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Bowhunting on privately leased land for:
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Whitetail
Deer |
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Kansas
Mule Deer |
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Turkey |
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Small
Game |
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Predators |
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Bowfishing |

Bowhunting is our best kept secret. Year after year, dedicated MAHA archers harvest
Pope & Young record book bucks. And with Kansas, Missouri and Iowa's long seasons and
multiple tags, MAHA bowhunters get to put a lot of venison in the freezer and enjoy
Bowhunting success most bowhunters only dream of. Trophy opportunities, including record
book bucks, are a reality (see the MAHA deer
hunters photo gallery for just a few of the big bucks harvested on MAHA leases). Add
to that fall archery turkey seasons concurrent with deer seasons in Missouri and
Kansas, and leases with both excellent deer and turkey populations, and you get bowhunting
opportunities to satisfy the even the most discriminating archers.

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Whitetail deer are available throughout both
Missouri, Kansas and Iowa. |
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Mule deer are abundant in central and western
Kansas. Mule deer hunting is one of the most underutilized MAHA resources, and may offer
the best opportunity for a Pope and Young trophy. |
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Turkey are abundant throughout Missouri, Kansas and Iowa,
and are easily combined with deer hunts. |
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Small game is abundant on most all MAHA leases and is legal
quarry for the archer. |
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Predators are also common on most MAHA leases,
where archers regularly see bobcat, coyote and foxes. |
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Bowfishing is
available for any MAHA fishing lease. Missouri
river "blue holes" support good rough fish populations for bowfishing. (see the Kansas City Star article on MAHA and
Missouri River blue holes). |

Trophy
Opportunities
Hunters from some states claim that
their state has the best deer hunting, usually based on the sheer number of hunters, or
the number of deer harvested. In the Mid West we judge our hunting quality by
the book (i.e., Boone and Crockett, Pope and Young).
Fact:
The largest
non-typical whitetail on record (Boone & Crockett) is
from Missouri, scoring a whopping 333+ inches! The trophy is on display in Kansas
City, at the Brywood office of the Missouri Conservation Department.
Fact: Kansas ranks among the
top trophy buck states, especially in recent years.
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23 of the top 100 typical whitetails, and
24 of the top 100 non-typical whitetails,
including 6 of the top 10 non-typical whitetails listed
in Pope & Young (archery trophies) records, have come from Kansas. |
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28% (14) of the top 50 all time non-typical Pope
& Young whitetails come from Kansas. |
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The No. 2 all time non-typical Pope & Young whitetail
was taken in Kansas, scoring 257 points. |
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In the ten year period from 1984 through 1993 (what happened historically
in previous decades has little bearing on hunting now), Kansas had as many deer entered
into Boone and Crockett Club records (89), as all of
states along the Atlantic coast plus the states of West Virginia and Vermont. |
Fact: Few of these trophies
were taken on public land.
Fact: Record book roles and
the MAGBA membership role share several of the same names, for Missouri, Kansas and Iowa
bucks. MAGBA only has some 650 members, many of which are not deer hunters. Try randomly
polling 650 public land hunters and see if you find any record book entry holders.

Regarding all of the above species:

The MAHA reservation systems assures a quality hunting experience, and peace of mind.
Each member reserves ample space on quality leases. MAHA hunters avoid the highly
congested public hunting lands, where hunting pressure can be extreme. On some public
land, most bowhunters see more bowhunters than deer - this could never happen on
MAHA leases. The reservation systems allows MAHA staff to manage the hunting pressure on
club leases.
MAHA bowhunters can hunt deer under natural conditions, before, during, and after the
rut, and pursue unpressured deer. Most experienced bowhunters agree that hunting
unpressured deer is a primary factor in bowhunter success, especially with trophy bucks.

Kansas, Missouri and Iowa both allow compound bows and traditional equipment. Crossbows are
allowed only by special permit for hunters with disabilities.
Always check with
local state government regarding the most current hunting
regulations.

Every type of hunting is available, depending on the season and the chosen habitat. Tree
Stand hunting with portable stands is the preferred method throughout Kansas and
Missouri. Food source pattern hunting (crops, hay fields, woodland mast
crop, etc.) is available to the early season bowhunters, and again in the late
season (late standing corn, hay fields, etc). Still hunting and organized
drives can be executed without unknown hunters in the area to spoil the activity
in any portion of the season - great non-rut mid-day tactics if hunting with one or more
buddies. Rattling and grunting are available to pre-rut and rut hunters
and have netted big bucks for MAHA archers (try rattling in bucks on public land where
the bucks are busy fleeing the hunter filled woods). Spot and stalk
techniques are available in the open country of western Kansas, especially for mule deer. Ground
stands are used with some success. Your portable tree stands are
much less likely to wind up stolen or with some other hunter in them, on posted private
property.
The Mid America
Hunting Association staff will help you select the right leases for
your particular hunting style and needs.

