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 Monday, May 19, 2008
Dramatic Browse Line in Upper Michigan
Posted by DDH Staff
An untrained eye's first glance at the following photo might elicit a response of, "Huh, that's cool." To a trained eye, however, the image is a stark reminder of a bad situation for both deer and their habitat. You will be hard-pressed to find a more dramatic example of a deer browse line than the one shown in the following photo. Turkey & Turkey Hunting Editor Jim Schlender snapped this photo while chasing gobblers in Upper Michigan this past weekend. The image not only underscores the reason why Northern cedar stands are on the brink of extinction, it serves as an indication of deer overabundance. Overpopulated Northern deer herds simply will not allow cedar regeneration, especially white cedar. Browse lines become this prominent over time when deer do not have access to other quality foods in winter, or they are drawn to an area where heavy baiting and feeding is prevalent. Although cedar is not a quality deer food, whitetails obliterate it because provides a lot of roughage. Dan Schmidt, Editor
Monday, May 19, 2008 4:41:32 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, May 16, 2008
$5,000 Reward Offered for Return of Stolen Mount
Posted by DDH Staff
The fall of 2003 was 16-year old Brian Andrews first year to go bow-hunting. The only problem was he didn’t own a bow. Not to let that stop him, Brian borrowed some outdated archery gear from his sister’s boyfriend and started practicing.
 Around 4:30 pm on November 13th, after numerous unsuccessful hunts, Brian arrowed a 26-point Buchanan County, Iowa record breaking whitetail. The enormous buck B&C net scored 253-1/8 making it the new non-typical state record and the world’s No. 2 bow-taken whitetail that year.
Between 8:00 and 10:00 pm on Thursday, June 18, 2004 Brian’s buck was stolen from the Andrews home.
Almost 4 years later Brian’s trophy of a lifetime still has not been found and no arrests have been made. To this day, Brian still can’t understand why someone would want to steal the buck he shot and was so important to him. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime deer and irreplaceable,” Andrews said.
Outdoor writer Les Davenport, who has been investigating the theft of the Brian Andrews Buck along with several other ongoing thefts of Iowa trophy whitetails, contacted Bass Pro Shops to see if they would be interested in putting up a reward to help Brian get his deer back. “Bass Pro Shops listened to my story about this young man’s deer and without much hesitation agreed to offer a $5,000 Bass Pro Shops gift card to anyone with information leading to the return of Brian’s buck and the arrest and conviction of the person or persons who stole it,” stated Davenport. “Bass Pro Shops is also going to outfit Brian for this year’s bow season.”
The Andrews family and the Buchanan Wildlife Association are also offering a $5,000 cash reward for the same results.
“It is our hope that by doing this, someone will come forward with information that will finally get Brian’s buck back where it belongs”, commented Bass Pro Shops Communications Manager Larry Whiteley. “Maybe with Les bringing attention to all the other stolen Iowa bucks too, it will help get some of these other magnificent animals back to their rightful owners.”
Other thefts of Iowa trophy whitetails in 2003 included the Deaton buck with a 198 1/8-inch mainframe from the Columbus Junction area, and Jack Bell’s 235 7/8-inch non-typical. In September 2005, eight whitetail mounts were stolen from the cabin of Leroy Brinks near La Porte City. More recent robberies include a 192-inch non-typical stolen from Jim Nagle of Evansdale and in March of this year Jamie Aikey of Waterloo had a 16-point non-typical stolen from his business. Aikey, Deaton, and Bell are all offering a $5,000 cash reward for the return of their trophies and the arrest and conviction of those responsible.
If you have any information or knowledge of the whereabouts of Brian’s buck contact the Buchanan County Sheriffs Department in Independence, Iowa at 319-334-2567. If you have information on any other stolen Iowa whitetail mounts, please contact the Iowa State Police at 515-725-6090.
