I've been hearing something in the woods now for about 3 years and I think I know what it is but I am not certain. It is short in duration, less than a second or maybe 1 second, is usually 1 or 2 times in the late afternoon, although Saturday morning I heard it 4 times over maybe 10 seconds and then within maybe 5 minutes I heard it once more. I've searched youtube and can't really find anything comparable. The best way I can describe it is a short creak, like a creaky stair, or shoe, or door, something along those lines. It vaguely resembles what you get out of one of those Primos bleat cans but not really. Someone hearing it could easily say "oh that's a frog" but it's not quite like a frog and frogs in my experience are both communal and verbose, once one starts they all join in and go on and on and on. Again, what I hear is one voice and brief, usually only one or two times.
I think this is a matriarchal doe assembly call as they rise from bed but I've never actually witnessed a doe do it so I don't know.
The only sound ive ever heard a doe make was a quick loud bleat. She was telling her fawn to stop, and it did. It had just bolted out into a field, a little faster than what mom felt was safe, I guess.
Interesting. Now I know what a woodcock sounds like. The duration of the sound is pretty close but the woodcock sounds more like an insect to me and the woodcock kept going. What I've heard is not a woodcock
No it is not a grunt. The duration of the sound is pretty close, maybe very slightly longer, to the woodcock, nothing like a grunt. The woodcock is more buzzy sounding to me.
I've heard this long before rut times, even earlier this year. It's not really a clicking noise. It's driving me crazy. I think it may be an important piece of the puzzle but can't be sure if it's even a deer at all.
I found the video I was looking for, 1:12 - 1:40 mark. I have had buck make basically the same sound as what she is doing with no other deer around before and during the rut.
This is much closer! There is still a lot of variation in what she is doing though. The first and third sounds she makes are much closer to the duration I've heard, with the first sound being possibly just barely longer and the third sound being slightly shorter. Considering the fact that she is a human attempting to mimic the sound of a deer, this could be it!
The thing is though how it sounds exactly the same every time, no shorter and no longer.
Wow, I guess that changes everything if it's a buck and not a doe. I knew the scrapes looked super fresh, maybe it was a buck and not a doe and maybe it is ridiculous to think does create scrapes. I still don't know why there weren't any rubs though.
From the tree I was in there was a draw between 200 and 300 yds that I couldn't see the bottom of. On the opposite side of the gas cut, in the bottom of the draw, at the edge of the tree line is where I found the first scrape. I scouted this area just a little bit a couple of years ago but never hunted it. I went in in the dark. Had I walked another 100 yds to the next point before climbing, I probably would have seen him cross the cut, if in fact it was a buck.
So here is the million dollar question. The next time I hear this, what can I do to bring him to me? I'd be afraid any sound I'd make would just send him the other way.
That last video is what I saw and heard a Kansas buck do while tending a doe. I described it as a frog as well. I have heard Alabama deer grunt as we are use to but not the clicking grunt.
I'm around does every day, 365 days a year. I've never heard any of them make any noise except various grunts from very, very, low almost unhearable to loud discipline grunts to fawns. And snorts/blowing, etc, sudden loud noise.
I've heard bucks make a variety of grunts from low single to tic tic tic tic grunts. Snort wheezes of all kinds. Don't believe I ever heard a buck snort like a doe will.
I've spent most of the money I've made in my lifetime on hunting and fishing. The rest I just wasted.....
proud Cracker-Americaan
muslims are like coyotes, only good one is a dead one
Don't believe I ever heard a buck snort like a doe will.
I've heard it once and it was by a big, old, mature buck that was almost dead under my stand when he saw me. One loud snort and he was gone. But it wasn't high pitched like a doe, it was low and loud like a horse snorts when they're agitated.