® Crew on a more personal level all while showing the great hunts they journey into each year. there’s never a dull moment in the Backwoods! After now over 12 years on the air, the guys have grown to new levels and are proud to say they are average folks living a dream. Kevin Knighton and Michael Lee travel all over the country livin’ the Backwoods Life. From coast to coast hunting anything they can get a tag for there’s never a dull moment in the Backwoods! Watch each week July – December on Sportsman Channel (US) and Wild TV (Canada). Also visit Backwoods Life online at: Website: www.BackwoodsLife.com YouTube: www.YouTube.com/TheBackwoodsLife Instagram: www.Instagram.com/BackwoodsLifeTV Twitter: www.Twitter.com/BackwoodsLife Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Les Welch. He grew up chasing small game and whitetails in the big woods of Northern Wisconsin. Having the ability to roam for thousands of acres hunting, scouting, and exploring without seeing people and civilization ingrained the public land DIY mentality deep within. After harvesting dozens of whitetails with archery equipment, including many P&Y, and countless more with rifle and muzzleloader the desire to explore the mountains had become too much to overcome. In 2006, he started researching antelope. That led to the harvest of 6 DIY, public land antelope in 2007 between him and his father. public land DIY mentality That trip was the beginning of the obsession/addiction. Since that trip he has traveled West of the Mississippi on 8 more hunts, all 100% DIY public land…. with 100% success rates, harvesting multiple elk, mule deer, and antelope. Coming home to the flatlands after that first hunt back in ’07 he realized the need to be in shape if success was going to continue. He dropped 60# and 20% body fat in a few months. He has since become a certified Personal Trainer and Fitness Nutrition Coach. Understanding what the body needs to maximize performance whether he is running a race, competing in triathlons, or preparing for 15-20-day backpack backcountry hunts help insure he achieves full potential. a certified Personal Trainer and Fitness Nutrition Coach Year around gym time, training, scouting, and spending time in the outdoors with family maintain that healthy lifestyle to keep “mountain” ready! He is on pro-staff for Sitka Gear, HECS, and ElkNut Outdoor Productions. When he is not chasing down something with stick and string, rifle, or muzzleloader he can be found spending time hunting, fishing, camping, or something of the like with his family. You will also see him at many of the RMEF events as he is Chapter chair in Wisconsin. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Jason Dyck otherwise known as “The Extreme Outdoor Guide” has been a big game hunting guide and outfitter for the past 28 years. He eats, sleeps and works for hunting…Everything from backpack sheep and goats to prairie whitetail and mule deer to horseback grizzly and moose hunts and everything in between. Guiding has not been his only career in the outdoor world. Jason is also an outfitter, taxidermist, hunting consultant and outdoor writer. He’s hunted from Kyrgyzstan and Africa to New Zealand and all over north America. As you can see his passion is in the outdoors and have enjoyed helping thousands of clients and friends fore fill their dream hunts. Hunt when you can, where you can and with you can… Jason Dyck Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Brandon Pressley…I’m 34 years young born and raised in Harrisburg, PA. Have been hunting since the age of 12 but have been in the woods for as long as I can remember. I started bowhunting when I was 20. That’s what really got me hooked and I’ve been passionate since then. I taught myself how to bowhunt by reading as many bowhunting books and watching as many bowhunting videos as possible. My main interest is bowhunting public land mountain bucks. I also enjoy running trail cams and shooting my bow when I can. My latest gear purchase has been the new cuddelink cams more specifically the newest cuddelink cell cam. They are really going to be a game changer. Hunt hard…Brandon Pressley Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Clint Campbell host of the Truth from The stand Deer Hunting Podcast https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/truth-from-the-stand-deer-hunting-podcast/id1127162036?mt=2 http://truthfromthestand.com/author/ccambell/ Clint…is from Pennsylvania and avid bowhunter -Hunts a combination of public and private property for whitetail, and enjoys out-of-state DIY elk and whitetail hunts -This year was full of ups and downs. Success on a first sit in location, had my target deer in range on the first set of the season, was at full draw on a public land bull and mule deer in Montana and got humbled in southern Ohio in Nov. Truth from the stand Deer Hunting Covering all things whitetail, the Truth From The Stand deer hunting podcast is the place to get your deer hunting stories, strategies, tips and more. We’ll launch a new podcast twice a month exploring topics across the landscape of deer and deer hunting. This podcast is for deer hunting addicts, those who avidly live the whitetail lifestyle. So take your time and enjoy each episode. Be sure to subscribe to the podcast and take us with you across all your devices. Whether in the car or at work, we could all use a little more deer hunting in our lives! Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
If you follow us closely here at Affiliated Outdoors, https://theaffiliatedoutdoors.com/ you will likely hear us refer to the outdoor lifestyle quite a bit. It’s in our writing, our speaking, and even in our mission statement. We believe that hunting, fishing, and firearms go beyond sport. We believe that those sports are just pillars of the outdoor lifestyle. A true 365-day way of living. Something that we can engage in and live out from youth to old age, pass down from generation to generation, and use as a guide in our daily lives. The outdoor lifestyle is alive and well in America, and we wouldn’t have it any other way. As we move on and continuously evolve in this outdoor lifestyle, new areas of interest inevitably pop up. Needless to say, the outdoor lifestyle in 2018 is drastically different than it was in 1918, or even just ten years ago in 2008. While land and wildlife management are not new ideas by any stretch, they have evolved and become something of a new dream in the outdoor community. Now more than ever we have outdoorsmen and women with land and wildlife management aspirations. Hunters who hope to further immerse themselves in the outdoor lifestyle by connecting with the outdoors at a deeper level. So many public land hunters So many public land hunters who live the do-it-yourself lifestyle just dream of one day having access to private property so they can put their own touch on it. Many of you reach out to us and others on social media to share that dream. Some of our most popular posts here and on social media center upon land management or deer management. Modern outdoorsmen and women are in love with the idea of putting their own touch on a piece of land and making it better for the wildlife and recreation alike. More hunters than ever before are trading the camouflage for work boots as they mount their tractors to plant food plots, alter the landscape, and break a sweat in the name of better hunting and a more sustainable renewable resource. Quality Deer Management Association Thanks to incredible stewardship examples set by organizations like the Quality Deer Management Association, National Wild Turkey Federation, and outdoor television showing us how rewarding management can be, we now have a new age of outdoorsmen with a different dream. A dream of putting their hands on a piece of property and leaving a lasting legacy. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Josh Honeycutt…is the Realtree.com Associate Editor | Deer Hunting Editor https://www.realtree.com/deer-hunting I am an outdoor writer, photographer and videographer seeking to share with others what the outdoors has inspired within me. I work as the associate editor and deer hunting editor for Realtree.com. I also work as a freelance writer and have sold material to publications and websites such as: Field & Stream, Outdoor Life, North American Whitetail, Whitetail Journal, Bow and Arrow Hunting, Fur-Fish-Game, Game & Fish, Turkey Country, JAKES Country, Modern Pioneer, Fieldandstream.com, Outdoorlife.com, Bowhunting.com, and numerous others. My byline has appeared in more than 50 publications and websites in the last five years. I am a member of the: Professional Outdoor Media Association, Outdoor Writers Association of America, Southeastern Outdoor Press Association, Kentucky Outdoor Press Association and Tennessee Outdoor Writers Association. What y0u will find at Realtree.com/deer-hunting… Deer Hunting 24/7 Breaking news on giant bucks and the best deer hunting blog posts, articles, photo galleries and videos in the industry. Whether you’re a 20-year veteran of the whitetail woods or need to learn how to field dress your first buck, you’re welcomed here. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Kasey Thren says..Why Quality Deer Management? I fell into this profession because it was a calling to me. I love hunting deer and it has always been a staple in my life. This is a way to be around my serenity year-round. The education I’ve gathered and continue to accumulate is endless and I’m up for the challenge. Kasey Thren My goal is to meet your goals and expectations. What I have learned and worked hard for through blood sweat and tears is to know I will give you everything I have to make your hunting experience fun and memorable. Kasey Thren secrets from… http://www.completedeer.tv/ 1. Inventory your deer herd 2. Test your soil 3. Must have food, cover and water 4. Know your neighbors 5. make the deer travel where you want them to go 6. Minimize the number of permanent stands 7. Never stop learning 8. Have a 365 day food plot plan FUN is the number one objective. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
