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# Tuesday, December 23, 2008
"Scruffy" Deer Decoy Nabs Roadkill Poacher
Posted by DDH Staff

Source: Oregon Mail Tribune

Police say a Wasco County man tried to reap his own personal bumper crop of mule deer, but instead ended up sowing the latest set of misdemeanor charges for targeting a decoy deer.

Brian LaFaver allegedly rammed "Scruffy," Oregon State Police's decoy deer, with his pickup off a Forest Service road during a Wildlife Enforcement Decoy operation Dec. 7 in southern Wasco County.

The impact sent the decoy flying 12 feet, severely damaging the decoy named for its bullet-tattered hide from past poaching cases, police said.

LaFaver, 34, of Tygh Valley, was cited on charges of unlawful take of a deer in closed season and second-degree criminal mischief for damaging the decoy, police said.

LaFaver, who had his wife and two small children in the pickup, also was cited for driving without a valid operator's license.

Investigators believe it was the second time someone has tried to turn Scruffy into roadkill, but ended up in court.

"I think we charged the guy with criminal mischief in that one, too," says Lt. David Cleary, who supervises wildlife enforcement for OSP's Fish and Wildlife Enforcement Division.

"It's not real common, that's for sure," Cleary says.

Troopers were in the Rock Creek/Wamic area of the northeast Oregon county on Dec. 7 after several large bucks had been poached there recently, with only their heads or antlers removed and the carcasses left to rot, OSP said.

The decoy was placed about 30 feet off a Forest Service roadway in a clearing that included some trees, police said.

LaFaver, who told police he was Christmas tree hunting, allegedly drove the pickup off the road and through a ditch before ramming the decoy, OSP Senior Trooper Swede Pearson says.

"Sitting there watching it, I'm thinking, 'Is he going to do it? I think he is. Yep, there he goes,' " Pearson says.

The impact knocked Scruffy's antlers off and broke two of its legs, Pearson says.

Pearson says LaFaver told him at the scene that he was not trying to hit the decoy. LaFaver claimed he thought it was a real deer and wanted his kids to get a closer look at it, Pearson says.

Reached by telephone at his home, LaFaver said he had no comment this week about the case and hung up.

LaFaver was set to appear Monday in Wasco County Circuit Circuit Court on the misdemeanor charges, records show.



Source: Oregon Mail Tribune


Tuesday, December 23, 2008 3:49:00 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Monday, December 22, 2008
Dual Bond sabot slug review
Posted by DDH Staff



Submitted by Jim Schlender, publisher


This nasty-looking thing is Winchester Ammunition’s latest entry in the lighter/faster sabot slug wars: the Dual Bond. I got a sneak peek at it during a recent hunt in Alabama but, alas, missed my opportunity to try it out on a deer. The Dual Bond will be offered in time for next deer season as part of the company’s Supreme Elite line. It will be available in 23/4- and 3-inch versions in both 12 and 20 gauge. The 12-gauge slug weighs 375 grains and the 20 weighs 260 grains.

Think of the “Dual Bond” design as a bullet within a bullet; it’s a basic hollow point design but with a heavy outer jacket to protect the inner bullet as it penetrates hide and bone. As the slug penetrates, both parts expand, creating 12 petals instead of six and, presumably, creating an indescribable mess of any deer’s insides.

This slug is so new that I don’t have official velocity numbers from the factory, but I believe it will be around 1,900 fps in the 3-inch, 12-gauge version.
The Dual Bond bullet will also be available in large-bore handgun calibers. The 260-grain slug will be used in the 454 Casull and 460 S&W Mag, while the 375-grain bullet is used in the 500 S&W Mag.

Jonathan Harling, who handles public relations for Winchester, introduced me to the new slugs, and we went to the range together to sight them in using a Knight KP1 with the 12-gauge slug barrel.

Harling only had a precious handful of the new shells, which I’m sure he had to wrestle away from an engineer at Winchester headquarters. So I got on the paper using Winchester RackMaster slugs, then switched over to our small supply of Dual Bond shells. I put three shots into a 2-inch group at 100 yards, which is outstanding accuracy for any combination of shotgun barrel and slug. The impact difference between the two types of slugs was negligible, so I was ready to hunt.

I wish I had a pretty picture of a slug recovered from a deer, but the mature doe I missed in the waning light of my last evening in Alabama is still running around somewhere unscathed. She was at about 120 yards, and I think I subconsciously held a little high and sent the slug right over her back. I was hoping for a shoulder hit so I could see how the slug performed. Guess it’s hard for me to get used to slugs that fly more like centerfire bullets than big, heavy chunks of lead.

