When does the rut start in your area?

Brushpile

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Staff member
I take my deer to an Amish processing plant, and I killed a young buck early so I could test Elkie and have her recover her first deer. When I took the early season buck to be processed there was only one other deer at the processing plant. However, when the rut started and I brought in a deer, there were well over 100 deer being processed!

I have a favorite spot, and I stay out of it until the rut! If I go in early I risk spoiling the spot prior to the rut, when my odds of success peak.
 
I really wish I could figure out the rut here in SC. I have been living on this land for over 25 years and still cannot figure it out. It seems to be more related to weather than any dates. Hot weather seems to shut it down but get a couple good cold days and I want to be in the woods. We have seen spotted fawns as early as March 22 and as late as September 19.

In Pa, they have extended the archery season until the second week in November. I always hunt the last two weeks. Most years that's really the best time although the weather can push it back a week or two some years.
 
Where I hunt in north Florida, I've seen the rut start as early as New Year's. I know that is super late compared to most of y'all, but our season opens in late Oct and ends in late Feb.
 
Whitetail in Western Kansas and Eastern Colorado is usually like the second week of November, Mule deer in that area is about two weeks later, typically around Thanksgiving.
 
I've seen it happen the first of November and other years it will be 2 to 3 weeks later.

Also a lot of states time their rifle season to coincide with the rut which results in higher harvest.
 
We're really rockin and rolling around Jan 20-25 here in my neck of the woods
Same here. Just down the road from CNC. I shot my buck this past season on the first Sat in February, but I think that was the tail end of the rut. I wish I could have been in the woods a week or two before.
 
You want an older buck on my place - the second half of November is the time. It also is when our general firearms season is. More hunters in the woods to push deer around and extended range to close the distance. Every older buck I have EVER seen in my immediate area has been in the second half of November.

I think some of it comes down to habitat conditions,deer numbers and weather conditions as well......but year in year out - November is the time to hunt in my area.

I mention the habitat because if you don't have the habitat to hold mature bucks your timing will be different. I don't hold mature bucks and as such I have to wait for those deer to get more adventurous in their travels before I get a crack at one. That means hunting a feeding pattern early season is of little use to me. I have to wait until other "urges" drive them to broader patterns and travels.
 
It's a sliding scale here starting around Halloween through Thanksgiving. I'm in the woods as much as I can be those 4 weeks.
 
I haven't seen evidence of a real rut in years. A large part of that was because I went a few years without seeing a deer at all during the season. I suppose maybe November 1st-5th in my part of the world.
 
If you had the time and access to land, you could hunt the rut in Alabama from Thanksgiving to February. It's different throughout the state.
 
Same in SC. It will start in a few weeks on one property I hunt, and it will be a month later on a property I also hunt that is 5 miles away.

I've always thought that the best time to kill a big deer around here is the last week of October through the first week of November, but it honestly seems to change every year.
 
I know some folks consider the "whitetail rut" to be different things. To some it is when they start seeking and harassing which in our area usually begins the week of Halloween with a disclaimer that I killed a real nice buck many years ago in a hard flat out chase that lasted a good 20 minutes before I could get an arrow into him on October 8th. Then again last year I actually had a real great buck (I killed him a couple week's later) that I actually had tending a doe on October 17th all around me but no good bow shot offered even though I tried one through the brush that never even spooked him... I killed him while he was "seeking" on October 26th. The seeking phase is my favorite time to hunt and coincides with our Muzzleloader season. Most of my Best Bucks have been killed the last week in October while rambling from place to place scent checking does to see how close they are...

The Chase phase for us is right around the first week in November and runs until about the 10th or so. This is the time when the bucks are super amorous but the does are not quite receptive yet. It's a very frustrating time for the bucks as well as for me. Deer running through the woods willy nilly but can't quite get them to stand still within 30 yards for a good bow shot. See a lot, shoot a little but can be a great time if you know to hunt where the does hang out. Sometimes it all lines up perfectly and you kill the buck of a lifetime but sometimes this phase is your "story" phase where when you get back to camp you tell all the unbelievable stuff that you saw that morning while on stand but couldn't get a shot :(

I notice the actual "Rut" which is actual breeding begins right around Veterans day and can run for about 2 weeks. It's feast or famine at this time of year with you trying to figure out where all the deer went you saw the week before. Lots of times they are pretty well locked down in the "bedroom" and not moving much at all. In this time frame I have noticed once a doe has been bred and the buck leaves her is the best time to kill him in that time frame. November 16th is the day my trail cams for the past 5 or so years have gotten pictures of great "stranger" bucks. He will start looking for another estrous doe immediately and if you can catch him looking or happen to have that doe around you somewhere your odds are good. Our rifle season always begins the Saturday before Thanksgiving and we usually see some of this activity at that time. We have 2 full weeks of rifle and the first week can be "fair" and the second week the bucks may not even be looking at the does because they are no longer in estrous and are more focused on food.

The next great time to hunt, at least for me, is right around the week leading up to Christmas. Most guys are out of the woods because they think it is over and it is cold. We are in Archery season again but there is a rifle Doe only season that begins the 16th - 25th of December this year. Does that somehow missed getting bred in first estrous and doe fawns on first estrous come back "in". I have seen some crazy stuff that week while nobody else is in the woods. I watched 5 giant bucks chase a 50 lb doe fawn all around me one morning in a WMA while I sat there helplessly since I was carrying a compound and somewhere between my truck and the tree I lost my release. I didn't realize it until I got settled in the tree after putting my stand up. I just decided to sit there and enjoy the view until it got light and then I was going to get down and ease back the way I came looking for my release. The deer had a different plan and I shot every arrow I had off my bare fingers with a 30" axle to axle bow at them. Finger pinch was severe and no matter how low I held ever arrow sailed over the backs of these giant bucks until I finally almost aimed to hit 6' closer than the actual deer was and got a brisket shave with my last shot...It's a great time to hunt and if you have any of your target bucks left and any of your buck tags left shouldn't be idle time for you...This phase usually last about 2 weeks and in our area and even though I dislike it a lot of our bucks get killed at this time by folks who are rifle hunting for a doe and just can't pass the big buck they see and then justify it by saying they didn't get a buck during the general firearm season so they were "owed" a buck...