Friday, May 16, 2008 7:17:45 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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Survey: Rifles are Tops with Deer Hunters
Posted by DDH Staff
Centerfire rifles were the most popular choice for deer hunters during the past season, according to a recent national survey. An April 2008 survey by Southwick Associates of 3,700 deer hunters nationwide showed that 28 percent of those who pursued America’s top big-game quarry used rifles to harvest their deer. Bows were the second most popular choice, used for deer hunting by 21 percent of survey respondents last season. Muzzleloaders, the choice of 18 percent of hunters surveyed, were not far behind. Fewer hunters used shotguns (15 percent) or handguns (5 percent). In some areas, especially more densely populated regions, rifle hunting is not allowed, so hunters must use a shotgun, bow, or muzzleloader to harvest their deer. Another 12 percent of survey respondents reported that they did not hunt deer at all last season; and 1 percent listed their top weapon choice as “other.” Deer hunters were asked to select their top choice of weapon, in order to allow the survey takers to account for hunters who participate in multiple deer seasons—for example, general gun, bow, and muzzleloader. Source: Rob Southwick at HunterSurvey.com. #
Friday, May 16, 2008 1:20:15 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Tuesday, May 13, 2008
First Look
Posted by DDH Staff
Posted by Jacob Edson, D&DH associate editor Last week Deer & Deer Hunting publisher Brad Rucks and I attended the first-ever Industry Bow-hunting Round Table hosted by Media Direct. The event offered a select group of media members the chance to meet with some of the largest manufacturers of bow-hunting equipment to learn about their newest products and even test those items out. The following are a few highlights from  the three-day event. This is just a tiny taste: For a complete guide to the hottest new products of the season check out the Deer & Deer Hunting Equipment Annual available July 15. One of the most exciting new products we tried is the X-Force Dream Season Bow from PSE. The new bow features all the features and performance of the X-Force (including a blistering IBO speed of 340 fps) with a forgiving 7-inch brace height. The extreme speed not only creates more arrow energy, it produces a flatter trajectory that forgives some error in range estimation. Another exciting release is from Carbon Express. The new Aramid KV arrows are made with a layer of Kevlar and are Carbon Express’ strongest shafts to date. We got a chance to shoot the arrows into a concrete barrier, and I was wowed by their durability. However, it was the extreme high-speed footage that demonstrated how the Built-in Weight Forward design stabilizes the arrow in flight that really blew my socks off. For those of you who would like to see it, Carbon Express will be offering a DVD to dealers later this summer.   Tanja Washburn, of New Archery Products, brought along the Nightmare broadhead for review. The offset blades and Trivex point offer increased accuracy, but also promise gaping entry and exit wounds. Washburn also gave the attendees a “sneak peak” of a new broadhead set to debut in August. All I can say is watch for this head in later issues of D&DH, you will be impressed.  Finally, one of the coolest new products we got to try out was the Epic video recorder by Stealth Cam. This tiny camera can be mounted virtually anywhere and provides VGA quality resolution and SD compatible memory with up to 200 minutes of video at 30 frames per second. The camera will retail for less than $200 and can be mounted to a bow, gun, tree stand, hat or just about anything else.
Tuesday, May 13, 2008 2:44:47 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, May 12, 2008
Estrous Does Are Mute, but Bucks Still Respond to Calls
Posted by DDH Staff
White-tailed deer behaviorists and those who raise deer for research purposes mostly agree that white-tailed does are typically not that vocal during the rut. In fact, in their reports in Deer & Deer Huning over the past 30 years, many of the top behavorists and researchers have stated that does are most vocal during the fawning season. Dr. Leonard Lee Rue III was possibly the first behaviorist to document this whitetail tendency, noting how does make a soft, cat-like mewing sound when they call for their hidden fawns. While photographing whitetails in the 1950s, Rue noted how fawns, after hearing a doe’s bleats, jumped to their feet and went to their mothers to nurse. Despite a doe’s mute tendencies in autumn, both Rue and Charles Alsheimer agree that bleat calls (tubes and cans) are extremely effective for attracting adult deer during fall hunting seasons. These seemingly contradictory observations bring rise to an interesting question: Are all whitetails trained at birth to respond to doe bleats? We might never know, but we do know that calling elicits a definite and pronounced response in deer. To learn more, check out my new article, "Bleat Performance," in the September issue of the magazine. It hits newsstands on June 24. Dan Schmidt, Editor
Monday, May 12, 2008 1:33:51 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Monday, May 05, 2008
A Sign of the Times?