Oh well, for now all I can say is that it looks great on paper. By this time next year we’ll all know how the new Dual Bond products are performing for the legions of deer hunters who use shotguns.




Monday, December 22, 2008 5:22:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
A New Way to Rattle
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Jim Schlender, publisher

Honestly, how do you come up with a new way to rattle? More than 25 years ago when rattling a set of antlers together to call deer caught on, we used the real thing. Then we graduated to synthetic “rattling horns.” Then came the still-popular rattle boxes and rattling bags. Done, right? Well, not so fast.

On a recent hunt in Alabama, Knight & Hale Game Calls’ engineering manager Greg Burcham told me he wanted to show me a new rattling system he’d patented. I was prepared to be underwhelmed, but after playing around with the company’s new-for-2009 Pack Rack for couple minutes, all I could say was this: Cool!

The Rack Pack comprises two pieces of a super-tough polymer. With the halves nested together, the Rack Pack is completely silent and takes up no more space in your pack than a softball. Pull the two halves apart, grab the handles and you’re ready to rattle. Look at the pictures and you’ll get the idea.

What’s really neat about the Rack Pack is how easy it is to change the tone and volume. Grip the halves tightly with cupped hands and crack them together to produce the sounds of large, heavy antlers. Loosen your grip and gently clink the ridged half against the rounded half and you can imitate the sounds of light sparring.

Burcham said it took a lot of trial and error to come up with the consistency of polymer that would make the most realistic sounds, but finally he was satisfied. I think it’s safe to say that if you like to rattle, you too will be pleased with his effort.







Monday, December 22, 2008 5:15:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
"Ironic" Hunt Yields Success
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Jim Schlender, publisher

I had to laugh at the irony. The last time I’d hunted with a Knight KP1 muzzleloader it was 26 degrees with 25 mph winds and a steady rain that froze everything it touched, including me. That was in Iowa. Now, a year later, I was sitting comfortably in a shooting house in southwestern Alabama, watching a food plot. Temp: a balmy 60. Wind: none. Sunshine: bright. Ah, yes, I thought. I could get used to this.

I was enjoying my low-stress hunt on property leased by The Shed Hunting Lodge (www.shedhuntinglodge.com). Shed owners Larry Norton (of champion turkey calling fame), Gray Mosley and Henri Billiot have 10,000 acres of great deer and turkey habitat available for their guests. I’d come to The Shed along with several industry writers and photographers to review new products from Knight and its sister companies Knight & Hale Game Calls and Summit Treestands, along with some new ammunition designs from Winchester.

We liked the forecast for the next day even thought it meant an end to our personal comfort. A powerful cold front was coming through, and we hoped it would boost deer activity. Sure enough, that’s what we got. That night we hung four bucks on the camp meatpole.

I shot this bruiser a half-hour before dark. The buck acted like he owned the place, hooking branches as he walked the field edge, and then stopping to paw at a scrape. I was wondering if I would have to try a shot at 180 yards, but finally he started meandering up the hill toward me. When he turned quartering to me at 130 yards, I sent a 285-grain Knight Ultimate Slam bullet on its way.  The Barnes-designed Spitzer Boattail hit just high and behind the shoulder and went all the way through, dropping the buck in his tracks. Norton later aged the 190-pound, goofy-racked deer at 41/2 years old.

I was really excited to finally take a buck with the KP1. In the past year I’ve experimented with its 12-gauge slug barrel, the muzzleloader barrel and the .30-06 barrel, all with good results, but hadn’t had many chances to actually hunt with it. This spring I plan to outfit it with the 12-gauge smoothbore barrel and take it turkey hunting.

I’ll have more product news from this hunt in upcoming posts.






Monday, December 22, 2008 5:12:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Thursday, December 18, 2008
Deer Trapped on Ice
Posted by DDH Staff



Thursday, December 18, 2008 10:32:56 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Deer Stuck in Jar
Posted by DDH Staff

From a Dec. 17 article in Cleveland's Plain Dealer comes this story and its rather lengthy, obvious headline, "Doomed Parma deer can't eat or drink with head stuck in bucket." The photo paints a pretty good picture of what's going on. The article follows.



PARMA — A deer living behind a York Road home near Sprague Road has gotten its head stuck in a plastic container.

Parma officials called the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, which has no plans to help the deer.

"It is very difficult to try to tranquilize a free-ranging deer," wildlife officer supervisor Doug Miller said. "And our policy is, if we do tranquilize a deer, it must be euthanized."

Wildlife officers fatally shoot the deer they tranquilize because the drug taints the meat that could be consumed by people if the deer were killed by a hunter or motorist.

Miller said spraying a spot of brightly colored paint on the deer to show that it had been tranquilized is not an option, because the paint might wear off before the drug fully leaves the deer's body.

