Whitetail Instinct March, 2016 | Page 5

Editors Thoughts Brody Vorderstrasse Rethink Your Deer Season The early season anticipation is over. The rut has run its course. The last ditch efforts of the late season have taken place. Deer season is over. gun. There was no sightings of huge bucks, doe sightings were hard to come by, and in the end I didn’t leave the woods with a deer in the back of the truck. It was not what I But as deer season ends another one had dreamed of. I kept asking begins. Starting at about this time myself , “How am I going to become every year is the season of “dreams”. the deer hunter I want to become if Dreams about what was and what’s this is how my seasons are going to to come. go.” I realized this offseason that I A dream can be defined as the had a choice to make. I could either pursuit of an unknown outcome, dream about what could have been working towards something that and what might be in the future or I may or may not occur. could continue the pursuit. For most that work starts now: shed hunting, planning food plot locations, scouting, finding new stand sites. All of these things are done in the pursuit of an unknown outcome, the pursuit of a dream. There is no guarantee that a buck will walk in front of your stand. There is no guarantee that you will still have that lease next year, that a big buck will stay on your property, or that the food plot you planted will grow. But what can be guaranteed, is the pursuit of that dream. This season made me understand that the obstacles in my way weren’t going to move just because I had a dream. I would have to keep working at it. The fear wasn’t going to go away, the doubt wasn’t leaving, and the disappointments still happened. It may have been disappointing this year having to lease a piece of ground to hunt on, having to move stands multiple times on public land because of hunting pressure, or having put in hundreds of man hours This season’s pursuit was not what I creating the perfect habitat and food had hoped for. The arrow never left plots and still only having does walk my bow, the bullet never left my in front of your stand. But my advice to you is, keep working. Keep pushing forward, make habitat improvements, shoot your bow a few more times, learn all you can learn. Change your attitude on what you think your dream is. Change it from one you think about every now and then as you wait for opening day, to one you live every day. So one day, when you sign the papers to your own piece of ground, hang that record book deer on the wall, or have your own show, you can look back and be thankful you kept on pursuing your dream. I don’t know what your hunting dream is. Maybe it is to own your own land, to go on a hunt of a life time, or to tag a Boone and Crocket buck. Whatever it is, it deserves to be pursued because in the end it is not the goal that makes you who you are, it’s the pursuit of it. Brody Vorderstrasse Co-founder: Whitetail Instinct 5