Posted by DDH Staff
 Attached is a picture of a deer I have seen on my way to work every day for the past month. I grew up knowing that if I asked someone nicely, I could hunt or fish on their property. One deer season many years ago, I was driving home from a morning hunt when I spotted a nice buck and several does about 200 yards into a field. I took the next gravel road off the highway and knocked on the door of the first house I came to. An older lady and her son answered the door. I told them about the deer I had spotted and asked if I could go in after him. They said go ahead, but watch out for the cattle back there. I drove back toward the highway, parked in a field entrance, grabbed my rifle and started sneaking back toward the area where the deer had been. I was about 2 or 3 hundred yards from the truck when I spotted white flags bouncing over a hilltop. I thought I had lost my chance but something caught my eye, antlers. The buck was still standing but I could only see his head and antlers when he raised them to check the situation. I could get no closer than I was, and a head shot was all I had. I was prone and had a good steady rest with my .270 and took the shot. He was out of sight, but I couldn't tell if he ran or was down. After walking to the sight I fount that he was not just beyond a ridge, but standing at the edge of a washout. He was now laying in the bottom of a steep muddy gully. I grabbed his antlers to take a look and he came back to life. I jumped back and the buck began lungeing like a horse does when it tries to get up. After several tries I thought he was going to get up so I shot him again, and that killed him quickly. After checking him out I found the first shot had left a bare streak up the flat spot on his head, right between the antlers. It had knocked him out. It was quite a chore to get him up out of that gully.I took the deer back to the landowners house to show them and thank them, and they were more excited than I was. The old woman was acting like a kid that had just taken the deer herself. Just before Christmas that year I dropped by their house and gave them some sticks of summer sausage and the excitement started all over again. That was a long time ago, and I bet there are very few folks that would let a complete stranger hunt like that anymore. The grandkids inherit the farm, don't know how to run it or are just too lazy, and they sell it to hunting clubs.This "business" of hunting leases, and landowners becoming more concerned about liability is going to be the death of hunting as I know it, and it is a crying shame. I live in the country but do not own enough land to hunt. Fortunatly, I have good relations with some neighbors that own lots of good hunting ground. They let me hunt, and I keep and eye on their ground, clean up the trees that fall into the fields after high winds or ice, and give them some deer meat. No money ever changes hands, and thats the way it should be. Robert Rowland A long-time D&DH reader from northwest Missouri
Monday, May 05, 2008 8:11:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Friday, May 02, 2008
States Might Adopt Shed Hunting Seasons
Posted by DDH Staff
Talk about a few bad apples spoiling the bushel. Thanks to the actions of some hooligans, Nevada, Montana, Wyoming and Idaho are considering enacting laws and seasons on the gathering of shed antlers from deer and elk. According to published reports, wildlife officials from those states have seen an increase in activity from individuals who harass deer and elk in efforts to get them to shed their antlers prematurely. For example, in April, Nevada game officials apprehended a man who used an ATV to chase mule deer through sagebrush in attempts to get them to drop their antlers. Montana has been dealing with this problem for several years, and has already implemented closed seasons on shed hunting in certain parts of its elk range. Fines for harassing deer and elk in that state can range up to $500 per violation. Other reports include violations in Idaho where shed hunters were using off-road motorcycle to chase animals. A date-specific shed-hunting season? Now I think I've heard it all. --Dan Schmidt, Editor
Friday, May 02, 2008 8:33:31 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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Questions & Answers About Doe Harvests
Posted by DDH Staff
One of the most questions we get here at D&DH is, "How many does should I harvest from my property each year?"
That's a great question, to which there are no easy answers. However, through some of the research provided by our longtime contributing editors, we have formulated some guidelines that are just that ... guidelines for the art of proactive deer management.
Before setting an antlerless harvest goal on your property, you need to know what type of habitat you have. Is it prolific, mediocre or poor? What type of deer density do you already have? These questions can really only be answered accurately by your local state-employed deer biologist.
