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 Tuesday, December 11, 2007
The Date And Origin Of This Amateur Video Is Also Unknown Thanks To Some Quick Thinking The Good Samaritan Saved Th
Posted by DDH STaff
The date and origin of this amateur video is also unknown. Thanks to some quick thinking, the good Samaritan saved this doe by using a helicopter to literally blow it off the water and back to land.
How_to_blow_away_a_deer.wmv (1.82 MB)
Tuesday, December 11, 2007 7:19:40 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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This Is The Latest Deerrelated Video To Be Flying Around The Internet The Unfortunate Buck Found Itself In This Pre
Posted by DDH Staff
This is the latest deer-related video to be flying around the Internet. The unfortunate buck found itself in this predicament after apparently sparring with a homemade swing. The landowner apparently captured the video from his backyard.
DumbBuck.wmv (2.62 MB)
Tuesday, December 11, 2007 3:02:53 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, December 10, 2007
MISSISSIPPI SWEEPS IS A SUCCESS
Posted by DDH Staff
D&DH-TV Producer Chris Hermans and I just returned from southern Mississippi where we met loyal D&DH subscriber David Cargill for a hunt with renowned hunter and callmaker Will Primos. Cargill was the winner of our latest sweepstakes hunt and prize package that was publicized throughout the year in the magazine.
The hunt could be described in one word: HOT! When I left home from Wisconsin the morning of December 6th, the temperature gauge in the vehicle read minus 11.
We met Cargill at the Atlanta airport. Needless to say, he was fired up- -- as we were -- to get into the woods that night, but due to some airline issues we didn't arrive in Jackson in time to hunt. We did get a chance to walk though the office and meet a lot of great people, and stock up on the latest Primos calls. We then headed to camp just in time to give us a quick tour and the first food plot that we saw had a number of deer in it, including one nice buck. To say we were excited would be an understatement. But the next morning the warm weather had already arrive. Cargill would be filmed by Chris for a muzzleloader hunt, while I bowhunted. However, with the warm weather, the deer just didn't move.
After the entire first day we had seen a total of six deer, all does and fawns. Maybe our luck would change the next day! Mine didn't, as I got skunked for the second strait sit on stand. However, Cargill faired much better, harvesting the largest buck of his lifetime on film. It was a main frame eight with great mass. It grosses well over 130.
The highlight of the hunt for me was the final 30 minutes when a 3.5 year old 8-point came into range. The place we were hunting is intensely managed and try shooting only 4.5 year olds or better so we abided by the rules and passed him up, and as always once you decide to pass him up he didn't want to leave the area. He stood for the longest time at 20 yards giving us some great behavioral footage.
As we were driving back to the airport the temperature was hovering around 80 degrees and very humid and I found myself wondering what the hunt would have been like had the temperatures been 20 degree's cooler. All and all it was a great trip, and I want to thank the staff at Primos for hosting a great hunt!
--Brad Rucks, Publisher
Monday, December 10, 2007 5:50:01 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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This Monster 20pointer Was Allegedly Killed In Southwestern Wisconsin During The Early December Muzzleloader Season
Posted by DDH Staff
This monster 20-pointer was allegedly killed in southwestern Wisconsin during the early December muzzleloader season. The buck is said to have 6+ inch bases and an inside spread of nearly 25 inches. It was said to be killed in the state's CWD management area.
Monday, December 10, 2007 5:17:32 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Thursday, December 06, 2007
We Are Seeking More Information On This Buck Which Has Been Making The Rounds Across Cyberspace It Was Supposedly K
Posted by DDh Staff
We are seeking more information on this buck, which has been making the rounds across cyberspace. It was supposedly killed in Alberta recently. If it is legit, it seems to have well more than 40 inches of mass, which would likely push it above 200 inches B&C. We will post more information as it becomes available.
Thursday, December 06, 2007 8:17:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Wednesday, December 05, 2007
We Do Not Know For Sure The Details Behind This Photo But Rumor Has It That This Albino Buck Was Killed By
Posted by DDH Staff
We do not know for sure the details behind this photo, but rumor has it that this albino buck was killed by a car just outside of Petoskey, Michigan, in November. As far as albino bucks go, this is an impressive buck. Albinos are genetically inferior animals, and, hence, are usually stunted in their growth.
