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<blockquote data-quote="dennishoddy" data-source="post: 918731" data-attributes="member: 5412"><p>I've posted this before, but two years ago, for an experiment on the last day of gun season, I shot a doe in a food plot, next to a feeder and field dressed her where she layed. Put the trail camera on the gut pile, and checked the camera a week later. the deer kept coming to the feeder, the same night even. I had pics of some looking at the pile, but 1 min later they would be feeding. </p><p>It didn't bother them a bit.</p><p></p><p>Back to the gut pile. </p><p>It laid there for three days with nothing but crows eating on it, and on the fourth night, I had pics of deer, and then 1 minute later, I had another pic of no deer, and no gut pile. Something came in there and dragged it off.</p><p>Other gut piles over the years dissapear overnight.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dennishoddy, post: 918731, member: 5412"] I've posted this before, but two years ago, for an experiment on the last day of gun season, I shot a doe in a food plot, next to a feeder and field dressed her where she layed. Put the trail camera on the gut pile, and checked the camera a week later. the deer kept coming to the feeder, the same night even. I had pics of some looking at the pile, but 1 min later they would be feeding. It didn't bother them a bit. Back to the gut pile. It laid there for three days with nothing but crows eating on it, and on the fourth night, I had pics of deer, and then 1 minute later, I had another pic of no deer, and no gut pile. Something came in there and dragged it off. Other gut piles over the years dissapear overnight. [/QUOTE]
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