A deer was spotted last month in Broadview Heights with a plastic pumpkin stuck on its head. No one has reported seeing the deer lately, Miller said.

He recommends that people never leave food containers where wildlife can reach them.

Source: Cleveland Plain Dealer



Thursday, December 18, 2008 6:31:41 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
An A+ Atypical
Posted by DDH Staff

Rare? Check. Unique? Check.

Details surrounding this harvest are sketchy, but here's the gist of it. Vince Castellano was hunting Dec. 6 in Baltimore County, Maryland when he put this buck in his sights. While not the mythical "30-point point buck," Castellano's atypical trophy came in at 26 points. The crown sat upon a burly king weighing in at 254 lbs. dressed.

Way to go Vince! That's a happy hunter right there.










Thursday, December 18, 2008 6:20:10 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Harper Scores in Texas
Posted by DDH Staff

D&DH Field Editor Matt Harper recently returned from a successful bow-hunt
in Texas. Matt writes, "I think he will score between 125 and 130 which is
pretty good for the year they are having.  It was very dry and they have
seen a decrease in antler score by about 10% to 15% because of the drought.
Shot the deer with my bow out of a ground blind."

Congrats, Matt!




Tuesday, December 16, 2008 7:30:35 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Deer Breaks Into Pennsylvania Tax Collector Office
Posted by DDH Staff

Waynesboro, Pennsylvania tax collector Delmos Oldham joked about upsetting Santa Claus when a deer crashed through the window of his office.

"Maybe I upset one of his elves," Oldham was reported as saying. The debacle went down just after 4 in the afternoon, as the panicked deer ransacked Oldham's workspace.

At home with his wife at the time, Oldham recieved a call from police and drove to the office. Once there, police — acting on erroneous eye-witness reports — told him the deer had escaped. But when he walked into the office he found a surprise:

“I turned the light on and saw her. She raised up, denting the filing cabinet. I headed out. We were taken by surprise."

The deer jumped up on a nearby table, knocking a copy machine to the floor and then became trapped in the men’s bathroom, according to Oldham.

"The police went in — I saw them standing on the table — and couldn’t find her. The door to the bathroom was closed ... somehow she pushed it shut. She was in there,” reported the Record Herald.

Police used a Taser to subdue the deer and later destroyed her.




Tuesday, December 16, 2008 7:24:34 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, December 15, 2008
Operation Texas Shuffle Takes Down Illegal Deer Trade
Posted by DDH Staff

AUSTIN, Texas — Game wardens in the Special Operations Unit of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department’s Law Enforcement Division have arrested six men and executed two search warrants as part of Operation Texas Shuffle, a year-long investigation into the black market deer trade in Texas.

"Our focus here is stopping two main areas of criminal activity: deer being brought illegally across state lines, and wild deer being illegally laundered into deer breeding facilities," said Col. Pete Flores, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department law enforcement director.

Five of the men were arrested yesterday, including William Kornegay, 42, of Eden in Concho County; James Johnson, 60, of Florence in Williamson County; and Jeff Arbogust, 48, of Austin in Travis County, Chris Sharp, 33, of Marble Falls in Burnet County; and Ronald Rogers, 39, of San Saba in San Saba County. The sixth suspect, Lance Clawson, 40, of Regency in Mills County, turned himself in this morning.

All six are alleged to have trapped, purchased or sold wild native whitetail deer. In addition, Rogers, Clawson and Kornegay are involved with permitted deer breeding facilities and are believed to have laundered wild deer into the permitted facilities. Kornegay serves as an agent for multiple licensed deer breeders. In one case, Clawson, a permitted deer breeding facility operator, allegedly darted wild deer and put them illegally into his facility.

Deer breeding is a legal and growing business in Texas, estimated by one breeder organization to be worth about $650 million per year for the state economy. It is illegal to capture or obtain wild deer and place them into breeding facilities. Breeders must obtain captive, pen-raised deer from other permitted breeders. There are currently 1,099 permitted deer breeders in Texas, holding 86,989 deer in 1,161 facilities. The vast majority of these are whitetail deer, and the rest are mule deer, the two native species in Texas.

"Money is driving the illegal trade in wild native deer," said Capt. Greg Williford with TPWD Law Enforcement Division’s Special Operations Unit. "A captive-raised breeder buck can sell for tens of thousands of dollars. So, catching deer in the wild seems a lot less expensive, until you get caught."

TPWD regulates deer breeding, issuing permits and conducting periodic facility inspections as warranted. A particular concern is monitoring breeding facilities for diseases such as Chronic Wasting Disease. CWD has not been detected in Texas, but it has cost tens of millions of dollars in other states. Texas borders essentially remain closed to the importation of whitetail and mule deer because of disease concerns.