Wednesday, December 05, 2007 5:57:21 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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Dan's Report for 12/5
Posted by DDH Staff
D&DH-TV Producer Chris Hermans and I just returned from a hunt at Prairie Wings Outfitters in north-central Kansas with Tim Herald of Under Armour and Bill Mitchell of Nikon Sport Optics. This was my first trip to Kansas, and I finally got to experience first-hand what D&DH subscribers have been telling me for years: It's always windy in Kansas! I also witnessed that wind does not affect deer in this environment as it does elsewhere. Deer are used to the wind ... so much so that they move around their habitat much like deer would here in the Midwest -- even when it's blowing 25 mph or more. We scored on a very nice 8-pointer during an afternoon hunt that saw us hunting out of a haybale blind overlooking an alfalfa field. The tending phase of the rut was in high gear, and we witnessed that when the buck came out of a nearby river-bottom hot on the heels of an estrous doe. One shot from my 7 mm Mag dropped the buck in his tracks at just over 100 yards. Chris caught all of the exciting action on video, which will be featured in an upcoming epsiode of D&DH-TV for 2008. Check this blog for more details in the coming months. We still have some hunting left to do here in WI, and the entire D&DH staff will be in Alabama for a hunt for the Southern rut in mid-January. --Dan Schmidt 
Wednesday, December 05, 2007 3:20:33 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Tuesday, November 27, 2007
Now Available!
Posted by DDH Staff
Deer & Deer Hunting 2007 Collection CD
This new, easy-to-navigate searchable CD gives you instant access to all nine 2007 issues of Deer & Deer Hunting magazine. Here's a sample of what you'll find:
- Easy navigation to specific articles – clicking on the cover line or title in the table of contents takes you directly to the story you want.
- All files are fully searchable so you can find the specific article you are looking for.
Special Features- 30th Anniversary Collector's Edition Issue
- Clash of the Titans
- Muzzleloading's 6 Biggest Mysteries
- 25 Tree Stand Tips for Shotgunners
- How to Hunt Skinny Trees
- Why Antlers Don't Grow
- 15 Postseason Scouting Tips
- Bowhunting's 5 Most Common Mistakes
- The Key to Hunting Marginal Habitat
- How to Find and Hunt Hot Oaks
- 7 Tips for Hunting the Pre-Rut
- How to Hunt Bucks Where Does Bed
- Are Some Bucks Unkillable?
- How to Hang Killer Stands
- Top Tips for Better Decoying
- Scout Smarter with Cameras
- How to Hunt Forests & Deep Woods
- The Rut's Biggest Myths
- 7 Ways to Dupe a Rutting Buck
- Hunting's Most Important Half-Inch
- Blood-Trailing's 3 Toughest Trails
- 6 Simple Steps to Better Deer Mounts
- 3 Ways to Fill Your Tag on Opening Day
- How to Harvest Does & Not Spook Bucks
- 5 Reasons Why Your Gun Won't Shoot Straight
- Why the Biggest Bucks Aren't Always Our Best
- And Much More!
