Does anyone really know what, if anything, gets the deer to quit eating acorns? Does a freeze or moisture sour them? I've heard lots of people say one or both of those rots them. But if that were the case and they all rotted and died every winter there would never be acorns in the spring to grow more trees. I keep waiting for the deer to come back to the feeders as the corn piles up. I'm hoping if we get some weather event it will do it. But I suspect we will just have to wait until the deer pick them all up.
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Originally posted by Low Fence View PostI've heard you can actually hunt near acorns. And if you have thousands of them and no deer at feeder your odds are still better picking random tree.
OP here is some good reading on acorns and "the souring" or lack of......
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Originally posted by TXbowman View PostDoes anyone really know what, if anything, gets the deer to quit eating acorns? Does a freeze or moisture sour them? I've heard lots of people say one or both of those rots them. But if that were the case and they all rotted and died every winter there would never be acorns in the spring to grow more trees. I keep waiting for the deer to come back to the feeders as the corn piles up. I'm hoping if we get some weather event it will do it. But I suspect we will just have to wait until the deer pick them all up.
Never understood the "souring" of acorns. Acorns last awhile after hitting the ground. Another thing you can do is pick a tree to your advantage and fertilize it...that's what I do. We have lots of White and Red Oaks on our lease so I gotta do something to pull them to where Im atLast edited by lovemylegacy; 12-02-2017, 07:33 PM.
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My philosophy is if the deer want acorns, give them acorns. We rake them up from all the nice fertilized yards in town and store them in burlap bags. Then put a bucket of corn and a bucket of acorns in our feed pens (we don’t use feeders). The deer seem to prefer these to the native acorns were we hunt. We routinely have mature deer in our feed pens.
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Originally posted by TheBeaster View PostMy philosophy is if the deer want acorns, give them acorns. We rake them up from all the nice fertilized yards in town and store them in burlap bags. Then put a bucket of corn and a bucket of acorns in our feed pens (we don’t use feeders). The deer seem to prefer these to the native acorns were we hunt. We routinely have mature deer in our feed pens.
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Originally posted by lovemylegacy View PostOur lease is a little different than most SETx leases, as of right now we have lots of oaks.
Well in the Hill Country and some of West Texas we have thousands of oaks. Picking one magical tree in a 40 yard circle to set a tree stand when 20-30K trees are producing on 2400 acres is futile looking for that one deer.
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I have close to 25 acres of Post Oaks. I put a feeder, a rifle blind and a bow stand in the center of the 25 acres. It is the busiest feeder I have.
There are plenty of acorns hanging yet, a good rain or storm will knock them down. I would rather they all fall out at once as this will make real good hunting for a week or two.
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