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 Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Graphic Images of Truck-Deer Collision
Posted by DDH Staff
Warning: What follows are graphic images of a truck-deer collision. If you are offended by images of this nature, we encourage you to use the back button on your browser before proceeding down. These photos depict just how dangerous deer-vehicle collisions can be. While no one was hurt in this incident, one can see from the damage done just how fortunate both driver and passenger were in this situation. The same cannot be said for the deer. Here's the description accompanying the photos: DEER HUNTING THE OLE FASHION WAY ... They were traveling in southern Arkansas, between Mena and DeQueen. Oncoming car clipped a deer and sent it straight up into the air. The deer came down head-first into Clayton's brand new truck. The deer's head went thru the front windshield, cutting the head (plus some) off, and landed in Jill's lap. The body of the deer flipped up, smashed in the top of the truck, and landed in the bed. Clayton couldn't see Jill from his side, because the top of the truck was smashed in so horribly. He got out of the truck, went around, and opened the door on her side...only to start flipping out, because she was literally drenched in blood. However, neither one of them were hurt. Her parents were following in a separate vehicle and didn't see it happen...but drove up on it right afterward. I can't imagine what they were thinking!       
Wednesday, November 05, 2008 3:03:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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Bad Boy Buggies Director Takes Bad Boy Buck
Posted by DDH Staff
 Tim Herald, director of marketing for Bad Boy Buggies, shot this incredible whitetail in Saskatchewan while hunting with Safari River Outdoors last week. “I really misjudged this deer - but in a good way,” Tim said. “He gross scored 178 and change. He is a typical 10-point frame with both G-2's split along with a split brow tine. He has 45 inches of mass and 24" beams. I am very much humbled by this incredible animal.” Congratulations, Tim!
Wednesday, November 05, 2008 2:40:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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Deer Break Into Nebraska Homes
Posted by DDH Staff
A news report outlined two recent stories involving deer breaking and entering into two Nebraska homes. "Monnie and Harvey Maske, 4630 Van Dorn St., say they came home from
church on Sunday to find their home in shambles. There was broken
glass, furniture knocked over and blood everywhere.
Monnie Maske says they thought someone had trashed their home until
they found a set of antlers outside a broken picture window in the
living room.
About three miles away near 69th and La Salle streets, another homeowner reported a deer had crashed into his basement window.
Police tried to track the deer, but had no luck." Source: JournalStar.com
Wednesday, November 05, 2008 2:36:42 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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Wheelchair No Impediment To Taking Trophy
Posted by DDH Staff
 We were contacted recently by Jason Dorshorst, of Plover, Wisconsin, with a photo of a very nice buck taken from a ground blind. The buck was shot just north of Iola, Wisconsin. The remarkable thing about this hunt wasn't the deer -- though it is a very good buck with 11 points, weighing 200 pounds and rough scoring 155 gross (151 net) with a 23-inch inside spread. No, what's remarkable was the hunter: That's because Dorshorst -- who was injured in a motorcycle accident and became a paraplegic -- was hunting at ground level, in a blind, from his wheelchair. Taking big bucks can be challenging enough, but few can understand the unique challenges Dorshorst has overcome to stay in the game and successfully take trophy deer. Great job, Jason.
Wednesday, November 05, 2008 2:29:26 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, November 03, 2008
Did Decker Take The New World Record Typical?
Posted by DDH Staff
 On Nov. 1, Bob Decker, of Eau Claire, Wis., killed what was possibly the most famous whitetail in North America.
The buck was filmed earlier this year near Mondovi, Wis., and the video
was released on Field and Stream's Web site. Whitetail authorities
across the country immediately began to debate whether the giant
whitetail could be a walking world record — larger than Milo Hansen's
huge Canadian typical.
Decker knew the buck was filmed near his lease, but he never imagined
he would kill the monster whitetail. But at 9:30 a.m., the huge buck
appeared 40 yards from his stand.
According to Jack Dodge, the taxidermist who will mount Decker's
amazing buck, Decker didn't even realize the buck was the same deer he
had seen on the internet.
