Meat delivery! If it was season you could use the loader to put him in the truck. Just kidding- sort of......
I like to watch them too.
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nice little fella there
cool to see
Hit em'hard
hit em'often
True, he's not a very large one. I think he's a last year's fawn. A lot of them seem to skip the spike year and go right to the fork. The 4 pointers (and up) get pretty large. Archery season is on, but rifle season isn't until next month.
DG
Nice. Now if only you could lure him to the butchering area.
I've heard that compared to whitetails, shooting a mule deer is like shooting a cow tied to a post. Is that true?
Also, is that a mule deer, or a black tail? I've only hunted deer out east. (I guess black-tailed is a subspecies?)
Last edited by Buck Shot; 09-07-2021 at 12:28 PM.
But will he be there at hunting season. Seems like may animals have their own calendars with hunting season marked.
Had two wander by about that time on Saturday, and yesterday an even larger buck and I guess his favorite doe were right at my fence just wandering by nipping a bit of grass or weeds. Won't see them in about 6 weeks for a couple of months.
GONRA sez - in semirural PA "back yards" they're all over the place......
I got myself confused about their tails a couple of years ago, and phoned OF&G to ask an expert. Mule deer have a white tail with a black tip. From my observations the top 2/3 is white and the bottom 1/3 black. Here's the strange part: A whitetail deer's tail is black, except when they run and stick it up in the air and the bottom is white. A coastal black tail deer's tail is...yup, black. This guy is definitely a mule deer, which is all we've got here unless one was to run across a crossbreed, which is rare, and OF&G is understanding if they are mistakenly shot for something else. Basically, we've got the blacktails in the Coast Range Mountains and Willamette Valley, mule deer in the Cascades and Eastern Oregon. Only one county (Douglas) has whitetails in sufficient numbers to permit hunting, and they don't seem inclined to move very far away from that location. I was informed that whitetails were all over the state when it was originally settled, but they were hunted almost to extinction. As for the mulies being like shooting a cow (I did see the wink) I really can't say, as it's probably where you locate them at and under what circumstances. Maybe if they're out in a pasture grazing like a cow-- but they sure can disappear into a forest quickly, and like the man said, when deer season arrives they become very elusive.
DG
Wow..nice tractor
I Am Descended From Men Who Would Not Be Ruled
Fiat Justitia, Ruat Caelum
There is enough fat in the federal government that if you rendered it you could wash the world
Ronald Reagan.
Good looking table fare to me !
"Behold The Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world". John 1:29
Male Guanaco out in dry lakebed at 10,800 feet south of Arequipa.
Had a little one in velvet like that cross the driveway in front of me when I went out to check the mail the other day. He wasn't real scared, and if I hadn't had the dog with me, he'd have likely stopped and let me talk to him like they often do.
I still like to eat them, but can't seem to generate my former enthusiasm about killing them anymore. I'll still hunt, because like I said, we like to eat them, but I seem to enjoy watching them more and more lately.
Yep they are fun to watch.
But when October arrives my brain still thinks "supper time" for us and several older than us families we supply with great corn fed meat.
"Behold The Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world". John 1:29
Male Guanaco out in dry lakebed at 10,800 feet south of Arequipa.
Not so much fun to watch when they helping themselves to your garden.
..
I have about 60 acres to hunt on here. My land is 95% trees and brush. I enjoy the hunt and do my own processing. I am in a CWD (chronic wasting disease) county, so I have to travel to a check point to have my deer checked for CWD. That's only required on the opening weekend of our firearms deer season. I can just take the head and part of the spine for check in or the whole deer, my choice. So generally speaking the deer never leaves the home place after it is harvested. I said all that to say that we do hunt and like the meat. But house rules here is that we don't harvest any deer (or turkey either) around the house. We enjoy watching them too much to shoot them close to the house. Silly maybe, but that is our rule around here.
Mark 5:34 And He said to her (Jesus speaking), "Daughter, your faith has made you well. Go in peace and be healed of your affliction."
I culled a buck last year that had a broken shoulder more than likely from a run in with a car. Some people just can't understand what a crippled deer is suffering like. I too hope the deer died quickly.
BP | Bronze Point | IMR | Improved Military Rifle | PTD | Pointed |
BR | Bench Rest | M | Magnum | RN | Round Nose |
BT | Boat Tail | PL | Power-Lokt | SP | Soft Point |
C | Compressed Charge | PR | Primer | SPCL | Soft Point "Core-Lokt" |
HP | Hollow Point | PSPCL | Pointed Soft Point "Core Lokt" | C.O.L. | Cartridge Overall Length |
PSP | Pointed Soft Point | Spz | Spitzer Point | SBT | Spitzer Boat Tail |
LRN | Lead Round Nose | LWC | Lead Wad Cutter | LSWC | Lead Semi Wad Cutter |
GC | Gas Check |