TED MILLER PODCAST - Horizontal Rub Q and A

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  • Опубліковано 10 лип 2018
  • Ted Miller podcast on all things horizontal rubs! Cha Ching!
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 95

  • @DontjeB
    @DontjeB 6 років тому +27

    Got a feeling that some public land will be looking like an olympic hurdle event this year. Thank you THP, and Ted, for taking the time to go more indepth about this concept.

  • @mikemellon80
    @mikemellon80 Рік тому +2

    great to revisit this after a few years. have to make sure i get one or two out this season

  • @jeremyrmooney
    @jeremyrmooney 6 років тому +1

    Thanks for another great video. Cleared up my questions and can’t wait to try it out this fall! Love The Hunting Public , great show you guys are doing. Please keep it up

  • @greyhunter9287
    @greyhunter9287 6 років тому

    Great job guys and thanks! Enjoy seeing you interact with Ted. You guys have a good synergy.

  • @jackiemacey2160
    @jackiemacey2160 5 років тому

    Ted is the man, keep up the good work of teaching all us your amazing tips and tricks.

  • @matthewsims359
    @matthewsims359 3 роки тому +1

    It seems that around here, cedar is the preferred tree for bucks to rub but i think that Ted and the THP guys just proved to us that scotch pine is the best. Thanks yall for taking the time to help us be better hunters in general. Stay safe everybody

  • @isaactyson4618
    @isaactyson4618 6 років тому

    Thanks for answering my question. I am really enjoying your channel. Keep up the good work.

  • @donhawkins8366
    @donhawkins8366 5 років тому

    Man great video I'm 63 and can't wait to experiment with this love all the knowledge wow👍👍

  • @brianjohnson2483
    @brianjohnson2483 6 років тому

    Awesome video! Very enjoyable to watch.

  • @catchemalive
    @catchemalive 6 років тому +2

    Y'all are an amazing group of guys!! Dang good thing I don't live up there or we would tear the woods up together!! Keep the videos coming and thanks for all the answers I needed on the rubs. Gonna give it a try.

  • @featherstailsscalesoutdoor6647
    @featherstailsscalesoutdoor6647 2 роки тому

    Very helpful information!! I will be putting it all to use this season (2021 Michigan) and will definitely video before and hopefully after videos and pics. Great job!!

  • @captainjoesanglingadventur4894
    @captainjoesanglingadventur4894 4 роки тому

    Going to try this down South with Ceder. I found Ted's channel and absolutely love to watch his trailcam videos of deer working a man made rub

  • @dannystarliper1915
    @dannystarliper1915 6 років тому

    GREAT INFORMATION FELLAS!! Let’s go deer season 🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌🦌

  • @philbowhunts
    @philbowhunts 5 років тому

    I just set mine up guys thanks for these great videos. I was looking up scotch pine so I could ID them and kept getting directed to Scots Pinr. I hope that's the correct tree luckily we had one on our property.

  • @soko1450
    @soko1450 6 років тому

    I'm definitely trying this up behind camp this year

  • @russbatzer6970
    @russbatzer6970 6 років тому +1

    I'd like to try red or white pine this year, but also popple, which is common here, & they always get hammered with rubs....great video fellas 👍👍

  • @yostandy
    @yostandy 6 років тому

    Deer seem to like ironwood in my neck of the woods. I have tried to eradicate most of them in my TSI work, but I'm thinking of trying one as a "scrape tree". I'm planning to try my first horizontal rub in a known buck bedding area this year and will use pine since Ted has done all the research on them.

  • @garygarlow1795
    @garygarlow1795 6 років тому +1

    Thanx much guys! Don't have any scotch but do have red pine. I'll give it a whirl. Anyway, another thing to play with. Thanx for the idea.

  • @jonst.9304
    @jonst.9304 6 років тому +3

    I’m plan to set up several of these this yr. y’all got my blood boiling right now. So ready to get in the tree.

  • @matthewwichtner2935
    @matthewwichtner2935 8 місяців тому

    That was a good video guys. I love Ted's input. Even though deer don't always hang out together, they are social. Give them something, like the horizontal rub method, and they'll come back and let All other deer, know, they're still around. Even if it's once a year.
    Personally, I rather know where that year-round / community / scrape/rub is located, then not know.
    Side note: seen this vid before, but I got more out of it this time. If that makes any sense. Lol. Thanks guys!