"He thought it was a big 10-pointer," Dodge said. "He was turned the wrong way and had to turn around to get a shot at him."
Decker made the shot, though, as the buck passed directly under his stand.
According to Dodge, the giant buck has a 14-point main frame and a
total of 16 points. Dodge aged the deer at just 31/2 years old. The
buck field dressed at 200 pounds.
"It has incredible tine length but not a lot of brow-tine length,"
Dodge said. "We'll have to see what it comes out at, but it is an
amazing buck, and it couldn't have been killed by a nicer guy."
For more on Decker's hunt and pictures of the buck, visit the story online at the Eau Claire Leader Telegram.
Monday, November 03, 2008 5:51:17 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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D&DH Web Pro Staffer Scores with Rage
Posted by DDH Staff
 Submitted by D&DH Web Pro Staffer Jerry Ciuk: I went out to the woods at 3:34 and was in my stand well before 4pm on Thursday, the 30th of Oct. At 6:06 pm, the buck came walking in from the south; he was headed down a trail that went into a bedding area. He stepped right into my shooting lane and I made a great shot on him. He ran 21 yards before falling over. I was using the Rage 2-blade broadheads and was very pleased with the result. After getting the deer home I took a tape measure and put it on the hole: over 3 inches! Hours and hours of sitting on a stand paid off for a hunter who gave his all that night. Jerry Ciuk Michigan Web Pro Staff
Monday, November 03, 2008 3:03:26 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Thursday, October 30, 2008
Deer-Car Collisions on the Increase
Posted by DDH Staff
As the chasing phase of the rut approaches, motorists need to be on the lookout for deer on the move. But a new study released says, in addition to seasonal increases in deer activity due to breeding, urban sprawl accounts for an even greater factor contributing to incidents. "Fatalities from vehicle crashes with deer and other animals have
more than doubled over the last 15 years, according to a new study by
an auto insurance-funded highway safety group that cites urban sprawl
overlapping into deer habitat," the recent story in the washingtonpost.com revealed.
"The report by the Highway Loss Data Institute found that 223 people
died in animal-vehicle crashes last year, up from 150 in 2000 and 101
in 1993.
Since 1993, Texas had the most deaths from such crashes, with 227, followed by Wisconsin with 123 and Pennsylvania with 112.
'Urban sprawl means suburbia and deer habitat intersect in many parts
of the country,' said Kim Hazelbaker, the Highway Loss Data Institute's
senior vice president. 'If you're driving in areas where deer are
prevalent, the caution flag is out, especially in November.'
The study found that insurance claims for crashes with animals is
three times higher in November than it is from January to September.
'The months with the most crash deaths coincide with fall breeding
season,' said Anne McCartt, the Insurance Institute for Highway
Safety's senior vice president for research.
The Governors Highway Safety Association cautioned that the numbers
need to be looked at in context, citing the more than 12,000 drunk
driving deaths each year.
'Deer crashes are a small highway safety problem in terms of total
deaths,' said the group's spokesman, Jonathan Adkins. 'This problem is
perceived to be a lot more common than the reality.'
Adkins said there are no proven countermeasures, other than fencing,
"which is extremely expensive and not practical. Our message to
motorists is to slow down, particularly at dusk and on rural roads."
In a 2004 study, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety found that
fencing, combined with underpasses and overpasses, can be an effective
way to prevent deer-vehicles crashes.
As to the size of the problem, McCartt said, 'I agree that the
number doesn't compare to the number of people killed in
alcohol-related crashes, but it is going up. We're not suggesting it's
of the same magnitude, but they do result in injuries and death.'
The overall number of animal-vehicle crashes is also on the rise.
The report says that State Farm Insurance Co., the nation's largest car
insurer, has estimated 1.2 million claims industrywide for crashes with
animals over a 12-month period ending June 30 of this year. State Farm
says that claims for those types of crashes have increased nearly 15
percent over the last five years."