All in all anywhere between October 20th give or take a couple days up until the last week in December you can get into some sort of rut activity in our area of the country with some definitely better times to hunt within that frame but you can't Kill them if you aren't out there. Great time to have time off available or be retired ;)
 
I know some folks consider the "whitetail rut" to be different things. To some it is when they start seeking and harassing which in our area usually begins the week of Halloween with a disclaimer that I killed a real nice buck many years ago in a hard flat out chase that lasted a good 20 minutes before I could get an arrow into him on October 8th. Then again last year I actually had a real great buck (I killed him a couple week's later) that I actually had tending a doe on October 17th all around me but no good bow shot offered even though I tried one through the brush that never even spooked him... I killed him while he was "seeking" on October 26th. The seeking phase is my favorite time to hunt and coincides with our Muzzleloader season. Most of my Best Bucks have been killed the last week in October while rambling from place to place scent checking does to see how close they are...

The Chase phase for us is right around the first week in November and runs until about the 10th or so. This is the time when the bucks are super amorous but the does are not quite receptive yet. It's a very frustrating time for the bucks as well as for me. Deer running through the woods willy nilly but can't quite get them to stand still within 30 yards for a good bow shot. See a lot, shoot a little but can be a great time if you know to hunt where the does hang out. Sometimes it all lines up perfectly and you kill the buck of a lifetime but sometimes this phase is your "story" phase where when you get back to camp you tell all the unbelievable stuff that you saw that morning while on stand but couldn't get a shot :(

I notice the actual "Rut" which is actual breeding begins right around Veterans day and can run for about 2 weeks. It's feast or famine at this time of year with you trying to figure out where all the deer went you saw the week before. Lots of times they are pretty well locked down in the "bedroom" and not moving much at all. In this time frame I have noticed once a doe has been bred and the buck leaves her is the best time to kill him in that time frame. November 16th is the day my trail cams for the past 5 or so years have gotten pictures of great "stranger" bucks. He will start looking for another estrous doe immediately and if you can catch him looking or happen to have that doe around you somewhere your odds are good. Our rifle season always begins the Saturday before Thanksgiving and we usually see some of this activity at that time. We have 2 full weeks of rifle and the first week can be "fair" and the second week the bucks may not even be looking at the does because they are no longer in estrous and are more focused on food.

The next great time to hunt, at least for me, is right around the week leading up to Christmas. Most guys are out of the woods because they think it is over and it is cold. We are in Archery season again but there is a rifle Doe only season that begins the 16th - 25th of December this year. Does that somehow missed getting bred in first estrous and doe fawns on first estrous come back "in". I have seen some crazy stuff that week while nobody else is in the woods. I watched 5 giant bucks chase a 50 lb doe fawn all around me one morning in a WMA while I sat there helplessly since I was carrying a compound and somewhere between my truck and the tree I lost my release. I didn't realize it until I got settled in the tree after putting my stand up. I just decided to sit there and enjoy the view until it got light and then I was going to get down and ease back the way I came looking for my release. The deer had a different plan and I shot every arrow I had off my bare fingers with a 30" axle to axle bow at them. Finger pinch was severe and no matter how low I held ever arrow sailed over the backs of these giant bucks until I finally almost aimed to hit 6' closer than the actual deer was and got a brisket shave with my last shot...It's a great time to hunt and if you have any of your target bucks left and any of your buck tags left shouldn't be idle time for you...This phase usually last about 2 weeks and in our area and even though I dislike it a lot of our bucks get killed at this time by folks who are rifle hunting for a doe and just can't pass the big buck they see and then justify it by saying they didn't get a buck during the general firearm season so they were "owed" a buck...

All in all anywhere between October 20th give or take a couple days up until the last week in December you can get into some sort of rut activity in our area of the country with some definitely better times to hunt within that frame but you can't Kill them if you aren't out there. Great time to have time off available or be retired ;)

Your rutting activity and mine coincide, and dang that was a good read Okie... Thanks! I try to get a deer before the rut, so I'm available to track deer, when the real harvest gets under way. Bow season opens September 15 in MO, but I've found that hunting in September is not productive, and I don't even get many tracks for Elkie. The chasing phase brings in bucks I haven't seen all year, which I think come down out of the hills into the area around the river where deer raise their fawns.
 
I would say that the second week of November is when things really kick in for us. I really like the 10th-17th.... At least this is when I have had my luck the past few years.

Is it hunting season yet!!! I can't wait to get out there!
 
Ours here in Illinois pretty much mirror Okie's. Chase phase starting around Halloween with the peak of the chase around the second week of November. Peak breeding coinciding with our gun season the 17th thru 20th.
 
Here in Chesterfield County where I am, I always say the best chance to see a daytime buck is November 10th thru 15th. BUT, it has to be a Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday. If I hunt those dates on weekends, forget it. Every knuckle-head around is in the woods on weekends, totally screws things up.

Good luck this year fellas! I'm so danged ready for cool weather here.
 
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