Whitetail Madness - Trophy Whitetail Deer - Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, North

Whitetail Madness - Trophy Whitetail Deer - Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, North
Trophy Whitetail Deer - Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota And Canada

Friday, January 28, 2011

How To Pick Your Hunting Location – Deer Hunting Tips

January 28, 2011 | Author: Tye Wunon

Being able to properly pick your hunting location is one of the most important factors in deer hunting. Finding the right hunting location can give you the ability to get that trophy rack that you’ve always wanted, as well as plenty of venison for the freezer. It doesn’t matter how good you are at shooting, you won’t have a very successful hunt if there are no deer where you’re hunting. As a result, follow our deer hunting tips so you can find the perfect spot to hunt.
Knowledge of deer behavior and their movement patterns is essential when you begin to hone in on locations. Deer look for food during conditions of low light, where they can feel safe; also, they sleep during the mid-day and late at night. They typically leave their resting areas quite late in the afternoon and roam around to find food. They feed and drink, and then return to their resting spots. They repeat this pattern in the early morning hours.
It’s wise to look into the hunting locations available prior to setting out. Two weeks in advance is advisable. Explore the area that you plan to hunt in. Study the area and learn which spots deer move through the most, as well as how many doe and bucks are in the area. Spend some time in your chosen location behind blinds or in stands where you’ll be hunting from and observe the deer and how they move about. During the middle of the day, walk around the area and look for evidence of deer. The deer will give you the best deer hunting tips available.
Watch for trails and deer tracks indicating travel. Take note of the direction, quantity and size of these tracks, as this will describe how the deer travel and how many there are around. The doe and bucks may make use of the same trail, but the buck usually will travel in their own path. Typically, these buck trails travel alongside the doe trails, and occasionally cross them. Keep an eye out for scrapes, the places where the ground or brush has been scratched by bucks.
Scraping will usually precede the rutting season by three weeks, and dissipate as rutting starts. Seek out these rubs, and spots on posts and trees in which bucks have rubbed their antlers to remove the velvet, and to indicate their own territory. Watch for a consistent rub pattern – usually more than six within a line of 100 yards. You’ll usually find these tree markings facing the direction where the buck has come from, so take note of this direction also, as you’ll be able to locate the origin of the bucks’ travel more accurately. Examine the area for bedding spots and take note of the size.
Don’t just go to a forest you don’t know and pick your deer hunting spot arbitrarily; with the right work and research, you’ll be able to have a great hunting season ahead of you!
Please use these deer hunting tips to help you during your upcoming deer hunting season. And please check out www.Deer-HuntingTips.com for even more advanced deer hunting advice.

Whitetail Antler Growth and What It Can Tell a Hunter

by
Naomi K. Shapiro

big bucksThroughout the year whitetail bucks and the occasional doe grow antlers. The antlers start growing in early spring and throughout the year, until late August/early September, when the antler growth stops. Throughout the growing season the antlers are coated in a light velvety coating that helps protect the antlers and encourages growth. Underneath the velvet the blood and nutrient flow promoting the growth of antlers. At the end of the growth cycle, the velvet falls or is peeled off by rubbing and scraping and voila, the mature antler is exposed.
There can be a lot of irregularity in antler growth. Throughout the year as antlers grow, bucks get in fights with other bucks, or an antler is dinged or is banged on something. These types of events will cause some type of visible or hidden "splinter" in the antler, and will result in an irregularity in the antler. This type of irregularity can also be caused by something like an injured leg or joint, or equally common - being hit by a car.
What these types of "injuries" do is to draw the attention of the deer's immune and nutrient system from the antler to the injured part of the body. This will result in an irregular growth of an antler. The injury generally will affect the growth of the antler on the side of the injury. And friends, this is a very common occurrence in whitetails. That's why perfect and symmetrical racks are so prized.
Typically, when antlers grow, they grow in unison, and as the animal ages and matures, the antlers grow larger and heavier, with more and longer tines. What a deer hunter looks for and can determine from antlers are several different things: The type of nutrients, genetics and deer management in a particular area. Without naming any particular area in Wisconsin, there are areas where trophy bucks are far more common than in others. These areas generally have a lot of exceptionally good deposits of needed nutrients and minerals both in the ground and in available forage. And then there's the commitment of that area - -and its hunters - -to closely manage the deer population. Generally in these "big rack" trophy areas, smaller deer are simply not being taken. Cooperation on all fronts means that the trophies will be there, albeit they are never a "gimme." Deer hunters who frequent these areas often would rather come home empty-handed than with a small deer. "You make your choice and you take your chances" as the old saying goes.
Here is a non-scientific scenario of antler growth.
A new buck to about six months of age will by September or so have a couple of little nubs on his head about an inch or so high. These animals are called "nubber bucks." It is illegal to hunt them in many states (check your regs! - -as I keep "preaching" to you to do - - before going out). A buck that’s a year-and-a-half old and has carried through its first winter and made it to its second year is called a "spike buck." They'll have two spikes sticking straight out of their head, with anywhere from four to eight points, with an average width of seven to eight inches, and tines two to four inches long. From what I've seen, I'd estimate that 90% of the bucks taken in Wisconsin in any given year fall into this category.
If a buck makes it through its second year, they really start to put on growth in their antlers - -depending again on their food source, genetics and area management. Their racks will get heavier and wider, with longer tines. You can get bucks with 20 inch spreads, and 14 inch tines. These bucks are called "trophies" (as if you didn't know – and stop salivating- - they are out there, but they take a lot of patience and effort to bag. I know. The closest I've ever gotten to one is seeing a shed here-and-there).