Thursday, October 30, 2008 7:45:28 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Trackers Take D&DH Advice to Recover Deer
Posted by DDH Staff
Bloggers at Born-to-Track News & Views relayed a story of two D&DH readers who read about the use of dogs -- german Daschunds to be exact -- to track deer. The hunters needed help tracking a deer after they'd exhausted all efforts to recover it and came up short this past weekend. After reading the D&DH story, they did some tracking of their own to locate one of the deer trackers cited in the article. They found Kevin Armstrong and his dog Karma. What follows is Armstrong's report: "We found this deer 87 hours after it was hit! The hunter hit the
deer last Friday (10-24-08) and gave it up for lost on Saturday. Over
the weekend he read about tracking dogs in Deer & Deer Hunting magazine.
Through contact information in the magazine he managed to get the call
narrowed down to me. Tuesday morning I left at daylight in a hard cold
rain with little hope of recovering the deer nearly 4 days after the
hit. The hunter was sure he had a body hit and he was willing to tag
the deer if we found it. It took 2.5 hours of cold trailing, then area
search and wind whiffing. Our adventure included an unplanned dip in
the Clyde River but what the heck. Anyone crazy enough to take up a 4
day old trail is crazy enough to ... well. Long story short, we found
him. Hunter, human tracker, and K9 tracker are all cold, wet, and
tired. None of us could be happier!
Happy trails!
Kevin & Karma "
Wednesday, October 29, 2008 1:50:45 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Deer Hunters Kill Bear in Self-Defense
Posted by DDH Staff
Two Kentucky deer hunters have been cleared of charges after they shot and killed a 250-pound male black bear. A story in chatanooga.com revealed the bear may have only been curious, but given its unusual behavior the hunters had only a split-second to make a decision. The decision they made was to err on the safe side — that's when they pulled the trigger: "...investigators have ruled that the hunter was justified shooting the
animal in self defense after the animal came too close to his hunting
blind last Saturday morning.
Kentucky Fish and Wildlife Conservation Officer Shane Amburgey
said, 'The bear came right to his blind and almost stuck his head
inside when he shot it. We found blood from the bear within a foot of
the blind.'
No charges were filed in the case.
Another hunter at the scene, 31-year-old James Forester of
Cumberland, shot the bear a second time, in an attempt to protect his
friend. Investigators found the dead 250-pound male black bear
approximately 700-800 yards away. The incident occurred around 9 a.m.
Oct. 18 on Black Mountain, located near Gap Branch in northeastern
Harlan County.
Wildlife Biologist Steven Dobey, black bear program coordinator
for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources, said bears
rarely approach people in such a direct manner unless they smell food.
Amburgey said Koger did not have food inside the blind with him.
'It is likely this bear was investigating the blind out of pure curiosity,' Dobey said.
Koger told investigators that he initially saw two bears in the
clearing that he was hunting. Koger said one of the bears started
trotting toward him when he started yelling at Forester, who was asleep
at a gas well approximately 50 yards away, according to Koger's
statement.
Koger said he started yelling at the bear, but it did not stop
coming. Koger told investigators he shot the bear from 3 feet away.
Forester told Amburgey that the bear came back to its feet after the
shot and tried to get inside the blind. Forester said he shot the bear
and it ran away. The second bear did not approach the hunters.
'The fact that yelling did not deter the bear from approaching the
blind suggests it likely did not recognize the concealed hunter as a
person,' Dobey said. 'Given the location of the incident, however, it
is also possible this bear had lost its fear of people.'
Dobey noted that the bear was shot less than a mile from an open
dumpster site where bears have been feeding throughout the summer.
Kentucky Fish and Wildlife officials suspect people have been feeding
the bears as well, causing the animals to lose their fear of humans.
'This is a perfect example of how irresponsible actions of people
in one area create problems for people in another area,' he said."
Tuesday, October 28, 2008 1:44:17 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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 Monday, October 27, 2008
Simonis Takes First Deer During Antlerless Hunt
Posted by DDH Staff
12-year-old Coryn Simonis, of Rosholt, Wisconsin, took her first deer recently -- a whitetail doe -- during Wisconsin's special antlerless deer hunt. It's great to see so many young hunters having success and getting excited about deer hunting. Congrats from all of us at Deer & Deer Hunting, Coryn! 
Monday, October 27, 2008 6:29:48 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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