mtlion
Well-known member
You're giving me way too much credit. Im just a guy with a job that gives him too much free time.
That is badass. Are you guys hiring?
LOL Good one on the rooster! I'm not sure :W:
Roosters don't lay eggs. :hump:
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You're giving me way too much credit. Im just a guy with a job that gives him too much free time.
LOL Good one on the rooster! I'm not sure :W:
Roosters don't lay eggs. :hump:
I've seen roosters lay eggs.
Well it appears that maybe you arent out in the hills when the elk and deer are regrowing their antlers,,but take a look at my album in my profile,,if you still think they dont shed them then tell me how they are laying all over the ground in the spring
Roosters lay chickens :hump:
Chickens lay eggs.
Rooster on rooster is legal in a few states now fyi
Well I guess that some people are just ignorant,,I am mobility impared and I use my bike to carry my load but I ride only on the roads,,I walk and carry the antlers to where my bike is parked,,you cant see it in the pictures but I am already at my truck,,with the economy the way it is I ride my bike to places I want to walk,,not my truck
79% of elk do not shed their antlers. Fact.
Just measured 2 moose and two elk racks I have handy. The pedicals on the moose are 8-8.5" in dia right at the base of the antler and the elk are 6.75-7"... These are all mature animals. Not sure you're theory on frost bite holds much credibility. I'd say elk and moose are similar in diameter of equal age.
All most all moose shed in in the dead of winter. I would imagine that the thousands of moose that live in interior Alaska where its routinely 20-40 below zero when they shed, should all have frost bite?
I watched a perfectly healthy elk get eaten alive by a single wolf one spring morning. He could have defended himself with his antlers but didn't even try. He ran for his life and lost. I don't think antlered animals really use their headgear for defense.
I was wondering if anyone knows if this is true. I was told that whitetails drop their antlers about now followed by Mule deer and then elk. I just have a hard time believing that an elk, who has to grow substantially more antler mass than a whiteail, would drop his antlers the latest. Thanks for any help.