texashuntingforum.com logo
Main Menu
Advertisement
Affiliates
Advertisement
Newest Members
garey, SteveG, justin77, Tjh, Clint Mcmullen
72051 Registered Users
Top Posters(All Time)
dogcatcher 110,795
bill oxner 91,416
SnakeWrangler 65,525
stxranchman 60,296
Gravytrain 46,950
RKHarm24 44,585
rifleman 44,461
Stub 43,916
Forum Statistics
Forums46
Topics537,970
Posts9,731,206
Members87,051
Most Online25,604
Feb 12th, 2024
Print Thread
Attracting Aoudads to feeder #8803495 02/17/23 09:13 PM
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 82
G
GaryRI Offline OP
Outdoorsman
OP Offline
Outdoorsman
G
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 82
A friend wants me to kill as many of the Aoudads that are on his Hill Country property as I can. Been sitting AM & PM for the last week. Shot 4 young so far. 3 Ewe. 1 ram.

I am sitting over a corn feeder that goes off just before sunrise and an hour before sunset. Would a bale of alfalfa be a good idea?

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8803621 02/18/23 01:42 AM
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 1,649
B
BubRay Online Content
Pro Tracker
Online Content
Pro Tracker
B
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 1,649
Spotlight…….

Sounds like your doing well!


Take Care,
Bub
Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8803697 02/18/23 04:37 AM
Joined: Sep 2020
Posts: 16
A
anthonytexas Offline
Light Foot
Offline
Light Foot
A
Joined: Sep 2020
Posts: 16
Let me know if you get tired and want to rotate.

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8804056 02/18/23 09:14 PM
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 82
G
GaryRI Offline OP
Outdoorsman
OP Offline
Outdoorsman
G
Joined: Feb 2019
Posts: 82
[Linked Image]
[Linked Image]

These are really tiny animals so far. And the property owner isn't going to want anyone he doesn't know on the property.

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8805369 02/21/23 03:02 AM
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 695
C
ccrock Offline
Tracker
Offline
Tracker
C
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 695
Alfalfa will bring ‘em in.

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8805399 02/21/23 03:56 AM
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 459
S
svbubba Offline
Bird Dog
Offline
Bird Dog
S
Joined: Aug 2011
Posts: 459
we have had great luck with sweet feed along with alfalfa in west texas ..........

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: svbubba] #8805533 02/21/23 02:32 PM
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 394
Geedubya Offline
Bird Dog
Offline
Bird Dog
Joined: Dec 2011
Posts: 394


I hunt near Reagan Wells. Sixty-thousand acre low fenced ranch.We have a 1,700 acre "pasture" (3,000 acres if it was flat) covered in Juniper. Hunting pressure is very light as only myself and one other member go up on a regular basis. I've hunted there at least once a month for 3 to 5 days(these days mostly at night w/ thermal) since 2004. I feed persimmon corn, roasted soybeans out of spin-cast units and protein out of on-demand units.. Have six feeders working, all with game cameras, each in a different area. It has been my experience that Aoudad are hard to pattern consistently. One may see them every day for a week or so then not again for a year.

I have not tried Alfalfa.

Of course YMMV.

Best,

GWB





Last edited by Geedubya; 02/21/23 02:34 PM.

A Kill Artist. When I draw, I draw Blood
Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: Geedubya] #8805943 02/22/23 03:24 AM
Joined: Dec 2015
Posts: 569
N
nyalubwe Offline
Tracker
Offline
Tracker
N
Joined: Dec 2015
Posts: 569
Originally Posted by Geedubya


I hunt near Reagan Wells. Sixty-thousand acre low fenced ranch.We have a 1,700 acre "pasture" (3,000 acres if it was flat) covered in Juniper. Hunting pressure is very light as only myself and one other member go up on a regular basis. I've hunted there at least once a month for 3 to 5 days(these days mostly at night w/ thermal) since 2004. I feed persimmon corn, roasted soybeans out of spin-cast units and protein out of on-demand units.. Have six feeders working, all with game cameras, each in a different area. It has been my experience that Aoudad are hard to pattern consistently. One may see them every day for a week or so then not again for a year.

I have not tried Alfalfa.

Of course YMMV.

Best,

GWB







Geedub, Ive seen alfalfa work, but I've also seen corn work. They seem to really like cotton seed, but my experience is like yours, they are near impossible to pattern.

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8805958 02/22/23 03:45 AM
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 3,448
A
aggiehunter03 Online Content
Veteran Tracker
Online Content
Veteran Tracker
A
Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 3,448
Corn. Always corn.

Re: Attracting Aoudads to feeder [Re: GaryRI] #8807951 02/25/23 04:35 AM
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 133
4D RANCH Offline
Woodsman
Offline
Woodsman
Joined: Dec 2010
Posts: 133
I don’t think they pattern well to feeding stations but will hit them on their way thru. I’ve gotten pics on game camera of them eating corn when it spins in the morning but nothing else for a week or two. Next thing you know I had pics at 2 in the afternoon when there wasn’t a cornel of corn on the ground but they could smell it in the feeder? If you’re hunting a herd you’re better off hunting in the best grazing areas and setting up on the travel and certainly the escape trails. The first one I took came on a bluff over looking a wheat field that I routinely seen them in but couldn’t get close enough for a shot. I climbed up the opposite side of the bluff and was looking down on them when they winded me and took off. They ran the 300 or so yards directly toward the bluff and went straight up the steep side that had stoped my stalk in the first place. I watched as 12 or so topped the bluff and trotted past me at about 50 yards single file and the mature ram was the last one to top out. He stopped to make sure the others had not encountered any danger and that was his last step! 50 yards or so but my scope was all the up in anticipation of a longer shot he stared at me in awe because I wasn’t supposed to be in his safe space I guess? I was able to get the scope adjusted and make a good shot he dropped. To the OP I apologize for the reminicing but when I went to that ram he died on what I think was the frequently used escape route. After admiring the ram I went 50 yards each way and determined it was most definitely a goat trail but the 50 yards down the bluff was insane and that’s why they used it. Sorry for the long post but I was reminiscing and typing at once. Point being you don’t really ever know where there going to be at a certain time so focus on trails to where they like to graze and trails they use when spooked.


James Davis
4-D Whitetail Ranch
Previous Thread
Index
Next Thread

© 2004-2024 OUTDOOR SITES NETWORK all rights reserved USA and Worldwide
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3