My name is Lindsay Persico. I live in Montana with my three little kiddos and my sweet husband. I stay at home and take care of managing the household and in my spare time I pursue my love of hunting and all aspects of outdoor life. Canning, processing game, hiking, shooting and camping are just some of the interests I find myself enjoying. I started this blog, Hunt Fiber, https://huntfiber.com/ https://www.facebook.com/huntfiber/ https://twitter.com/HuntFiber/ because I want to share my love and experiences with others and show the world that a regular girl can be an avid and successful hunter on public land. My stories have been shared on Camo is the New Black, Rack’D Up Outdoors, Citizen Sportsman, Backcountry Hunters and Anglers and The Montana Wilderness Association page. I have also written articles for The Outdoor Channel and am a content writer for Earned- the DIY Journal. I am honored to be Pro Staff for Rack’D Up Outdoors as well. My love of hunting began as a little girl as I watched my dad head out on hunting trips and later packed my own gear along and headed out with him. He taught me so much and really helped me develop my love for wildlife and the outdoors. HuntFiber Fitness was born from HuntFiber.com where the love of hunting and the outdoors is celebrated. This lifestyle is more fully enjoyed when the adventurer is fit and healthy. From this truth is where HuntFiber Fitness got its wings. As a lifelong seeker of fitness I chose to get my NASM Personal Training certification so that I could help bring more opportunities and outdoor experiences to life for those around me. My goal is to bring you farther into the woods and closer to the game. May your adventures always be long, exciting and fit. Sincerely, Lindsay Persico Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Starting at the age of 10 in 1973 after watching the movie Jeremiah Johnson, it was apparent that this was what I was designed to do. Trapping, fishing and hunting, the next 8 1/2 years were filled with them all until 1981 when my father died. He was my mentor in the outdoors as well as my best friend, that all got taken away and my passion for the outdoors died. Then in 2002 after numerous invitations by an individual to go deer hunting I decided to get back into the outdoors. One day was all it took the fire ignited and it quickly became a forrest fired, consuming my life once again. In 2004 I was diagnosed with Multiple Sclerosis. In 2007 it got very bad after turkey season. I underwent heavy IV steroid treatments which brought me back. So I decided then to start filming as a way to document my passion for the outdoors. One thing lead to another, God guiding me all the way to where I am at today. I enjoy sharing my experiences in the field with others thru my hunting show, Uncle Bucky’s Outdoor Adventures and also my website and Youtube channel. I also enjoy speaking to others at various outdoor dinners about my experiences in life, the outdoors and how God has worked thru those times. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EGKidlYRA2k Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
We are called to hunt says Bill Vanderheyden. https://www.ironwilloutfitters.com/our-story/ We watch the morning sky’s eastern light erase the nighttime stars. We earnestly listen for the deep bass of dead branches cracking on the forest floor. Our hearts accelerate and smile from the pungent odor of our nearby quarry. Our off-season is spent reminiscing about past hunts, refining our skills for next season, and anticipating the trophies to come. Our passion for becoming better hunters drove us to engineer the ideal broadhead; a premium broadhead as reliable as science allows. We chose to name our company Iron Will Outfitters because of Bill’s relentless quest for the ideal broadhead and because of the individual resolve bow hunters must possess to earn the opportunity for a shot. We believe that every hunt is a once-in-a-lifetime experience. When the time comes to complete the shot, make the most of the opportunity by choosing broadheads that are as reliable as science allows. At Iron Will Outfitters, we refuse to cut corners to save money. Our broadheads are designed and engineered using the highest quality premium materials available, so you can count on them at the moment of truth. Hunt well. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsBwBXtUjAzMy08TPR6WvmA Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Using remote cameras, hunters revisit the age-old debate about whether moon phase affects buck behavior By Tanner Edenfield https://www.outdoorlife.com/does-moon-phase-really-impact-deer-movement “So what does this mean for a hunter? Day and other Georgia hunters who subscribe to his theory plan their vacation days so they can hunt this three-day window, and they are prepared to sit all day. In most conditions, a hunter can expect a better-than-average chance at a big buck on these days. However, if cold weather occurs during the right window of time, the results can be absolutely deadly.” Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Wes Sherouse help start the company with a couple guys with a passion for the outdoors and has evolved into a year-round company with 4 products. 1. Top Secret Deer Scents —oxygen free from collection to bottle 2. Scent Defense 3. Bio shield— all-natural bug repellent 4. Fog zero— an all in one anti fog device for optics BioShield is a proprietary blend of all-natural ingredients and therefore 100% safe to use on skin and clothing. BioShield has a pleasant citrus smell unlike most insect repellents. BioShield is safe to use on infants, children, pets, horses, cows, any mammal effected by insects. Don Bell, inventor of Code Blue®* Deer Scents and the hunting industry’s foremost scent specialist, introduces his newest deer scents; Top Secret® and Red-Light District. Top Secret® is “Oxygen Free…from collection to bottle”. This means the urine is oxygen free sitting on the shelf of your favorite retailer. The urine is oxygen free and ready for the hunter to open the bottle and use. In addition to this patent pending revolutionary collection process, Don has introduced a patent pending Scent Saver System. This is a system you can take to the woods while hunting and allows you to remove oxygen. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Kevin Paulson is the Founder and CEO of HuntingLife.com. His passion for Hunting began at the age of 5 hunting alongside of his father. Kevin has followed his dreams through outfitting, conservation work, videography and hunting trips around the world. HuntingLife.com is a national news source for hunting and conservation news, product reviews and our Pro Staff blog. https://huntinglife.com/ Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Nick Taylor owner of Elite Outfitters is a big game hunting outfitter in the state of Utah. We hunt almost every animal available to hunt in Utah. We specialize in Elk, deer, Mtn Lion, and bear. We started Elite Outfitters about a year ago. We have found out how difficult it can be starting an outfitting business from the ground up. Prior to this, I was a full time Police Officer. Me and my wife have also been working with the state of Utah on our next exciting project, a Guide and Outfitter School. This School is exciting for us due to it being the first and only in the state of Utah. Next to my family and god, hunting is the most important thing in my life. I love hunting with friends and family and everything that it stands for. I love hunting Whitetails all though I am not very good at it. I took my 9 year old whitetail hunting in Kansas for his first ever hunt. We were joined by his grandfather and had the best time. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Brandon Waddell says It’s all about your attitude. A positive, enlightening and informative podcast of amazing adventures from men and women who live in the spirit of the wilderness attitude! Hosted by Brandon Waddell, who has re-introduced himself and his children to wildlife, hunting and respect for the outdoors. In rediscovering his passion for life, health, and the wilderness, he has felt compelled to share his story and other stories in hopes of inspiring people. After 8 years of being a Scout, earning a variety of merit badges, and very nearly becoming an Eagle Scout, I discovered sex, drugs and rock & roll. The independence of becoming a teenager, getting my driver’s license, discovering girls and partying proved to be a huge distraction that would lead me down a dark path. After a short jail sentence, and the very real possibility of a prison term looming, I realized it was time to make some significant changes in my life. During this time, I was also reunited with my high school sweetheart, Callie, and we eventually married. In rediscovering my passion for life, my health, and the wilderness, I feel compelled to share my story, in hopes of helping others whose lives have followed a similar path. Producing this podcast, Wilderness Attitude, allows me to not only share my story, but the stories of others that may be the inspiration someone needs to re-engage, or redirect their lives! Publishers Note: Brandon is a positive force not only in the Out of Doors but in the lives of others. Reach out to him he will listen. