California mule deer behavior

Bcoonce117

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 13, 2019
Messages
233
Hello, how long will you guys hunt high country for mule deer? (Our high country is considered like 7-10,000’) I am a believer if they aren’t chest deep in snow, then they will be there. Thoughts?
 
OP
Bcoonce117

Bcoonce117

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 13, 2019
Messages
233
Hello, how long will you guys hunt high country for mule deer? (Our high country is considered like 7-10,000’) I am a believer if they aren’t chest deep in snow, then they will be there. Thoughts?
I guess I should clarify that I mean how late/ cold and snowy will you let it get
 
OP
Bcoonce117

Bcoonce117

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 13, 2019
Messages
233
D6 zone to be more exact. For obvious reasons I cannot say the exact location lol
.
 
Joined
Mar 31, 2019
Messages
3,298
Location
Weiser, ID
The chances of enough snow in D6 to cause any deer to migrate are exceptionally small . It could happen, but counting on any appreciable snow during the general season would be the last thing on my radar .
 

Smithb9841

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 26, 2019
Messages
293
The chances of enough snow in D6 to cause any deer to migrate are exceptionally small . It could happen, but counting on any appreciable snow during the general season would be the last thing on my radar .

I would disagree with you on that one. It doesn’t happen every year but if we get a storm the last week of the season it definitely brings the deer down especially on the side of the zone Yosemite National Park is on.
 
Joined
Mar 31, 2019
Messages
3,298
Location
Weiser, ID
I would disagree with you on that one. It doesn’t happen every year but if we get a storm the last week of the season it definitely brings the deer down especially on the side of the zone Yosemite National Park is on.

How many times have you witnessed it ? I've seen it once over 15 years ago. A few deer walking in the snow is completely different than a migration. It's not uncommon for Yosemite Valley to have a decent amount of deer in December and January.
 
Joined
Sep 23, 2018
Messages
1,936
Location
Santa Rosa, CA
I’ll be up in D5 for this storm. I think it’ll take more than two days of snow flurries to push the deer down. Could be some good hunting.
 
Joined
May 13, 2015
Messages
3,707
Mule Deer do not migrate for a little snow, like Blacktail Deer do. Considering that we have been in a severe drought for the vast majority of the past 30 plus of minus years. As such, WeiserBucks is correct, and I have seen the data from collared deer to prove it.

What I have found though is that cold weather, rain, snow, no rain, no snow, but freezing weather during the season does cause the deer to move. Just not move to their wintering grounds. I have seen many more deer bedding in the transitions areas of summer bedding to fall/mild winter bedding areas. But I have never found them bedding on open southern slopes until after the season is over. The above 2 last sentences goes for bucks.

I have witnessed several migrations here in Ca. As WeiserBucks pointed out, it does not happen very often. But it has happened during the season. But it takes a very big storm that dumps a lot of snow to get them migrating. Is that likely to happen, unfortunately no. Can it happen, of course it can. Like many, I am hoping to have a valid tag and an open deer season when it does.
 

Smithb9841

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 26, 2019
Messages
293
How many times have you witnessed it ? I've seen it once over 15 years ago. A few deer walking in the snow is completely different than a migration. It's not uncommon for Yosemite Valley to have a decent amount of deer in December and January.

I usually have my deer tag filled most years that there has been enough But usually about every 4 years there will be an early storm that will push deer down. Will it push all the bucks down no. But there are a lot of deer and nice bucks that come down. I do agree with what bubble said the cold weather is really what pushes them down not so much rain storms but actual cold storms.
 

amassi

WKR
Joined
May 26, 2018
Messages
3,658
Hello, how long will you guys hunt high country for mule deer? (Our high country is considered like 7-10,000’) I am a believer if they aren’t chest deep in snow, then they will be there. Thoughts?
1- until they're gone down lower
2- when lower elevations have enough deer density and low hunter density that the odds of turning up a good buck without the effort of going up higher and competing with hunters- some drainages hunt real well with a couple guys tramping around above
3- lots of factors besides snow- alot of high elevation is summer range once it's out of water and forage bucks will move- also hunter pressure, pct hikers will all move bucks around.

Sent from my SM-G892A using Tapatalk
 
OP
Bcoonce117

Bcoonce117

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 13, 2019
Messages
233
My biggest problem every year is work. I usually work so much I don’t have time to go. And typically use most of my focus in archery season, so that why I was unsure how cold it would need to be for deer to drop a couple thousand feet in elevation. I have missed a few migration days during the season due to work lol.
I’m gonna keep hammering the high country. Hopefully start seeing less people now!
 

Block

WKR
Joined
Nov 13, 2018
Messages
517
Where I hunt in Cali the 7-9k stuff really looks BROWN and DEAD by the 2nd week of Oct...all the berries in the high elevation burns are gone... road hunters and tag eating camp groups pound the high country and send deer down into the canyons where acorns are ready to be picked up. I wouldn’t be caught dead hunting up high during general season.
 

CaliforniaMuley209

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Apr 21, 2018
Messages
203
Location
California
I think the deer will move down simply because their feed burns off first, instead of snow pushing them down. Enough snow will do it I think but don't think one or two little storms will do much. All depends on the area and storm but I have heard of big California migrations in Late season storms in D3-5 / D6
 
Top