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 Friday, August 29, 2008
If Trees Could Talk
Posted by DDH Staff
I attached a picture of a really old tree stand just off the trail I walk on to get out to where I hunt. I have a few of these on the property that I hunt, there's just something about these old stands that catches my eye. Seeing them always makes me imagine what it was like back in the day for the hunter that used that stand. It's not like they're just a few years old, they're 20, 30 years old, or older. I can't put my thumb on exactly why I like those old stands, I just do. But I also know how dangerous they must have been ... and still are! Chris Kleist, D&DH Web Pro Staff, Wisconsin
8/29/2008 9:31:35 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, August 28, 2008
Are you ready?
Posted by DDH Staff
I just realized archery season opens tomorrow in North Dakota, and I see Manitoba started Monday! I wonder how many velvet-racked monsters have already hit the ground? We still have a little more than two weeks to go here in Wisconsin. How long do you have to wait?  D&DH Managing Editor Jacob Edson
8/28/2008 1:55:36 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Guess Who's Walking the Line?
Posted by DDH Staff
D&DH Publisher Brad Rucks discovered he has a very large neighbor cruising his property lines last week. This photo confirmed the roamer’s identity. 
8/28/2008 10:51:08 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Graphic Video: Squad Car Hits Deer
Posted by DDH Staff
Graphic Video: Squad Car Hits Deer Although this video clip is not for the weak of stomach, it is a stunning example of the serious consequences motorists face when driving too fast through whitetail country at night. We do not know where this was filmed, but it does appear to be taken from a dash-mounted camera in a police patrol vehicle.
GraphicVideo.wmv (2.02 MB)
8/28/2008 9:35:48 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, August 27, 2008
City Enlists Bowhunters to Curb Herd
Posted by DDH Staff
8/27/2008 3:50:15 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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The South's Best Deerslayers?
Posted by DDH Staff
When it comes to Southern hospitality, nothing beats the state of Georgia when
it comes to whitetail hunting. The state not only boasts a robust deer herd, its
hunting quality is second to none. Some interesting stats just revealed by the
state’s game department are beyond impressive. For example, the average Georgia
deer hunter in kills 1.5 deer per season, and it takes the average hunter just
14 days to get a deer. This is incredible when compared to 1980 when the state’s
average deer hunter killed 0.4 deer per year, and it took the average hunter 31
days to harvest a deer. While some hunters pine for the “good ol’ days,” I’d
have to offer that those days are here and now. Dan Schmidt, D&DH
Editor
8/27/2008 10:39:03 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Deer Densities Usually Measured Twice
Posted by DDH Staff
One question I receive a lot here at the office pertains to deer densities.
Although most hunters understand that deer population estimates are important
for managing herds, some do not realize that states often have two periods for
estimating their herd sizes. Deer population studies are often conducted for a
fall or prehunt estimate and an overwinter or posthunt estimate. Posthunt
population estimates are annually compared to the deer population goal for each
deer management unit as a basis for annual adjustments of antlerless harvest
quotas. Population goals and density estimates are usually expressed as deer per
square mile of deer range. These densities vary widely depending on region.
