I didn't go this year. Got laid off last year and couldn't really justify the license, permits, and all that. Never really did any hunting specifically for deer, but I ran across so many while pheasant/quail hunting, that I finally decided I should get the permit just in case I had the opportunity. I don't know of any private land to hunt, so I stick to the state parks and WMAs. What are you going to do? Still, I usually find something to shoot at. Two years ago was the first time I got a permit for deer since I was kid. Hunting behind the damn at Branched Oak for pheasants and quail during the deer season, I was carrying my S&W 500 8-3/8" barrel wheel gun just in case. Wouldn't you know it, I see my three chocolate labs suddenly dart to the far side of a plumb thicket, headed toward the dam, and I get a brief glimps of a deer running ahead of them. I knew the deer was either going to break to the right and cross the creek, or it would break left where the cover ended and cross an opening directly ahead of me. I put my shotgun down against a tree, pulled my revolver, and basically started running to reduce the distance should the deer break left and give me a broadside shot. With the dam as a backstop, I was ready when the deer cut across the 15-yd. wide opening in the brush. Couldn't have asked for a better opportunity, unless maybe the 50-75 yard distance had been a little less. Boom! My ears were ringing (forgot my earplugs), and the deer was still running. I looked to my left, and there was another small opening in the brush, so I prepared for another shot (even though it was a bit longer and I was afraid I'd never hear another thing). Boom! More ringing. No deer. Went and looked for signs of blood, but nothing.
I fully realize that to have a good chance of bagging a deer, it requires a lot of preparation (scouting, getting permission for a good place to hunt, tree stands or blinds, and all that). I'm more of an opportunist, but that opportunity was worth the cost of the permit, even though I didn't bag the deer. The year before, I had a much better shot at a beautiful buck, in a nearby area at Branched Oak, but I didn't have a permit. I was again hunting pheasants when some deer hunters spooked the deer from across the road, and he trotted broadside to me about 35 yards away with no interfering cover. Damn!
I didn't hunt at all this year due to my layoff, but I'm thinking about getting my habitat stamp and park permit so I can do what's left of the season and be ready for next fall.
By the way, I also ran across turkeys out there when I didn't have a permit. The next year I got the permit and didn't see a one.