okay I'm getting tired of all the comments about the evil lazy deer ambushers....
I live in East Texas and hunt in a place that would take a week to find a downed 747. yes it is thick.
I would love nothing more than to have some open plains, ridges, mountains, bluffs, cliffs and stuff to hang out on. But I don't.
If I could take long walks glassing and stalking, pausing to breathe the clean air, admiring the sun and clouds or a threatening thunderstorm, I surely would. But most of the place is 100% saturated with vegetation. if there is even a crack of space for something to grow, it is growing, be it a vine or sticker or weed or sapling or big tree. 5 feet into it you are tangled up and completely immobilized. I've even tried the pygmy crawling tactic to no avail. You have to cut your own trails, and maintain them or they will be impassable very soon due to new growth. You also are not going to sneak up on any of those animals without alerting them and they heading to the adjacent county.
I bust my tail working on my lease all year round in stifling humidity and when I put up a stand I prebuild it at my house, dissassemble it and hump each piece a few hundred yards into the crap and put it together. Everything I use I carry back there, come alongs, tools, I have even wheeled a little generator back there. I sweat my ass off and heat up to the point of chills frequently despite precautions.
I also like climbing stands. When I hunt, it is work. I'll probably die hunting, of a heart attack some day tromping around in the cold mud carrying a bunch of gear or dragging my deer.
Now if you think I am trying to sound like a badass, you are wrong. Because I am the biggest wussy ever when it comes to cold. Just mention the word freeze and I cringe. So my hats off to you guys that do it in the snow.
to put it bluntly, I ambush deer. I agree that it is not for everybody. I'm free to move wherever i want to. To each his own.