However, a general rule of thumb is that a posthunt population exceeding 40 deer
per square mile of deer habitat is considered to be at or above
goals. Dan Schmidt, D&DH Editor
8/27/2008 10:38:27 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, August 26, 2008
Deer: Geomagnetically Polarized Browsers
Posted by DDH Staff
Want a broadside shot at a feeding deer? Scientists say you should face east or west. German and Czech researchers have found that when grazing or resting, cattle and deer tend to point their bodies toward Earth's magnetic poles. While the research probably applies more to grazers, such as cows and elk, than browsers like deer who walk while feeding, it's something to keep in mind next time you're setting up a stand over a bean field or clover plot. http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=cattle-deer-sense-magnetic-field
8/26/2008 12:06:52 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Hunters Given Incentive to Shoot More Does
Posted by DDH Staff
Today’s feel-good deer story comes from Ohio where the DNR and the Farmers and Hunters Feeding the Hungry group have teamed up to encourage hunters to shoot more does this fall. The state has provided a $100,000 subsidy grant to FHFH to help pay the processing fee on donated venison. The grant money is being provided in two $50,000 allotments that are to be matched with funds generated or collected by FHFH. "By providing hunters with an affordable outlet for donating extra venison, the division hopes to ultimately encourage hunters to kill more does,” stated James Marshall, assistant chief of the Division of Wildlife. Finding ways to kill more does will help wildlife managers keep Ohio's deer population management plan on track. Deer hunters can again buy additional antlerless deer permits at reduced prices for the 2008-09 deer-hunting season. Cost of the antlerless deer permit remains at $15. Now over a decade old, FHFH has grown to include 120 local coordinators in 26 different states. Annual meat donation totals have topped 300,000 pounds-enough to provide meat for over 1.2 million meals-and are expected to increase even further in the coming years.
8/26/2008 10:21:13 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, August 25, 2008
Passing Up Bucks Pays Off
Posted by DDH Staff
Wisconsin Pro Staff member Chris Kleist and his brother recently started some QDM practices on the farm they hunt. "There are lots of deer out there, always have been, but never any mature bucks, they get about 2-1/2 years old then disappear," Chris reports. "The last three years we have been trying to talk to neighbors about letting the young bucks go, along with trying to harvest more does, something that area has been lacking. "I'm now getting some trail cam pics of some of the bucks we have been watching the last couple of years. I am fairly sure I have matched these pics up to the same two deer."  
8/25/2008 9:22:19 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, August 22, 2008
Fawn Befriends Puppy
Posted by DDH Staff
This one has been making the Internet circuit. The story goes that the fawn
followed the beagle home through the doggie door and the dog’s owners found the
pair curled up on the couch. Hopefully the story is true and the unfortunate
fawn was not picked out of the wild by well-meaning but uninformed
passers-by.  
8/22/2008 9:21:50 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, August 21, 2008
Heading Toward Autumn
Posted by DDH Staff
Web Pro Staffer Joshua Berckenhoff captured these photos of a fine 11-point and
a big, healthy doe last week on a ranch near his hunting area. It appears the
summer rains were enough to provide excellent nutrition for the area’s deer.  
8/21/2008 9:52:04 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Excellent Video Clip
Posted by DDH Staff
The North Dakota Department of Game & Fish recently revealed a short video entitled "Hunting Big Game Over Bait." This is one of the most comprehensive videos I have seen on the subject. It is a valuable resource that all hunters should view. Thanks to Pro Staffer Russel Wood, who brought this to our attention.
Dan Schmidt
To view the clip, click here
http://gf.nd.gov/multimedia/pubs/baiting-video.html
8/21/2008 9:33:06 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Pro Staff Members Named
Posted by DDH Staff

Greetings Cyber Stump Sitters! Last night, we sent out notifications to the first wave of members into the D&DH.Com Pro Staff. We would like to get members from each state, so it isn't too late to apply. Here is the team so far:
Alabama: Glenn Ferguson
Florida: Benjamin Gittleman
Illinois: Thomas Sawyer, James Sheets, Russell Wood
Indiana: Greg Russell, Darren Johnson
Iowa: Joseph Hogan
Kentucky: William Allendorf
Michigan: Jerry Ciuk, Mark Kenyon
Missouri: Randy Winchester
New York: Tom MacLaughlin, Ed McDonald
Ohio: Kevin Connell
South Dakota: Chris Podoll
Texas: Joshua Berckenhoff
Wisconsin: Jake Simon, Christopher Kleist
CONGRATULATIONS to all the new Pro Staff members! We are proud to have you on the team. Please keep up the great posts. We hope to announce the next round next month. If any Pro Staff members have items they would like considered for the "Rub Line" blog (field reports, trail-cam photos, etc.), please send me an email.
Here's to the hunt!
Dan
8/20/2008 11:53:51 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, August 18, 2008
Would You Shoot Him?