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Tyler Preszler hunts big mulies above treeline https://www.instagram.com/tyler_preszler/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHpfrs4_07_O4pD6fwf2r8Q Raised in Southwestern Colorado, Tyler’s passion for the outdoors began at a young age. His youth was filled with summer camping trips and falls spent in the aspen grooves of the Colorado high country surrounded by bugling elk. While Tyler’s true passion is archery hunting, he is a self-proclaimed “opportunistic hunter” and never turns down a new hunt, free food, or a good beer. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Prym1 was created by a wildlife artist who understands depth, colors, shadows and highlights seen in nature, utilizing organic shapes found in predators’ coats to design a hybrid camouflage pattern that takes versatility to an entirely new level of concealment. Not only will Prym1 conceal your outline and movement in all terrains, but will effectively blend in creating a false depth perception from your prey allowing you to be closer than you appear and therefore a more effective predator! https://www.prym1camo.com/ After years of being a professional wildlife artist as well as an avid hunter, my job has been to study the specific patterns and textures of animals in nature and to mimic them in my art. Years of this study led me to develop Prym1 camo, which uses the colors and textures of nature with the organic patterns of wildlife to create a camo with the effectiveness of a predator. Stacie Walker The hunter does not always stay stationary. A hunter moves across diverse terrains, and through changing backgrounds of foliage, which is often influenced by light and shadows. Let’s face it trees and brush do not move, and they stand out as solid objects from a distance. Traditional “sticks and leaves” camouflage will often fail because they tend to become solid forms and “Black Out”, therefore revealing the shape of the hunter which eliminates the purpose of the stalk. Digital, static, and hard line shape blurred camo works good at distance for outline break up in various terrains, but is not effective as distance is closed as it lacks depth, highlights, and shadowing. Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Our Purpose and Mission Full Range Outdoors is a family owned and operated adventure into the outdoors. We have always enjoyed hunting and fishing and the outdoors has always been part of our life. My wife and I enjoy spending time together and sharing our passion with others. This is why we decided to start our own outdoor company in hopes of spreading our love of the outdoor lifestyle. FRO is dedicated to promoting hunting, fishing, products, and services through video, pictures, and stories. Our vision is to travel to a variety of locations and to bring our adventures back home to you. We will do this in a family setting and give all of the honor and glory to God. Our adventures will be documented on this site for all to read about and enjoy. It is our desire to bring you a product that you can enjoy and share with your friends and families for years to come. Our stories will be dedicated to all of those that have come before us that love this lifestyle and to those that share our passion and spirit. We look forward to where the future takes us and hope to make many new friends along the way. Come join us and share in our love of the outdoors! God Bless, Larry and Gamble May Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link Here’s a quick demo about goHUNT.com/insider https://youtu.be/YFNMzEUtcys
Muzzle Force One, LLC is a family-owned, God-fearing company based out of North Carolina. We have a passion for the outdoors and a love for all that God has created. All of our products are designed, manufactured and distributed in the USA. We think that’s important and plan to keep it that way. Go get em! MF1 IS A SIMPLE TOOL FOR YOUR FIREARM; WHICH WILL ALLOW YOU TO CONFIDENTLY CONTROL THE ACCURACY OF YOUR SHOT. https://www.muzzleforce.com/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9ePt9KvFHQ Receive a $50 goHUNT Gear Shop Gift Card by using code WR when joining Insider http://bit.ly/2s8dX5k . Whitetail Rendezvous podcast receives compensation each time a new member joins Insider via our link