Sometimes, whether you're stuck in an early-fall lull before the rut kicks in or dealing with ghost bucks that seem to move solely at night, the only way to get a shot at a giant is to push him to another hunter. Drives with a bow can work--and work well--but it takes a different approach from the typically loud and aggressive orange-army pushes more common to gun season. Try these two- and three-man deer drives the next time that big boy won't cooperate by walking by of his own volition. Small Cover Whether it's a small stand of timber or an island of brushy cutover surrounded by fields, driving small patches of cover can yield big results when you're working to jump up a heavy-racked recluse. The smaller the patch, the better for just one or two hunters, as it is easier to narrow down where an escaping buck is apt to flee. Patches no bigger than an acre or two are perfect, but pushes in stands as big as 10 acres are still workable.