Clawson and Rogers were previously apprehended Oct. 16 by Texas game wardens and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service special agents for smuggling eight deer into Texas from Oklahoma. Such interstate smuggling is not only illegal but also poses a disease threat to native whitetail deer.

Numerous Class B misdemeanors (fines up to $2,000 and up to 180 days confinement) have been filed on all six men for violating state Trap, Transport, and Transplant regulations relating to whitetail deer. As the investigation continues, additional charges and arrests are anticipated, including possible felony charges of tampering with a government document, and possible illegal possession of tranquilizer drugs, also a felony.

Based on where the alleged offenses occurred, county attorneys in Mills, Bell, Lampasas and Concho Counties will be prosecuting the misdemeanor charges.

Anyone who observes illegal deer trapping, sale or purchase in Texas should call Operation Game Thief toll-free at (800) 792-GAME. OGT is Texas’ privately funded wildlife crime stoppers hotline, operating 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week. Rewards of up to $1,000 may be paid to callers (who may remain anonymous). Game wardens recommend making the call immediately when illegal activity is observed, and say it is helpful to have a description of the activity, location of the violation, physical descriptions of alleged violators, description of any vehicles and the direction of travel.


Source: Texas Parks & Wildlife Division




Monday, December 15, 2008 7:04:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Hard to Beat the Mass On This Base
Posted by DDH Staff

Strange deer photos continue to abound on the Internet. Today's winner is this one-base monstrosity that seems to have had its bases fuse together into one giant base. Now that's what we call "mass." The photo was reported to have been shot at a taxidermist's shop, somewhere in Maryland.




Monday, December 15, 2008 3:36:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Kansas Yields Huge Triple Drop-Tine Buck
Posted by DDH Staff

No other details were available on this enormous triple drop-tine buck, or the fortunate hunter, other than it was purportedly shot in Kansas.



Monday, December 15, 2008 3:06:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [5]
Snowstorm Still-Hunt Pays Off
Posted by DDH Staff

This 7-point buck was taken during Wisconsin's first big snowstorm of the season on December 9, 2008, with a muzzleloader. The deer was shot by Ray Smith, just north of Waupaca, as it chased a group of does through a stand of spruce trees. Smith, who was still-hunting through the snowstorm late in the afternoon, yelled at the buck to stop it and that provided a broadside shot.

The buck weighed 190 pounds and had an unusually long body. Smith wondered whether it was the second rut, the snowstorm, or both that compelled deer to move during the winter white-out conditions.



Monday, December 15, 2008 3:01:43 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Friday, December 12, 2008
Michigan Pro Staff Report: 9-Point Buck Shot
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Jerry Ciuk
Michigan Web Pro Staff

I shot this 9 point on 11/16/08 around 4 pm in Michigan’s UP. The day started off with a spike coming along and rubbing on a stump. Shortly after, a 3 point came out and the two bucks started to fight in front of me. This was very cool as I have never witnessed this before. After the fight, the two started to stare in one direction, they then ran in that direction. I’m guessing a doe was in the area and they went after her, as 10 minutes later the spike came back. He was rubbing on the same stump for awhile before heading back into the swamp. Right at dark this guy came out and I double lunged him at 41 yards.





Friday, December 12, 2008 10:54:45 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Birthday Surprises: Muenster Gets a Canadian Monster
Posted by DDH Staff

Terry Muenster is the happy hunter who took this big Canadian whitetail, which was reportedly shot on his birthday. The buck had 12 points (1-inch stickers off of the base of each beam that are hard to see), green scored 162 inches and field dressed at about 260 pounds.






Friday, December 12, 2008 3:17:37 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
# Thursday, December 11, 2008
Web Pro Staff Field Report: Doe Bleating
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Chris Kleist, D&DH Web Pro Staffer

I was bow-hunting tonight and on four occasions had does cruise past my stand bleating their heads off. I think there were at least three different deer, although one of the sightings was possibly the same doe twice. Two of them I could only hear in the brush; I couldn't actually see them. But one of them was a very young deer, and I could tell by the tone of the bleat that it was a young deer. The other one that I could actually see was a bigger, more mature doe, and just by her bleat she sounded more mature. They sounded just like that heat bleat call that's on the market the last couple of years. I bought one last year and watched the little DVD that came with it: The footage was of some does actually making that bleat. Anyway, these does tonight all sounded just like that, so if indeed what I heard was some sort of "heat bleat," they must be in that second rut now.