Most MAHA archery deer hunters manage to put themselves into shooting
opportunities at deer every season if they put in ample scouting and stand time. Most that
put in the time come home with deer, many with multiple deer, some with
wallhangers. Most
see lots of turkey from their stands, and often get opportunity to take turkey along with
deer.
Will all MAHA deer hunters take big bucks each year? If we did, it wouldn't be called hunting,
it would just be called shooting. If you want a guaranteed, or near certain shot
at a record book buck, you will have to book a guided hunt on one of the famous managed
herd properties like those found in Texas, Saskatchewan, or Michigan, but be prepared to
spend $5,000 for a one week hunt. They will take you to the big ones and tell you when to
shoot, or put you in a tree stand site they selected and hung, where you remain the
shooter but they did much of your hunting for you. And you may even get your name in Boone
and Crockett or Pope and Young.
We don't provide guided hunts, and we don't have managed herds in high fenced ranch
enclosures. And those hunts are okay if that's what your after, and even some MAHA
members travel out of state for guided hunts. But, will you have the same true hunting
experience and lasting satisfaction as the MAHA bowhunters who went out to a Mid West
farm or wood lot, seldom coming up empty handed after putting in ample stand time during
the season, and bag a big one on their own once in a while?
We can't guarantee trophy success, but we can guarantee private lease hunting with a
reservation system, in two great deer hunting states, which removes many of the variables
of deer hunting and puts your hunting success in your hands. This is why we offer some of
the best deer hunting opportunity in the Mid West.
Every bowhunter knows, you don't have to kill big bucks to be successful, or even bucks
for that matter. Any deer taken with a bow is an accomplishment to be proud of.
And taking antlerless deer in the early season gets the archer tuned up with timing the
draw, releases, overcoming the heart pounding out of your chest, etc. (if your heart
doesn't get pounding over every bow kill, you may need to take up another sport).
Kansas, Missouri and Iowa offer multiple archery deer tags, especially
antlerless.
Antlerless deer permits make it much easier to be successful and put venison in your
freezer while performing necessary conservation functions of addressing overpopulation
problems to prevent starvation and disease and limit crop damage, and also to maintain and
balance the buck/doe ratio. Many serious trophy hunters pass up all small bucks, and
choose to fill only their antlerless tags in seasons when the big ones had better luck
than the hunter, letting those little bucks live to become big ones. Who is the more
successful hunter, the one who killed the first buck he saw, or the one who passed up many
small bucks, and filled only antlerless tags?

All Mid America
Game Bird Association properties consist of privately leased
farms and ranches
Whitetail
Habitat
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Habitat
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Description
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Croplands
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Corn,
soy beans, milo, wheat - major deer magnets especially
during the early season. Late standing corn and winter
wheat sprouts are great in late season. It is these
crops that account for 200+ pound and even 250+ pound
field dress bucks on MAHA leases.
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Pastures
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Cattle
pastures are a food source for deer year round.
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Hayfields
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Brougham,
clover, and especially alfalfa work well all season,
and especially in the late season.
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Farm
Wood lots
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Whitetails
require cover, but the cover doesn't have to be big.
In fact, man hunters prefer farm country with only
small wood lots, hedgerows and wooded creek bottoms
which funnel the deer making them easier to find.
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Timber
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Big
timber, the classic whitetail cover, is available in
the Missouri Ozarks, across northern Missouri,
southern Iowa, and
portions of northeast Kansas.
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Strip
Pits
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Reclaimed
strip mining pits offer a unique environment in which
whitetails thrive. Mining operations in years past
gouged out steep parallel ridges with permanent
waterholes in between. The abundant water draws deer
during droughts, where they often remain. These ridges
are often covered with dense hardwood and cedars which
whitetails prefer as cover. Strip pits often
border farm land which provide a food source for deer.
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CRP
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CRP
provides both year round food sources and cover.
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Open
prairie
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Especially
in western Kansas, open parries provide food source,
and tall native grass and brushy draws provide cover,
for both whitetail and mule deer.
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Ridges
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Throughout
Missouri, southern Iowa, and in eastern Kansas you can hunt
ridge-runner bucks. One of the oldest rules in deer
hunting - find the high ground to find the big bucks.
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Mule Deer Habitat
Open country in central and western Kansas, including open prairie, CRP, wheat and
other crop fields, and brushy draws. For the bowhunter, tree stands can be set in
thinly wooded creek bottoms and in some thinly wooded hedgerows - both of which serve as
natural funnels for cover seeking big bucks (many older mule deer bucks exhibit habits
similar to their whitetail counterparts). Waterholes offer another close range
alternative for the bowhunter.

Always check with
local state government regarding the most recent license
information.
Archery deer and turkey permits are available over the counter in Kansas and
Missouri.
Kansas uses a drawing
system for firearms and muzzleloader deer permits. Applications are available in
the late spring and are due in by mid July for the primary drawing. One or more
leftover permit drawings occur thereafter. You cannot enter the primary
firearms permit drawing and have a statewide any deer archery permit.
Multiple antlerless tags are usually available.
Missouri offer an archers license which provides two any deer tags and two turkey tags,
but there are restrictions regarding when and how those tags can be filled. In Missouri
there are currently no restrictions regarding the purchase of both archery and firearms
licenses which can add up to as many as five deer. In the Kansas City and St. Louis
regions, bowhunters can purchase as many as 5 urban deer tags in addition to all other
licenses, for a possible 10 deer limit. However MAHA currently holds no leases in these
urban permit areas. Missouri also offers special drawings for some managed hunt areas,
again though, usually not applicable for MAHA leases.
MAHA can help you plan hunts, including providing recommendations regarding which
leases to hunt in each game management area, to suit your style of hunting. It is best to
start working with the MAHA staff regarding out of state hunting plans before
state permit drawings.

It is common for MAHA members who live in Kansas, Missouri and Iowa to hunt both states, and
both states offer licenses to firearms and archery hunters to support this.
If you are from a state other than Kansas or Missouri interested in taking advantage of
the superior bowhunting opportunities in Kansas, Missouri and Iowa, Mid America
Hunting
Association can provide you a place to hunt, on a reservation basis. There are an
increasing amount of out of state hunters taking advantage of this opportunity, many of
which learned of this opportunity on the MAGBA.COM web site.
MAHA can help you plan hunts, including providing recommendations regarding which
leases to hunt for your style of hunting, how to get there, lodging or camping, etc.
Particularly for out of state hunters, it is best to start working with the MAHA staff
regarding out of state hunting plans before state permit drawings.
Always check with
local state government regarding the most recent license
information.


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