Posted by DDH Staff
Here's another nice buck we captured on film recently. Question of the day...would you tag this buck if he walked past your stand on opening day of archery season?

8/18/2008 3:32:09 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Is it Your Duty to Dispatch Wounded Deer?
Posted by DDH Staff
Avid D&DH reader W. Pace wrote to me this morning and brought up some excellent points in response to the “Deer Browse” column from the October issue. Mr. Pace writes:
“I read Richard P. Smiths article "A View to a Kill" in the October 2008 issue. The question was raised, Who came out on top? Definetly not the doe. I was embarrassed when my daughter, an avid deer hunter, read the article. We couldn't believe that hunter Steve Polich was more concerned about messing up his first day bow hunting than putting the doe out of her misery. When Polich got home, his son asked if he had gotten anything and Polich answered, "I got a much better experience than shooting something." I guess our children will grow up with different opinions on our God given duty as stewards over nature and wildlife.”
What are your thoughts on this topic?
Dan Schmidt, D&DH Editor
8/18/2008 9:26:47 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, August 15, 2008
Alabama Launches Deer Recognition Program
Posted by DDH Staff
Hunters no longer have to wonder why Alabama doesn't have its own recognition program for big bucks killed in the state.
The Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Division of Alabama's conservation department has developed a new records and recognition program for white-tailed deer taken in Alabama — the Records of Alabama's White-tailed Deer.
The demand for information on the largest bucks harvested in Alabama led to the development of the new program, according to a department press release.
Click Here for More Info
8/15/2008 9:48:33 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, August 14, 2008
Fenced Hunting Ban Misses Ballot with Signature Snafu
Posted by DDH Staff
8/14/2008 2:22:18 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, August 13, 2008
Eye-Popping 10-Pointer!
Posted by DDH Staff
Check out this incredible whitetail. It was taken by Mike Herzog in New York in 2007. With a green score of 160+ Pope and Young, the huge 10-pointer ranks as the state’s top typical from last season. Congratulations to Mike on taking such a fine whitetail. We hope to profile his complete story on how he bagged the buck in an upcoming “Buck Shots” column in the magazine.
Dan Schmidt

8/13/2008 9:41:24 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, August 11, 2008
The Power of Mineral Sites
Posted by DDH Staff
Do mineral sites really attract bucks during spring and summer? You would be the judge. Faithful D&DH reader Dave Lewis captured this image last Thursday with his Stealth Cam trail camera. Both bucks appear to be in top shape. "These are Pennsylvania bucks where (growth) like this is not supposed to happen, but it goes to show that QDM can work anywhere!" Dave wrote.
Before setting up mineral sites on your property, be sure to check with your local game regulations. Some states prohibit mineral sites due to the presence of diseases such as chronic wasting disease.
Dan Schmidt 
8/11/2008 11:45:18 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, August 08, 2008
Deer Aren't Pets
Posted by DDH Staff
What happens when suburbanites lose touch with any meaningful understanding of deer and deer behavior? In northern Florida, at least, they're taking them home as pets.
But there's one problem: While these semi-tame surburban deer might look cute and approachable while young, eventually they grow up. And a deer's antlers and hooves can quickly become dangerous weapons which can inflict serious harm to anyone getting in the deer's way. Factor in a buck's "moody" disposition as his juices start flowing ramping up to the rut, and many are finding out the hard way that white-tailed deer are meant to be man's best game animal -- not his best friend.
For More Info Read: Taking Deer from the Wild is Illegal and Dangerous
8/8/2008 2:56:53 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, August 07, 2008
Archery, Bowhunting Make Late-Night TV
Posted by DDH Staff
Archery and bowhunting received attention on late-night TV when Hollywood actress Eliza Dushku made a guest appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live Aug. 6. Dushku, in a promotion for her new movie, brought along her Hoyt compound bow and wowed the audience with three shots at a competition target pinned to some haybales. The actress has starring roles in movies such as "Joan of Arc" and "Babe in the Woods."