  • @johnlamont3885
    @johnlamont3885 2 роки тому

    saw one of those exact same types of rubs on some iowa public land one time when turkey scouting and it was ripped to shreds

  • @josephtreadlightly5686
    @josephtreadlightly5686 2 роки тому

    A video of 3 guys I like to watch...brilliant!
    I think what u have in your area as long as pay attention to the details of the plan. Over the last several years I have found that Cedars r like magnets to bucks. They also seem to be located in all the right spots even though they aren't the dominant tree in the area. I even have a public land spot that I am going to transplant a Cedar. I found a spot where there is like 10 Cedars of the same size in a spot that deer bed in only @ night. The spot it's going to is 500 yards away which is floodplain near a river & it's very thick. We got the moisture this spring that we never had all last year. I plan to anchor up higher in the Cedar tree to another tree like 15 feet away with paracord so I can have an adjustable woodvine/grapevine suspended just a few feet away from the Cedar. Then I won't return until the fall when the conditions r right.

  • @stevesipes1634
    @stevesipes1634 Рік тому

    Zachee need a napee...haha
    Great stuff, love y'alls content.

  • @ryehewitt234
    @ryehewitt234 6 років тому

    Hey great videos!
    What editing software do y'all use? Thanks

  • @andybrooks8311
    @andybrooks8311 4 роки тому +1

    Very helpful. I'll definitely be trying this for 2019 season.

    • @MrBrave00
      @MrBrave00 4 роки тому +1

      cant do it on public land

    • @andybrooks8311
      @andybrooks8311 4 роки тому

      @@MrBrave00 we have private so we r safe.

  • @noahlemke1946
    @noahlemke1946 3 роки тому

    Could you put a horizontal rub in a water way that is a passage to a bedding area?

  • @jackstreet3377
    @jackstreet3377 3 роки тому

    I didn't hear it asked in the q&a, but does Ted use these post rut? More specifically during shedding season?

  • @jimmieoverall813
    @jimmieoverall813 4 роки тому

    We have no jack pine here mostly hard wood what do you suggest for wood

  • @darrinbriggs318
    @darrinbriggs318 10 місяців тому

    I'm not good at identifying a scotch pine from another pine. How deep do you put the trees for posts?

  • @lonestarangler8407
    @lonestarangler8407 6 років тому

    Great episode!! and Ted seems like an awesome guy and teacher!

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому

      He certainly is! We have learned a lot from him ourselves!

    • @lonestarangler8407
      @lonestarangler8407 6 років тому

      yall should have him on more often!! I'm in Texas so I got excited when yall started talking about what to use for rubs. I'm gonna give it a try this year and let yall know what I use if its successful. Thanks again for the awesome content and keeping your viewers well informed of things that interest us!

  • @michaellombardo173
    @michaellombardo173 2 роки тому

    Another awesome video! I may have missed it but what is the ideal height?

  • @Horlokx
    @Horlokx 5 років тому

    Where does Ted get the spruce trees from?

  • @danbaxter1437
    @danbaxter1437 6 років тому +6

    You all should do a pod cast with gene and Barry wensel

  • @JtotheG317
    @JtotheG317 6 років тому +2

    To my knowledge, we don't have many scotch pine in Arkansas. I even called a few Christmas tree farms. Apparently they are susceptible to a pinewood nematode common in the south. Will have to try with a yellow pine.

    • @catchemalive
      @catchemalive 6 років тому

      Jonathan Goodwin
      I live in south Arkansas and have gave yellow pines and cedars a try and have had minimal success with both. This yr I'm gonna try the willows he talked about and also gonna try a red oak and sassafras because deer around here seem to hit them as much as anything else! Good luck with whatever you go with!!

  • @DescartesDooley
    @DescartesDooley 5 років тому

    Just made a horizontal rub this morning based on Ted's work in this area. Can't wait to see what happens over the next few weeks.

  • @kurtshinn9498
    @kurtshinn9498 2 роки тому

    Very smart man

  • @brocklong1226
    @brocklong1226 6 років тому

    Since I don't think scotch pines are native to Ms, I may be taking some loblolly pine limbs to Ks this fall! It is very sappy so I hope it works.