— Chris Kleist



Thursday, December 11, 2008 10:35:18 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Iowa: Details On the Chris Wood Buck
Posted by DDH Staff

The e-mail accompanying the photo of the Chris Wood buck, reportedly taken in Iowa, states:

Attached is a picture of a buck my buddy Chris Wood from Des Moines shot this Saturday, December 6th with a shotgun during the 1st shotgun season.

He was hunting with a group of guys from Perficut Lawn Care, they were hunting in Taylor county by Bedford, IA. It was Woody's turn to post on this push. He was standing just inside the timber when a group of does came running by. This buck just walked by trailing the does, he was about 60 yards away when Woody shot. He only ran about 40 before piling up.

We scored the deer Sunday night and came up with a green score of 264-0/8", it has 33 scorable points and it has one drop tine. If the score holds close, it will be the 2nd largest buck harvested in Iowa; next to the Albia Buck.



Thursday, December 11, 2008 8:56:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
"Honey, Is It Getting Hot in Here?"
Posted by DDH Staff

According to an e-mail circulating around today, a senior citizen couple in North Carolina got quite a surprise when they pulled off the highway and stopped at a fast food restaurant to grab a bite to eat. The e-mail says:

"...these two old people (man and his wife) were on the way to Greenville, NC and stop to McDonalds in Farmville just off of 264 East bypass last Sat. and did not know they had hit this deer !! Someone in McDonalds had to tell   them ... the old man said he noticed the car was starting to run a little hot the last few miles !!!!!"









Thursday, December 11, 2008 8:44:24 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Don't Swap Opening Day for Wedding Day
Posted by DDH Staff

The hunter who took this buck has quite a story to tell — and it's not just that he killed a very big buck. That's because he was hunting from his buddy's stand — a friend who could not hunt on this particular opening day because it also happened to be his wedding day! Being the good friend he was, the groom gave the OK to hunt from his stand. Besides asking the obvious question, "Who gets married on opening day?" one hunter also observed that the whole affair really "poured salt in the wound."

Nothing like starting a marriage off on the right note. 

Congratulations — to both the groom ... and his successful friend.



Thursday, December 11, 2008 8:30:38 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Wednesday, December 10, 2008
One Last Walk Through...
Posted by DDH Staff

Don Thiel, hunting with his son Dean, took this buck north of Waupaca, Wisconsin, on the last Saturday of the 2008 firearms season with a muzzleloader. The shot presented itself after Thiel was preparing to leave for the morning and decided to try some still-hunting on his property. The tactic worked. Writes Don:

"We had planned on hunting until noon. I sat in my tower stand overlooking the back field until mid-morning. I only saw one deer all morning, and it was in the big field. We had planned that I would make a small one-man drive down to a gravel pit on our property and swing back toward Dean, who was sitting in the stand by the cabin.

"Earlier, Dean had shot at two does through thick brush in the hollow below his stand. I walked some pines toward him, seeing nothing. Then I moseyed along a fence line, cutting back into the thick  underbrush to see if he had hit either of the does he shot at earlier. I was half way through the hollow, and within 35 yards of this buck, when he jumped up. It was fortunate that he stopped in a little poplar stand about 50 yards away. Following the shot from my muzzleloader, he went down. The bullet hit him just above the ribs and slammed into the far-side front shoulder. I knew with all the thick blackberry brush I couldn't walk up on him because if he got up I wouldn't be able to see him.
 
"Dean got down from his stand and walked around to the North side of the hollow. He approached the spot where the deer was laying and got to within 40 yards of the buck. The deer jumped up, again, and Dean shot at him twice, hitting him in the chest. I got off another shot as well and hit him on the other side. Down he went.

"It took about an hour to get him out of the thick brush.
 
"It is hard to believe that this deer would stay lying in the hollow all morning — especially given that Dean shot twice at doe in this area. In hindsight, we believe the buck came in and bedded down before sunrise — because Dean could see the entire area where we initially jumped him."





















Congrats, Don!


Wednesday, December 10, 2008 10:28:06 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Tuesday, December 09, 2008
A Dandy Muzzleloader Buck
Posted by DDH Staff

This buck was reportedly taken somewhere near Waupaca, Wisconsin. No details were forthcoming on the deer or hunter, but it's safe to assume most hunters would consider this buck a "shooter." Most impressive is the fact that the deer was taken with a smokepole. The Dairy State's muzzleloader season runs through Wednesday, December 10, 2008 and hunters still have a good shot at taking mature bucks like this — and many are out trying to do just that in the wake of the season's largest snowstorm.









Tuesday, December 09, 2008 10:30:57 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
Police Finish Big Car-Wounded Buck
Posted by DDH Staff

This car-struck buck, wounded near Kaukauna, Wisconsin, was put out of its misery by a Kaukauna police officer. Details weren't available as to who ended up with the rack, or whether the venison was donated.















