by Damo300 » 13 Feb 2026, 7:17 am
Heaps of great advise above.
The hunt is the easy part. The carry out and harvest is the hot, sweaty, yukky bit.
I'm no expert, just a rough Aussie bush hack. Been public land hunting for a few years now. Lost access to properties being sold up etc.
My advise, and it works well for me.
Others hunt differently and have way more experience than me, but they're not piping up here and giving you a hand so I'll share my experiences through what I've learned purely on my own while out there, and what I've found on youtube clips that have helped me.
Go to the range and confidently zero a cold bore shot.
The others don't matter.
Cold bore zero at your desired range is a must.
Hunting out past 200yds, is on you, and your ethics as a human.
I don't recommend it.
Slow TF down.
Hunting is not rushed in any way, well not around our camp.
Download the current hunting maps and use through avenza maps. YouTube if you're not sure how to.
Download Google earth off-line map of your hunting Forrest for cross referencing with avenza.
No piss wrecks. Goes without saying.
No walking with rounds in battery and safety on. Big no way for me.
Happy to cycle the bolt slowly when required. Tried the rubber band thing, don't like it. If you're sitting still, no worries, but when stalking, or just moving about, clear the chamber and cycle a round when required.
No running, even if your target does the Harrold Holt, let it go. There may be more around that haven't spooked.
No smoking. Filthy habit that stinks out a forest in minutes.
No deodorant or aftershave. Same as smoking.
B/o is still a warning, but wind direction is the key to the not smelling you.
No noises, other than nature, and that of slow walking leaves and twigs accasionally cracking under feet, even then, try and walk on the grass or quiet areas, and if it's 15 seconds between steps, use that time to be scouting ahead for any movement whatsoever.
Always maintain line of sight with your buddy when possible, and have that agreement that anything runs between us gets to live, or gets away if it doesn't peel off in either direction.
If we're going to separate, we have UHF earbuds, and we agree in each other's path of travel so we can update our position should the other spot a potential target.
Always remember your ballistics.
Don't take a shot at an animal on top of a spur or hill. That bullet is yours untill it stops moving so don't miss.
The only time you look down is for path identification, and to assess for sign. Otherwise you're looking up and glassing well ahead of your position.
You have to remain calm and together with all your senses engaged. Smashing your way through the scrub is for dirt bike riding and 4x4ing.
Don't see many deer when I'm out riding.
Upon arrival you're going to need to find a good camping location. That's priority imo, especially if you're walking out the next morning and not driving, or you plan on hunting that evening to half past sundown.
Obviously don't camp next to other hunters, unless invited to. If you see a set up, move on. It's a big Forrest with limited permits for that reason.
Don't crap in other potential camp sites where you're camped.
Nothing worse than pulling up, and some grub has dumped in the camp spot. You'd be surprised at the grubs out there, not saying it's hunters, because it's open to all, but just grubs in general, so go behind a tree.
Once you've found a suitable camp location, set up a form of base to mark your claim (we have a quick shade and table), then go for a good drive and look for possible hunting areas.
Scouting the place prior to any hunting is mandatory imo.
Learn where everything is, and refer to your avenza maps, marking way points as you go, and it helps to mark different locations that will have phone reception.
If you plan on hunting from your camp spot, limit the noise to a bare Min, and we prefer to not have a fire of any kind at all. Some will disagree with this. Each to their own imo.
Morning and evening are your hunting periods, and the middle of the day is recon and scouting for game trails, until you can confidently identify every part of that Forrest, then midday can be devoted to resting, but not untill I know this place like the back of my hand. I don't drive stupid hours, past private paddocks full of deer, to sit still a. D catch nothing, so make every minute productive.
You may also see game run across the road in front of you. Happens all the time. Watch out for wombats at night. Rubber tyres are magnets for them for some reason.
Pull up and go for a walk SLOWLY! (I cannot stress this enough), into the bush.
Sure, take the rifle, but my advise if you see a deer and it hasn't seen you, drop immediately, work out your wind, and sit back and watch. Learn these animals behaviours.
It's what I did.
You may find that one deer, turns into four or five others that you didn't see.
The phantom of the Forrest is now out in plain sight, and you kinda get this feeling come over you of gratitude for everything around you, and all of a sudden, killing something is now in your hands, so you're selective and respectful of how you conduct your next move.
These things are flighty as hell. One wiff of you, or sound and they're gawwwn, so slow down, take your time, and concentrate entirely on breathing.
They are nocturnal in most state Forrest due to hunting pressure, but you will see them during the day as well. Mire so, bump them when you're scouting, but mostly, you won't see them.
I believe when I'm close enough, that they can hear my heart rate rise and the heart beating like a slipknot base drum in my chest, cause it'll wiggle it's ear, head up, turn, and look in my direction, and hop skippety jump, it's gone.
When it comes to the hunt.
You can now work to your Forrest layout and the direction the wind is blowing.
You've been for a drive and marked a few starting points.
Use windy, or similar to get your general wind direction live that morning, even if it feels like it's up your rear when you're out there, you're more than likely in a thermal or back draft, or they got the direction wrong, but it's normally one of the first 2 because you can see the wind direction live on windy.com at your phone reception point.
Get out before sunrise and be at your spot before the sun is up.
Be patient.
Be quiet.
Do not look down for a second.
Same in the evening.
Be well settled in before the afternoon kicks in.
And don't be disappointed if you don't see a deer the entire time you're there.
It's not about that.
You need to learn how to identify where they are, their food, their crap (some people love rubbing it between their fingers to check for age, but I'm happy just looking at it), their foot prints, their rub trees, their lyes, their wallows and scrapes.
The whole time you're out there you're learning.
If you're not learning, you're not hunting imo, and your persona and vibration will reflect that, and you won't see a thing.
You will never know it all, even if you think you do.
Good luck mate.
I really do hope you bag one on your first trip.
We saw plenty, but had no opportunity.