    • @Dennisgoyette
      @Dennisgoyette 5 років тому

      They aren't native to the US based off my research lol

  • @mudslutmusic9052
    @mudslutmusic9052 4 роки тому

    They LOVE stag horn sumacs in our woods in southern Ohio

  • @paulkolodziej6599
    @paulkolodziej6599 5 років тому +2

    How about some sassafras tree ? Oh and zach looks like a bobble head . Lol

  • @williamkilmartin7537
    @williamkilmartin7537 6 років тому +3

    Just curious as to the height off the ground for the rubbing post and the height from the ground to the licking branch??

    • @billbriscoe9414
      @billbriscoe9414 5 років тому +1

      Chest high if you are 6 foot tall William

  • @goodtimekillers3262
    @goodtimekillers3262 5 років тому

    Is that a bobble head in the middle?

  • @kingfisherfd2
    @kingfisherfd2 6 років тому +2

    do you think that having the horizontal rub allows them to put more of the forehead gland scents than a normal natural rub?

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому

      kingfisherfd2 that could have something to do with it 👍🏼

    • @kennykite8748
      @kennykite8748 5 років тому

      Yes , it has everything to do with it. I live in central Alabama and I’ve cut a 5” to 7” diameter cedar to clear a shoot’n lane and it fell across a young pine and a stump. One end was 3’ off the ground and the other was maybe 5’ and a few days later I noticed that it had bn chewed on a bit and I took a closer look and that damn thing was torn up ! I could smell how bad it was and when I’m around other ribs, I can’t smell a anything. Even after 20 min of watching a big mature buck make a fresh rub. So I’m saying yes! It has everything to do with it!!

  • @alanwhite4839
    @alanwhite4839 Рік тому

    Use cedar in Alabama

  • @josephtreadlightly5686
    @josephtreadlightly5686 2 роки тому

    Bully bucks moving into the area will ruin a properly managed hunting area more than anything. But @ the right time it might give u an encounter with a hard to pattern buck that us giving u fits. The key is to be there @ the right time b4 the Bully kills him. It's not really a case of it but when the buck u r after gets killed.

  • @swalker9482
    @swalker9482 5 років тому

    That ten shived jawbreaker that sucks, beautiful deer

  • @mikeoc217
    @mikeoc217 9 місяців тому

    👍🏻🦌

  • @billbriscoe9414
    @billbriscoe9414 5 років тому

    Guys down South, Cedar will work but Willow is Better! I use Willow. Fresher the better!

  • @deannakoa3
    @deannakoa3 Рік тому

    listen i do the same method that MR.Ted does that picked up from my grandfather .....only i use black widow scents on it and in scrape and its kiiiiler!!!!!!! deadly

  • @kurtis6939
    @kurtis6939 6 років тому

    i am pulling 45 pounds on my bow, and i would love to go bow hunting i am sighted in for 30 yards. Do you think 45 pounds could kill a deer at 30 yards?

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому +1

      Potentially but your odds go down the further the shot is. 15-20 yards is what you should shoot for starting out.

  • @deannakoa3
    @deannakoa3 Рік тому

    This a long time proven method

  • @TCS9490
    @TCS9490 5 років тому +1

    Hell. He makes horizontals, I piss in my scrapes. hell

  • @rodneygilbert5183
    @rodneygilbert5183 6 років тому

    Did this with a cedar next to food plot , in two years had zero bucks hit it.

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому

      Rodney Gilbert might outta listen to Ted and try scotch pine then

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому

      Once the limb dries out, they won't use it. Cedar dries out really fast, usually within a few weeks.

    • @rodneygilbert5183
      @rodneygilbert5183 6 років тому

      That's where l found out about it ,but no scotch pine here. I will try something else.

  • @tree7249
    @tree7249 5 років тому

    I dont like the using of wire. It gets loose deer gets tangled. Got to be a better idea.