- Dan Schmidt
8/7/2008 9:23:27 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, August 06, 2008
Big Buck Videotaped
Posted by DDH Staff
Check out
this giant 8-pointer associate publisher Craig Netzer videotaped yesterday
afternoon for an upcoming episode of D&DH-TV. “The closest we had him was
about 160 yards,” Craig said. “I love his main beams, with that bend in them.
Pretty cool.”
8/6/2008 5:47:24 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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You Might Be a Redneck Artist If...
Posted by DDH Staff
You might be a redneck artist if eating ribs inspires you to finger-paint an exquisite whitetail buck using BBQ sauce!
8/6/2008 4:10:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Is Hunting Land Priced Out of Reach?
Posted by DDH Staff
A recent report by USAgNet.com put exact figures on a problem many hunters face: the ever increasing prices of hunting land. According to the report, national value of farm real estate climbed 13 percent over the past year. Farmland values ranged from as high as $12,200 per acre in Massachusetts to a low of $630 per acre in New Mexico. The highest cropland and pasture values were found in New Jersey, while North Dakota had the lowest values. Top deer states Wisconsin, Michigan and Minnesota averaged $4,070, $4,150 and $3,100, respectively per acre. The national average was $2,350 per acre of farmland. How much is hunting land in your area and will that keep you from purchasing recreational property in the future?
8/6/2008 3:18:37 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, August 05, 2008
Bowhunters Score Huge Victory
Posted by DDH Staff
In a ruling likely to provide a nationwide precedent, the Virginia Supreme Court in mid-July upheld a lower court¹s ruling that bowhunting is a safe, science-based tool of wildlife management, and that local communities cannot outlaw bowhunting programs that comply with directives from state wildlife agencies.
The Supreme Court, in choosing not to hear an appeal by the Reston Homeowners Association, also upheld a lower state court's decision to allow the Archery Trade Association to recover all legal fees. After being alerted to the situation by the Suburban Bowhunters of Northern Virginia, the ATA brought legal action against the Reston Homeowners Association in January 2007. The ATA won the lawsuit in December 2007, and continued the fight after the homeowners' association appealed to the Supreme Court in May of this year.
As a result of the victory, bowhunters will return to Reston's woodlots this fall to reduce deer numbers and damage problems.
"This is a huge victory for bowhunting, not only in Virginia, but quite likely nationwide," said Jay McAninch, the ATA's President/CEO. "The Virginia Supreme Court reinforces four critical points that form the foundation of bowhunting in America.
* First, bowhunting in urban areas can be done safely without putting people or property at risk.
* Second, individual property owners can use bowhunting to address deer-damage and nuisance problems.
* Third, wildlife is a public resource that's held in trust and managed by states -- in this case, the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries -- for the public's benefit.
* And four, individuals or homeowners' associations cannot usurp state authority, or use the courts to shut down or interfere with a legitimate bowhunting program. When people or groups violate these historical, well-established lines of authority and take actions based on personal opinions, it's going to cost them."
The ruling ends a long-running legal dispute that began in 2004 when the Reston Homeowners' Association adopted a covenant to shut down the suburb's bowhunting program. Two local residents and the Suburban Bowhunters of Northern Virginia opposed the covenant and began working with the ATA in 2006 to challenge it in court.
The ATA filed its initial complaint in January 2007, maintaining -- among other things -- that the covenant violated Virginia's Constitution regarding wildlife management. At one point, the ATA subpoenaed testimony from the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries because Virginia's attorney general would not enter the case to enforce the agency's wildlife-management authority.
