Taking the controversial approach that deer hunting has become more of a social event than an affirmation of the more basic human need to subsist in the wild, Jim Roy proposes a simple, common sense method of stalking the whitetail that he calls survival hunting.
Some of the mysteries and myths concerning the whitetail can best be unraveled by observing the natural movements of the herd-not the more unnatural movements caused by pressure from humans or dogs.
Roy breaks the deer herd down into its natural family groups, such as parental does with fawns, lone bucks, and single does of various ages, tracking their movements to and from their bedding areas based on such natural influences as wind direction and angle of sunlight.
Based on over twenty years of observation at the Smithsonian Institute's Environmental Research Center on Chesapeake Bay, this revised edition of a classic will be welcomed by hunters and wildlife watchers alike.
About the Author: Vietnam veteran, whitetail behaviorist, and skilled bow hunter since before he was a teenager, Jim Roy won the National Field Archery Diamond Buck Award in 1977 and 1985.
He currently resides in Berkeley Springs, West Viriginia.
Author | Vietnam veteran whitetail behaviorist and skilled bow hunter since before he was a teenager |
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