Tuesday, December 09, 2008 10:04:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [6]
A Nasty Case of Fibromas
Posted by DDH Staff

Here's a deer many hunters might pass up. This is a case of Fibromas, which are noncancerous growths (caused by a virus) that affect deer. They usually run their course, then fall off.



Tuesday, December 09, 2008 4:59:54 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Discovered Skull: How Wide is this Spread?
Posted by DDH Staff

This skull was allegedly found near Rice Lake, Wisconsin. There were no further details available. Even so, assuming it's legitimate, this could be every shed-hunters dream come true.



Tuesday, December 09, 2008 4:54:43 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Monday, December 08, 2008
Back to the Future: An 80s Flashback
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Corey Graff, Online Editor

Have you ever heard a Duran-Duran or Tears for Fears song crank up on the radio and immediately feel like you've been transported back through time — back to the 1980s? I think they call that an "'80s moment."

Today I experienced an '80s moment while putting some finishing touches on the Deer & Deer Hunting 30-year Compilation CD soon to be released. That's because I stumbled across the ad you see below from the 1986 December issue of D&DH for the "Chair Pack." That mis-matched duck camo, green sleeping bag, and early-style compound bow really screams 1986. Even the concept seems 80s — something as simple as a chair. The ad takes a person back to the days when the deer hunting industry was beginning to gain steam and new companies were springing up, eager to jump on the bandwagon with accessories to help hunters bag their buck.

It's interesting to reflect upon a product that is essentially a chair and backpack, when viewed backwards through time from a place in history when lightweight treestands and ultra-high-tech pop-up ground blinds are the standard fare.

And you won't catch a hunter in any ad today wearing mis-matched camo.

It was a less scientific time, for sure, when deer hunters walked into the woods and plunked down on a deer trail, waiting for a shot that was sure to come sooner or later. The longer you waited, the more your odds went up. And to wait longer, one needed to be comfy. Thus, a chair.

Seeing an ad like this — and getting that '80s feeling — makes a person want to go back to those good 'ol days, when deer hunting seemed simpler. Part of me would gladly swap the times, since it seemed like there was less pressure to shoot big bucks in those days and more energy was expended on simply having fun. But then again, that view — no doubt through rose-colored glasses  — falls apart when one asks the more pressing question: Good grief, comfy or not, who could stand the music?



Monday, December 08, 2008 10:06:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
11-Year-Old Takes 20-Point Buck
Posted by DDH Staff



The Journal News reported that a young Ohio hunter -- 11-year-old Luke Woodruff -- shot his first buck and it was a dandy:

If his initial deer-hunting trip is any indication, Luke Woodruff's first car will be a Mercedes-Benz.

His first Ohio Lottery ticket will make him an instant millionaire.

And his first date — you know, in about five years — will be with Jessica Alba.

On the morning of Nov. 23, Luke Woodruff was an 11-year-old fifth-grader at Bogan Elementary in the Talawanda School District.

A few hours and one bullet later, he was Daniel Boone.

Luke and his father, Matt, spotted a large buck standing behind them in a bean field in the Vollmer Farm in Reily Twp.

Matt, 39, and a hunter for the last 19 years, called the buck the biggest he had ever seen.

But not the brightest.

The 19- to 20-point buck walked out of the thick brush and stood in front of the Woodruff's ground blind, about 30 to 40 yards away.

"It was the perfect situation," his father said. "The sun was coming up, the wind wasn't blowing. Everything was in our favor."

Without being encouraged by his father, Luke, a first-time hunter, removed his gloves, released the safety off his 20-gauge shotgun — last year's Christmas present — and pulled the trigger.

His heart, he said, "was racing pretty good."

Luke thought the worst.

"Did I hit it or did I not," he said.

Finally, he admitted: "I missed."

A few hours later, after hearing some barking dogs, Luke and his father started tracking blood. They found the deer across two fields, lying in a back yard, about 600 yards from where it was shot.

"I couldn't believe how big it was," Luke said.

His father added: "It was twice as big as I thought."

Source: Journal News



Monday, December 08, 2008 3:37:54 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Nontypical Sports 25 Points
Posted by DDH Staff

Taken near Fremont, Wisconsin, this non-typical reportedly has 25 points, plus a couple more that are less than 1-inch in length. The hunter's name is Jim. Congrats, Jim. The thought of seeing a deer like this is what gives many deer hunters restless nights before opening day.






