How do I find a pinch point for deer hunting?
A pinch point is any feature that funnels deer movement into a narrow strip — a saddle in a ridge, a fence gap, a creek crossing, a narrow neck of timber connecting two larger blocks. Find pinch points by reading topographic maps and aerial imagery, then verify on the ground by looking for converging trails.
Topographic features create most pinch points: ridge saddles where deer cross between drainages, narrow benches running through steep terrain, fence gaps where deer enter ag fields, creek crossings at the only feasible passage point. Mark candidates from satellite imagery, then walk them in summer to verify trail evidence.
During rut, pinch points downwind of doe bedding produce daylight buck encounters consistently. Pair with state rut dates for timing.