The Onset of Buck Fever

The Onset of Buck Fever

By: Nick Simonson , Fishing Buddy
06/10/2010 3:43 PM

I didn’t think it would happen to me. I thought I could avoid this onslaught of excitement, of gear-spinning thoughts, and yes, above the buzz of the caffeine from my morning coffee, the slight adrenaline rush that comes with the mere suggestion of it. But as of 8:07 a.m., on June 6, 2010, when a good trip around the lake for some largemouth would have at least kept it at bay, I came to grips with the fact that not only had it happened to me, it is now part of who I am - Buck Fever.

There were no deer hunters in my household growing up. The fact that I ended up hunting at all was a small miracle. My initial forays into the sport were unsuccessful, but a couple of mind-altering experiences in the last few seasons have hooked me on the chase, the rush, and the lure of ghostly deer with antlers that cast shadows the size of oak trees. With each passing season, buck fever besets upon me earlier and earlier. Last year, it was September, when I first started to get comfortable with my bow. The year before that it struck in October, as I hung my first stand in the woods. Two years ago, I was spared its effects until opening day.

But this year, the fever is in full effect well ahead of schedule. And it didn’t take much to bring the symptoms to a simmer either. Cooped up by the intermittent rains and occasional clap of thunder, and having read the Sports and Outdoors sections in their entirety, I was left with just the circulars in Sunday’s paper. Suddenly, the world went quiet and all I could hear was my pulse pounding in my ears. A mere two page spread in the Gander Mountain ad sent me up into a tree on the year’s first sale-priced ladder stand and had me poring over dozens of digital photographs on the back of a new trail camera. Food plot mixes and new models of compound bows were splashed against the backdrop of a big 10-pointer munching turnip greens in the sun-dappled field on the local fleet store’s half-pager.

My breathing quickened and I attempted to bring myself back to the moment. Surely that wasn’t sweat on my brow, as I cautiously reached my hand up from my coffee cup and rubbed the furrow on my forehead. It was probably just some condensation coming from the steam of my third cup of the morning. I looked at the wet sheen on the pad of my index finger and slowly curled it and I shivered with a twinge of adrenaline – I mean, caffeine – as the slow squeeze was transferred to an imaginary trigger with that same 10-pointer in the crosshairs of my scope.

“Are you alright? Did you do something to your finger?” my brother-in-law asked me quizzically, apparently having taken in my reaction to the equipment, gadgets and images that were spread out before me.

Like being caught talking to yourself about some private matter when you think you’re all alone, but really aren’t, I suddenly and almost embarrassedly became aware that I wasn’t in some stand on the edge of a clearing, that the only monster buck was the one still chowing down on the glossy page before me, and that it was still a full three months and change before the bow season opened and five months away from firearms deer season.
“No, no…I’m…fine,” I responded shakily, thinking that I’ve told much more intricate lies more convincingly in the past, but I really couldn’t remember any of them at that particular moment.

Blinking away the first of what will be many illusions and delusions of the seasons to come, I turned the page of the advertisement to the camping gear and canoe section and folded the back page of the paper in half, hiding the specials on bulk perennial seeds. I stepped to the sink with coffee cup in hand, and took my final sip of the morning. Looking out of the kitchen window, the breaks in the clouds signaled that the rain was going to let up soon, which would help get my mind back to summer and help me shake shake this confounded fever. After all, it is only June, and there were still plenty of bucks – I mean bass – to catch on the nearby lake…in our outdoors.

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Friday, January 21, 2011

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Ohio Trophy Deer - Nice 10 PT

Ohio is producing some trophy deer. This nice 10pt from the fall.
James

Venison Meatballs in Cream Sauce

Who doesn’t like meatballs? Kids really love ‘em, so this is a winner for families. They’re great served with rice or over noodles.
¼ tsp Grill Seasoning
1 egg (beaten)
¼ cup milk
2 tbsp ketchup
¾ cup quick cooking oats
¼ cup onions (chopped finely)
¼ cup parsley (minced)
1 ½ pound ground mule deer
3 tbsp flour
Salt & Pepper to taste
Sauce:
2 tbsp butter
2 tbsp flour
¼ tsp dried thyme
Salt & Pepper taste
14 ounces chicken broth
2/3 cup whipping cream
2 tbsp fresh parsley (minced)
In a bowl combine the first 10 ingredients, shape into 1 ½ inch balls and place into a greased glass baking dish. Bake at 400 for 10 minutes then turn and bake for another 10-15 minutes until done. Meanwhile, make the sauce by melting butter over medium heat; then add flour, thyme, salt and pepper stir until smooth. Gradually add broth & cream and bring to a boil. Cook and stir for 2 minutes or until thick and bubbly. Drain meatballs if needed, place on serving plates. Pour sauce over meatballs. Garnish with parsley.

Over 400 Inches Of Antler - How Would You Tag Them?

Ohio DNR found these 3 deer stuck together from fighting, over 400 inches of antler the biggest was 165 inches. So lets say you come up on these deer while you are hunting here are some questions you might ask yourself. Which one do I Shoot? How will they score IT or Them? Do I get to keep them all?