5 Tips for Photographing Mature Bucks

March 9, 2012 By: Lindsay Thomas Jr.

five_tips_for_photographing_mature_bucks__large

A number of trail-camera images in QDMA’s book, Deer Cameras: The Science of Scouting, belong to Todd Reabe of Brillion, Wisconsin. Todd is a QDMA member who, over many years, has shared numerous trail-camera photos with QDMA. His collection is noteworthy because it includes a noticeably high number of mature bucks on trails or using scrapes, many of them photographed in broad daylight.

Todd’s family farm is 156 acres and part of a 5,000-acre QDM Cooperative involving more than 30 properties. The Cooperative’s success at protecting young bucks is part of the reason for Todd’s ability to photograph mature bucks – there are simply more mature bucks available (like the palmated buck Todd photographed, shown above). However, the Cooperative is located near the chronic wasting disease (CWD) eradication zone in Wisconsin, and baiting has been banned in that region for a number of years. Because he cannot use bait to create camera sites, Todd had to learn different techniques for scouting mature buck activity using a trail-camera.

Todd follows basic guidelines for good lighting and quality images that are described throughout QDMA’s book. Here are his other tips and techniques for capturing mature bucks, especially in daylight:

1. Trails in thick funnels or bottlenecks between bedding areas and food sources are Todd’s best bet for mature bucks. He especially loves to find trails 
like this leading to soybean fields in late summer.

2. Todd says some trails produce lots of does, young bucks and other wildlife, but few mature bucks. Meanwhile, other trails produce fewer photos overall, but more mature bucks. These trails are almost always the ones with heavier cover, but there are exceptions to this rule. Spending time monitoring different trails is the only way to find the most productive sites.

3. Todd has found that scrapes on the edges of fields and open areas most often produce yearling-buck photos. He focuses on scrape sites located in or near thick cover and densely vegetated travel corridors. These more often produce mature buck photos.

4. On good trails for mature bucks, Todd has noted that photos come in waves, with quiet weeks followed by weeks with lots of photos, and vice versa. In most cases, the cause seems to be shifting availability of food sources.

5. In all cases, Todd practices extreme scent-control techniques to minimize disturbance around his camera sites.

About Lindsay Thomas Jr.:

Lindsay Thomas Jr. is the editor of Quality Whitetails magazine, the journal of the National Deer Association, and he is NDA's Chief Communications Officer. He has been a member of the staff since 2003. Prior to that, Lindsay was an editor at a Georgia hunting and fishing news magazine for nine years. Throughout his career as an editor, he has written and published numerous articles on deer management and hunting. He earned his journalism degree at the University of Georgia.

The Two Best Times to See Deer, Every Day of the Year

Sep 7, 2022 Matt Ross

It was inevitable. The mature buck stepped into my shooting lane, broadside, within easy bow range – and I just couldn’t bring myself to draw back and shoot.  Up until the 2021 season, I routinely…

read more

To Hear More Gobblers, Stop the Squeal

Aug 24, 2022 Lindsay Thomas Jr.

If there are feral hogs in the woods you hunt, there may not be as many wild turkeys as there could be. Hogs have previously been named among many suspects for causing the recent national decline…

read more

The Most Common Questions About CWD in Deer, and NDA’s Answers

Aug 10, 2022 Kip Adams

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) in deer has emerged over the last 20 years as one of the most significant issues in deer hunting in modern times, with enormous biological, economic, political and cultural impacts. The…

read more