Monday, December 08, 2008 3:26:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Buffalo County Continues to Produce
Posted by DDH Staff

Here's a very impressive buck taken in Buffalo County, Wisconsin during the 2008 firearms season. We don't have any information on the hunter, but according to the e-mail the buck was:
  • Shot at 7:24 in the morning
  • Green scored at 196 3/8"
  • Field dressed at 210 lbs.
  • Taken with a shotgun slug at 63 yards
  • Hunter almost missed him
  • Shot in neck forward of the shoulder
Will this buck beat both the Tschumper and Decker bucks?












Monday, December 08, 2008 3:14:30 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Thursday, December 04, 2008
This Deer Got Blown Away
Posted by DDH Staff



Thursday, December 04, 2008 7:41:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Video: Montana Ranchers Seperate Locked Bucks
Posted by DDH Staff

Warning: Don't Try This At Home! The Wallewein Ranch, near Sunburst, Montana, was the scene of two locked bucks that had roughed one another up when neighbors of the Wallewein's found them.

According to the greatfallstribune.com, "The deer had been at it for awhile," Mike Wallewein said. "They had been going through barbed wire fences and there was a lot of blood on their legs. When we got there they were still in the corral and were lying down. They were just whipped but when we got there they jumped up and away they went through another fence."

The story continued:

"We hazed them into a hedgerow of caragana and they crashed back and forth through the trees," Wallewein said. "Then they tripped up and threw themselves down and that is when we jumped on them. One got up and we had to throw him back down."

One deer's antler had pierced the other's tongue and had gone through the lower jaw while the other's had pierced the first deer's face under the eye.

"Those horns locked up tighter than if they had grown that way. We struggled for awhile and the only way I could get them apart was spreading the two and getting the one out of the mouth and over nose. The other side, I could see, was going to come unlocked fairly easily."

Jesse and Lance sat on one deer while Mike Wallewein sat on the other. He told his kids to get ready to jump when he got the deer undone.

"I undone them. The one with the horn through its mouth took off. I was sitting on the other one and I jumped up but it just lay there. It was so winded. It gave me a chance to count the points. I rolled it over with my foot and then it jumped up and took off."

Video:




Thursday, December 04, 2008 7:01:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Wednesday, December 03, 2008
Large Mass Drop-tine Buck Taken
Posted by DDH Staff

We don't have any details about the deer in this photo other than it was reportedly taken near Madison, Wisconsin. If we come across any information on the massive drop-tine buck we'll pass it along but this is certainly one impressive deer in anyone's book.



Wednesday, December 03, 2008 2:29:50 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Tuesday, December 02, 2008
Audubon Society Promotes Deer Hunts
Posted by DDH Staff

The Audubon Society might not be thought of as a staunch pro-hunting organization, but the society can't deny the necessity of deer hunting. In fact, across New Jersey the conservation group has supported deer hunts in the face of undeniable evidence that overpopulation of deer leads to decimated habitat.

What's more, the New Jersey Audubon Society is actually leading an effort to get the Morris County Park Commission and local towns governments that surround the Jockey Hollow section of the Morristown National Historical Park to urge the National Park Service to institute a whitetail deer hunt there.

As reported on dailyrecord.com:

The Aububon Society began deer hunts on its properties in 2006, Ettel told the park commission, because assessments of the agency's 3,700 acres of preserves showed that deer browsing was a major factor in the creation of "skeletal forests" that have become common in many areas of central and northern New Jersey.

The impact of deer on forests is "devastating," he said. As a result, since 2006 Audubon has advocated for increased hunting activity on public and private land and for the expanded harvesting of whitetail deer statewide.

While far too often non-hunters view "conservation" as being divorced from hunting, it is encouraging to see an essentially non-hunting conservation group supporting what hunter-conservationists have always known: Deer hunting isn't just something we like to do -- it's something we need to do. That is, if we take conservation seriously.




Tuesday, December 02, 2008 2:47:46 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, December 01, 2008
The Piebald Buck Stops Here
Posted by DDH Staff

There are few details about this unique piebald deer, but we're sure the hunter -- whoever he is, wherever he was hunting -- had to pinch himself when he leveled his sights on this buck.






Monday, December 01, 2008 11:01:51 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [4]
Predator Hunter Bags Buck
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Jared Blohm, Editor of Trapper & Predator Caller

The Wisconsin gun season started slow at our deer camp. As we headed back to the cabin after Thanksgiving dinner, we only had two deer tagged and neither had antlers. After another uneventful morning on Friday, I decided to hunt a brassica food plot in the afternoon. I thought I'd at least see does and I was ready to fill the freezer.

It was nearing 4 and the food plot was still quiet. I heard something
approaching across the field from the west just after 4. A couple minutes
later, a doe hopped out into the field with a six-point buck right on her
tail. The buck stayed on the edge of the food plot as the doe ate. I brought
my gun up to check out the buck's rack in the scope. It was a basket six. I
decided to pass. As I brought my gun down, the buck turned into the woods
and bounded away. Busted. The doe looked over, but stayed in the field.

