Order the new book by Russell D. Haynes, Where Did the Deer Go? This book explains, in detail and with pictures, the reason that whitetail deer were close to extinction in the middle to late 1800's of most of America. Then, this book explains the steps the United States government took to remedy the problem, thus, giving the United States, especially the southeast, a current, thriving whitetail population.
AMERICAN MADE. FREE SHIPPING.
SAVE ABOUT $20.00 BY PURCHASING A CASE OF FOUR (4)
Haynes Hunting Systems introduces a brand new product after years of tactile "in the field" research, teamed with advice from animal nutritionist experts.
Whitetail Wonder is a deer attractant as well as a deer health support system, from early spring through the dead of winter.
There are several deer attractants on the market today, most of them with cheap ingredients, many not even good for ruminants.
the other productTHE PROOF IS IN YOUR TESTING GROUND: We simply ask you do this: Buy any other attractant or feeding product on the market. Then buy our product in the woods together in at least a 50 yard radius of each other and SEE WHICH PRODUCT THE ANIMALS GO AFTER!
We ship a whole case (4 gallon jugs) free (through Fedex Ground with insurance) to anyone in the lower 48 states.
One jug produces an extra large "wallow hole" or several medium sized wallow holes for your whitetails to enjoy. Works on all species of deer as well as Elk. Simply add creek or distilled water, shake product and pour.
The informative product info and detailed directions are shown in the product pictures for you to read.
Each jug contains about 6 pounds of product, before you add water.
Posted by Judge Hopkins, Oklahoma City on 26th Jul 2016
It work really well after we got a second rain on over half the places we put it out. Later after rut the other spots got hit hard. So my hunting club went together and bout a whole case of this stuff
Posted by Charles Boykin, Boyd, Wi on 20th Jul 2016
They didn't hit it much in late summer last year but boy they tore ground up (and a stump) in October and through winter.