  • @TheRidgeLine_
    @TheRidgeLine_ 6 років тому

    I sent you a dm on instagram could you check it out it’s about buck beds

  • @leonardcavaretta905
    @leonardcavaretta905 6 років тому +1

    I am going to try this, this year. Wish me luck, but I am way more interested in shooting does. I am a meat hunter and don't really care about getting a buck. I need advice on and scents that work just for does.

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому +1

      That's awesome! We don't know much about using scents for deer. Does on the other hunt will bed much closer to the food sources than bucks. Does are also more prone to spotting you in the tree than bucks so make sure your hidden extremely well.

    • @leonardcavaretta905
      @leonardcavaretta905 6 років тому

      The Hunting Public: Due to my disability, I only hunt on the ground. Would appreciate any help you can in doe hunting.

    • @dennisknepp1616
      @dennisknepp1616 5 років тому

      @@TheHuntingPublic
      Agreed with that statement of a doe spotting you in a tree quicker than a buck. I personally don't see bucks in the woods heard them seen significant amount of sign in area of a buck or bucks in that area. But back to the doe I have had doe blowing 300 yards away because of someone else's scent dart my way stop 30 yards and "sky line" me. I have also had doe come in up wind in thick cover from cover to small opening. can't see deer till they are in opening. tree between me and deer as soon as she stepped out in the open she looked up . Doe are very self aware. And the doe that has done that has been living in my woods here in Pennsylvania for 5 years maybe longer I been getting pictures of her for 5 years at least. She is just as smart as a buck and is one I am hunting this year 2018.

    • @swalker9482
      @swalker9482 5 років тому

      As someone that hunts heavily pressured deer stay away from most scents. I don't use them anymore cause there are some that start saturating the woods with doe in heat first day of bow season, most deer know the difference

    • @davepaints101
      @davepaints101 5 років тому +1

      Scent free if any cover scent use acorn or apples thing about a doe is they are hardly ever alone so you will have more eyes hunting from a ground blind in an area you have daylight activity. If you don’t have a trail cam invest in them they will give you knowledge of deer movement and you can set up accordingly. Honestly I believe in pressured woods it’s harder to hunt the doe unless you have tons of deer than a buck that doe is almost never going to make a mistake but the buck he has different incentives for his movement

  • @brooklynoutdoorsman9969
    @brooklynoutdoorsman9969 10 місяців тому

    Hide it lol

  • @thefishinggrounds1979
    @thefishinggrounds1979 6 років тому

    first like

  • @kennethmichael2586
    @kennethmichael2586 6 років тому

    bobblehead

  • @adamlaroux3488
    @adamlaroux3488 7 місяців тому

    Yup yup yup yup yup yup
    Yup yup yup yup
    Yup yup
    Yup
    Yup yup yup yup

  • @ericbrown6454
    @ericbrown6454 4 роки тому

    Great information. But...…….Zach is like a bobblehead...…………...

  • @MrPaulluma
    @MrPaulluma 6 років тому +1

    The shot on that buck at about 30:18 made me cringe. Looked pretty far back. Hope he recovered it, if I had to guess I’d say that he prolly did.

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому +3

      P85037 L yes he did 👍🏼 unfortunately you can’t hit them perfect every time. But you can take good/ ethical shots and that’s exactly what Ted did.

    • @MrPaulluma
      @MrPaulluma 6 років тому

      The Hunting Public Good he recovered it. And I couldn’t agree more with you can’t hit em perfect every time. And yeah Ted is a great hunter. I know he wouldn’t take a bad shot. It’s crazy some shots don’t look that good but get the job done while others look really good and end up turning into a hell of a tracking job.

    • @MrPaulluma
      @MrPaulluma 6 років тому

      Anywho the horizontal rub setup that Ted came up with is awesome, very cool stuff!!

    • @TheHuntingPublic
      @TheHuntingPublic  6 років тому +1

      P85037 L glad you enjoyed the horizontal rub segment

    • @dublelung1
      @dublelung1 6 років тому +1

      I think the fletching end of the arrow kicked back and made that shot look worse than it really was. Broadhead entered in line with back of offside shoulder and should've deflated lungs pretty quickly. Helluva buck too! I love watching these horizontal rubs videos, just wish we had Scotch Pine down here in MS.

  • @miltonaliff3316
    @miltonaliff3316 5 років тому +1

    Who’s the girl, get a haircut pal,