I watched the doe eat for about 10 minutes as she made her way closer to me.
If she continued about 10 more feet, she'd be clear of the hanging branch on
my right and I'd have a broadside shot at about 40 yards. Perfect. I was
going to take her. As I waited for the right moment, I noticed the doe kept
looking back towards where the buck had run into the forest. I decided to
wait and see if another deer came out. Sure enough. About a minute later, I
could hear something on the edge of the food plot and spotted movement. I
saw antlers and I thought it was the basket six again.

As the buck walked along the edge of the food plot in the sticks, I got
glimpses of his antlers and could tell he was bigger than the buck I saw
earlier. I raised my gun and found him in my scope. He was about 100 yards
out and wasn't coming out into the open. There was only about five minutes
of shooting time left so I decided to pick my spot and take the shot. I
found an opening, fired and watched the buck run into the woods on the same
trail he came out on.

The blood trail ended only about 50 yards into the woods. We looked for an
hour, but decided to look again in the morning since we were at a dead end.
After a restless night, we continued the search shortly after sunrise and
found the buck laying less than 50 yards away from where we quit looking the
night before.

The camp was in high spirits that night. Nothing turns around a slow season
like a nice buck.






Monday, December 01, 2008 10:50:12 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
TV Crew Scores at Tiger Ridge
Posted by DDH Staff

D&DH Editor Dan Schmidt scored on this 9-pointer during Wisconsin's annual
gun-hunting season last week.

"What a satisfying hunt!" Dan reports. "Especially considering the fact that
it was extremely cold that morning. It was 8 degrees when we headed for our
stand site. That ranks right up there with the coldest temperatures I've
ever hunted in. All I can say is, 'Thank goodness for the Heater Body
Suit.'"

The hunt, which was captured on video by managing editor Jake Edson, will be
featured in a 2009 episode of D&DH TV on Versus Country.

On a statewide level, Wisconsin saw a dramatic decrease in its deer harvest.
Early reports indicate the gun-hunting harvest was down by as much as 28
percent in some areas.



Monday, December 01, 2008 10:19:36 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
Good Things Come to Those Who Wait...
Posted by DDH Staff

D&DH Web Pro Staffer Chris Kleist shared some good news of his family's Wisconsin gun deer hunt. Writes Chris:

"My dad's farm has been real slow gun hunting the last 7 or 8 years and I  officially gave up gun hunting there a couple years ago. My dad has stayed resilient though, sticking it out, even though he hasn't shot a deer in several seasons. Opening day all morning showed no activity, until about 10:30 a.m.. Dad was hunting a field of tall grass that sits between the crop fields and a small patch of woods. A group of roughly 30 deer came running through the fields right for his hay bale blind. His shotgun is outfitted with a smooth bore bird barrel and fed with plain rifled slugs for deer hunting; he forgot to take his plug out from duck season, and so could only load three shells. As the group approached running through the fields, he used his only three shots to drop three mature does, all perfect vital shots. Then he fumbled in his pocket to get more shells, which for some reason weren't even out of the box yet. He managed to get two more shells in his gun, shot another doe, and his final shot was a 156-inch four-and-a-half-year-old bruiser. The only bad thing that happened was the OTHER 150-inch buck got away!

"I really had to hand it to my dad, sticking it out through all the years of poor hunting, and even sticking with the ol' smooth bore, open sight shotgun and still being able to take down five mature animals in less than 30 seconds, with a reload to boot. Those will be some great pictures when we get them back. The buck is the biggest buck he has ever shot, and he is 56 years old and has hunted his whole life. On top of all that, he actually ended up giving the buck to his hunting buddy. His buddy has never shot a deer in his life, but actually made the "final" shot on the buck. Though my dad's shot was right through the lungs, the buck was able to make it another 60 yards to his buddy's stand, where he shot to put it down. My dad's friend was so excited, my dad took some pictures with the deer and then let his friend tag and officially claim it."



Monday, December 01, 2008 10:13:11 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
Central Wisconsin Gun Deer Sightings Vary
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Corey Graff, Online Editor

Following the close of the 2008 Wisconsin gun deer season, the big news being reported is the steep decline in deer sightings and a drop in harvest from last year of 25 percent or more at some registration stations. While many hunters saw less deer, some actually saw more this year. Such was the case for me, although I suspect it had more to do with the very cold temperatures and hunters moving deer around as they mosey about to get warm. Only two bucks were spotted within pistol range from my little blind and one of them — a little six-point buck — posed for the photo below.

What did you see?




Monday, December 01, 2008 10:04:59 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]