If you own or manage more than 500 acres, I would strongly suggest contacting someone from your state agency. Ask them to visit you on their next tour through your area and survey your property. Most guys will be happy to do it, especially if it's at their discretion and if it's going to help with the area's overall deer management program. However, if you are like most D&DH readers and own/manage less than 250 acres, here is a rough guideline of how to estimate and then formulate your own plan.
If your land is prolific (50+ deer per square mile, which is common nowadays--too high but common) and the habitat is excellent, a good range to shoot for is a harvest of two or three adult does per 100 acres. You could add one or two doe fawns to the harvest and not really effect things too much. If you take out more adult does, you run the risk of severely affecting the local herd dynamics. It's important to remember that adult does have smaller home ranges than bucks, and the fact that does live in maternally related groups with overlapping home ranges.
Is it possible to "overshoot" a doe herd? Yes. However, to get a good handle on this potential problem, you need to have a firm grasp on what your neighbors are doing. If they aren't shooting does, you might have to ramp up your efforts. If they are shooting does (and the habitat is at or under density goals), err on the side of taking out one adult doe per 100 acres and two or three doe fawns.
What about buck fawns? Don't worry about it. You are bound to have some in your harvest. The national average is about 22 percent in the annual harvest. No big deal, and absolutely no effect on buck populations in areas with high deer densities. If your goal is to produce a healthier herd and better buck population, a few buck fawns in the harvest is the collateral damage that's necessary for achieving the end result. To help prevent buck fawns from harvest, use a pair of quality binoculars when hunting. However, don't get bent out of shape if mistakes are made. Those buck fawns will be long gone from your property through dispersal by the time their 18 months old anyway.
We will have more on these topics in the coming issues of D&DH.
Dan Schmidt, Editor
Friday, May 02, 2008 1:54:48 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Thursday, May 01, 2008
Virginia Rewrites Record Books
Posted by DDH Staff
Virginia’s harvest of 240,000 whitetails last year not only represented a 7 percent jump over the 2006 season. “This was clearly our highest recorded harvest,” said Nelson Lafon, deer project coordinator for the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries (DGIF), in The News & Advance. In fact, the 2007 take was 13 percent above the annual median total for the past decade! As The News & Advance noted, DGIF has made a concerted effort to push up the doe harvest in recent years, liberalizing seasons and available tags. “Doe kills also outnumbered those of antlered bucks for the first time since the check system started, Lafon said. There were roughly 500 more killed this past year.” DGIF has also targeted urban deer populations. “[C]onflicts with deer in urban areas have risen in recent years, Lafon said. They come to these spots to find sanctuary, he said. Since 2003, he said nearly 20 cities and towns, including Lynchburg, have taken part in an archery program that allows hunters to target them in urban areas without violating laws that prohibit firearms. Bow kills climbed 1 percent this past season and crossbow kills, which became legal for all deer hunters three years ago, increased 21 percent.” — Brian McCombie, deeranddeerhunting.com contributor
Thursday, May 01, 2008 2:10:15 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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 Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Tips for Planting Pines
Posted by DDH Staff
Although red pines aren't exactly the tree of choice when it comes to providing deer habitat, they do provide hiding cover extremely fast, and their are quite easy to get established. I have dabbled with planting a very small amount of red pines (75) this spring and have learned some tips that might assist you as well. The key to planting any types of pines (or spruce, or cedar, or fir) is to remove weed competition near the planting site. On large scales, planting sites need to be cultivated or sprayed a year or more in advance. On smaller scales (like mine), this can be done by scalping the sod in a square-foot area. Position the seedling and backfill. Tamp the soil firmly to remove air pockets. An added boost would be to add wood mulch around the perimeter (eventual drip line). Be sure to keep the mulch at least 4 inches away from tree trunk. If it's too close, it can heat up the soil stress the tree in summer (even kill it). Mulching is usually not an option for large-scale plantings, but the trees will eventually take root and outgrow the competition. It just takes a bit longer. To provide maximum growth and dense cover, space the trees 6 feet apart in rows and space the rows 8 feet apart. There are numerous diseases pines can contract. For more information on those, click here. Dan Schmidt, Editor
Wednesday, April 30, 2008 1:48:25 PM (GMT Daylight Time, UTC+01:00)
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