8/5/2008 4:28:05 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Monday, August 04, 2008
Guide Busted: 16 Years No Hunting
Posted by DDH Staff
Deer poachers will undoubtedly be on high alert in North Dakota this fall after a landmark decision against a waterfowl poacher. 33-year-old Todd Siemers lost his hunting priveleges for 16 years when he was busted for operating a waterfowl guide service in North Dakota and Nebraska without a license. Granted, the penalties were pretty stiff, but Siemers was a repeat offender.
http://www.bismarcktribune.com/articles/2008/08/01/news/state/161405.t
8/4/2008 10:21:08 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, August 01, 2008
Take the High Road, But Keep Fighting
Posted by DDH Staff
A recent call for increased deer hunting opportunities in suburban areas in Virginia have, predictably, brought out the left-wing animal-rights zealots, including the elderly, former TV game-show host Bob Barker.
The focus of the "controversy" came when a Virginia homeowner allowed a bowhunter to hunt his property in hopes of curbing a few of the deer that are wreaking havoc on his property. PETA immediately jumped in and claimed the hunt was irresponsible and aimed at killing deer merely to save some flowers and shrubs.
"There are easy and simple things you can do to live in harmony with wildlife, of course, but it takes a heart," a blogger wrote on a PETA-endorsed Web site.
I typically ignore anything that spouts from the mouth of a PETA member, but, as Ted Nugent has often reminded me, "You can't argue with ignorance."
Once again, Ted is spot-on. In this case, for example, the blogger did not give us any insights on any simple or easy ways to curbing burgeoning suburban deer herds. I'd like to hear one of either. Also, the person failed to realize that the urban deer problem goes way beyond aesthetics.
I'd be preaching to the choir on this site to remind readers that overpopulated deer herds are more of a human safety concern than the annoyance of losing some hostas, azaleas and ornamental cedars.
Such unchecked herds pose serious traffic concerns, not to mention the potential side effects of chronic wasting disease, tuberculosis, Lyme Disease, et. al. What does bear reminding, however, is the fact that we must embrace all efforts like the one in Great Falls, Va., to open more deer hunting opportunities in suburban areas. We hunters must take the high road and carry the torch for wildlife management. It not only provides us opportunities, it proves that we are truly the only option to responsible wildlife management. As a nation, we cannot manage deer through birth-control pills and delusional "niceness."
We need to manage deer through tireless efforts to increase hunting opportunities. It's free, it's efficient, and it's been scientifically proven to be the most environmentally friendly.
If such opportunities come to your neighborhood, don't ignore them. Embrace them. The deer herd -- and your fellow deer hunters -- deserve nothing less.
Dan Schmidt
8/1/2008 1:53:32 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Slow-Mo Video Courtesy of NAP
Posted by DDH Staff
Check out this really cool slow-motion video footage of arrows being launched across various arrow rest styles. Courtesy of New Archery Products (NAP).
8/1/2008 1:42:23 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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Suburban Baltimore Approves Deer Hunt
Posted by DDH Staff
A recent phone survey of people living in
suburban Baltimore’s Howard County, Maryland, found that 81 percent supported
managed deer hunts. According to the Baltimore Sun, “About 58 percent
said there are too many deer in the county. Asked their opinion on what methods
work, 42 percent said managed hunts are ‘very effective,’ and 40 percent said
hunts are ‘somewhat effective.’”
Given those results, managed deer hunts will continue at
a half dozen county parks, this fall and into the foreseeable future. “County
officials say the hunts are needed to reduce an excessive deer population that
they say has led indirectly to more transmission of Lyme disease, damage to
vegetation and ecosystems in parks, and added to the danger of collisions for
motorists.”
Animal rights activists opposed the hunts,
and still claim that contraception could cure deer problems.
However, as the Sun noted, “The $22,333 survey
was organized by Donald F. Norris, chairman of public policy at the Maryland
Institute for Policy Analysis and Research at the University of Maryland,
Baltimore County. In a report accompanying the results, Norris wrote that
‘current scientific evidence shows that contraception does not work,’ and that
capture and transfer is also ‘not a viable option.’ About half the respondents
said they had either been involved in a collision with a deer or have a relative
or friend who had been in the past five years. More than half said they had
bushes or crops damaged by deer.”
—
By Brian McCombie for
deeranddeerhunting.com
8/1/2008 9:30:15 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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