Buy Now
Tuesday, November 27, 2007 2:18:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, November 26, 2007
Dan's Report for 11/26
Posted by DDH Staff
Just returned from a week-long vacation deer hunt here in Wisconsin (our annual gun season). The conditions were near perfect, with morning temperatures in the high 20s/ low 30s and daytime highs just cresting 40. A rather slow opening morning turned into one to remember very quickly. Situated high in a red oak, I was scanning a clearing when the sound of crunching leaves caught my attention at about 7 a.m. I look up and spied a mature doe sprinting wildly through the woods. She stopped every 10 yards or so to urinate and check her back trail. That's when I noticed a second deer! I could almost immediately see his antlers when he was still 100 yards out. The buck closed so fast that I merely confirmed he was mature before getting ready for a possible shot. That didn't take long. I would like to say that the hunt ended that quickly, but it didn't. At the shot, the buck ran out of sight and crossed a property line. However, all is well that ends well. The kind property owner graciously allowed me and my hunting party to enter his land to trail my deer. We found the deer within 75 yards of the property line. The 13-pointer features 11-inch G-2s and G-3s, 6- and 9-inch brow tines and three 2-inch stickers at the bases. He grosses in the high 150s. The rut was still in full swing in our area, with mature bucks actively pursuing does. It appears that the D&DH Calendar predictions were about as dead-on as could be expected. Lots of season to go! I will be heading to Kansas next ... after trying to fill a few more doe tags here at home, of course! --Dan Schmidt 
Monday, November 26, 2007 6:32:37 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, November 19, 2007
Brad's Report
Posted by DDH Staff
Opening-Day Buck
This year, gun season held a lot more excitement than normal because it was my 12-year-old daughter Cassie’s first year of gun-hunting. We had gone out during the early youth season and actually had a couple of really nice bucks in range, but things just didn’t work out.
Before I relay the story, I have to give you some information. I’ve taken all three of my children hunting for the past several years, and we always sit in the same heated box blind. I’ve taken some does with them but never a buck; not because we don’t see any, but more because I’ve always passed on them and waited for something really special.
This year, the children’s excitement was at an all-time high because they knew they would see a buck get shot if the opportunity arose. I knew they were excited when they sprang out of bed at 4:30 a.m., and by 5:10 a.m., we were sitting in the tower blind. The children were playing their Game Boys waiting for it to get light.
When they heard the first shot, they started scanning for deer. It wasn’t long before my 7-year-old son, Noah, said he saw a buck coming out. Sure enough, out walked a 10-pointer about 40 yards from the blind. We all needed to shift positions, and in the time it took for Cassie to get ready for a shot, the deer had walked out and was quartering away at a sharp angle. All she could see in the scope was the deer’s rump, so I told her to wait for a broadside shot. Something spooked the buck, and he turned and ran back toward the woods. I grunted twice and actually tried to whistle him to a stop, but to no avail. He kept running.
After the deer was out of sight, you could see the disappointment on the faces of my children especially Cassie’s. I told her there would be another deer, and that I thought I had seen a pretty good buck coming our way from the east. Just like clockwork, there he was. He was headed on a beeline directly to the stand.
I grabbed the DDH TV camera and start rolling film of the buck. I expected him to hit the food plot and turn right, and that Cassie would be able to shoot him right after he turned. However, the deer had other plans. He came in and turned left, which meant Cassie would need to shoot him out of the other window. I told her to switch positions, and I opened the window with my left hand. She positioned for the shot while I tried to find the deer in the viewfinder with one hand. I just got on the deer and started to focus when she shot, and I taped the deer running away.
The buck ran about 40 yards and stopped. I handed the camera to Noah and then reloaded the single-shot rifle for a second shot. By the time the gun was loaded, the deer had vanished. I thought he had probably gone down right there, so I told Cassie, “I think you got him.”
You can imagine the joy, but just a couple of minutes later, I saw a buck about the same size walk from our direction onto an oak ridge 400 yards away. My heart sank because I thought it was the same deer. I checked him out in the spotting scope and couldn’t see a mark on him. The only thing to do was get down and look for blood. Cassie wanted to because it was her deer, so I let her go down. She walked down the lane and didn’t see anything, so I handed the camera to my 9-year-old daughter, Jordan, and told her to keep it on Cassie. Then, I went down to help.
I was just putting my heavy coat on when Jordan yelled, “Cassie found him.” I looked out the window and saw her jumping up and down. We all piled out of the blind to look at the buck.
As soon as she saw us walking out of the blind, Cassie ran to me and gave me a big hug. That feeling was by far the best I’ve ever had in the deer woods. It was a great deer, and Cassie had made a perfect shot.
Later that day, Cassie also got a mature doe with another well-placed shot. It was a perfect ending to the first day of the season. She even said she might want to bow-hunting.
Only time will tell. I’m just glad to have another hunter in the family.
Monday, November 19, 2007 7:51:12 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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