That’s why I only did a contest once I’d like to see how they killed 35 probably off some dead beef with a thermal.
Drive around with thermal on top of vehicle and shoot them once they see them.
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That’s why I only did a contest once I’d like to see how they killed 35 probably off some dead beef with a thermal.
Lots of fawns. Wonder why recruitment is so bad?They eat deer
They eat deer
Not quite that simple allegedlyDrive around with thermal on top of vehicle and shoot them once they see them.
I don’t believe we are sustaining it.Yeah I know, but how can they even sustain that? That’s just an insane number of mouths to feed.
I promise you it isNot quite that simple allegedly
There was a long time I didn’t believe that coyotes killed many deer. My views have changed. Especially when there is deep snowyotes are pretty impressive as survivors and killers. There’s a small fishing dam near us on the edge of a small town. They’ve learned to push the mule deer out onto the ice when there’s little to no snow and slippery. They can’t move any good on that slick ice. I’ve witnessed several times going fishing there and seeing 2-3 fresh eaten carcasses from the night before with blood everywhere. Pretty gruesome.
I was the same way. They will kill them in numbers pretty efficiently on ice or deep snow like you mentioned.There was a long time I didn’t believe that coyotes killed many deer. My views have changed. Especially when there is deep snow
We took a hike yesterday in some rolling hill country not far from Big Timber. The number of coyote tracks were incredible. We are thinking of bringing the caller and a couple rifles there next week.I was the same way. They will kill them in numbers pretty efficiently on ice or deep snow like you mentioned.
There was a long time I didn’t believe that coyotes killed many deer. My views have changed. Especially when there is deep snow
That would be awesome.We should do a ht miss management derby for that
Yea, you need to manage them differently. With cattle, I imagine you manage the genetics very specifically, if you can, to express the traits you desire. You can generally control mortality from natural causes (weathers, feed, etc) pretty well, so any negative traits caused by the limited genetic pool are minimized.I think we may be illustrating the differences between the way ranchers and biologists think about managing a herds numbers. Ranchers tend to manage on an individual animal by animal basis. Biologists manage based on the herd as a whole. The problem for the rancher approach, it is very hard to manage by the individual in the wild. The problem biologists need to tackle in the future is hunters are no longer harvesting a "gate cut" like they did thirty years ago.
How did that 170 that you were hunting turn out? Did it turn into a 150 once it got blasted?Yea, you need to manage them differently. With cattle, I imagine you manage the genetics very specifically, if you can, to express the traits you desire. You can generally control mortality from natural causes (weathers, feed, etc) pretty well, so any negative traits caused by the limited genetic pool are minimized.
Conversely, the most healthy herd of deer would have the most genetic variance. That way in times of difficult environmental conditions you still have deer that survive. With a very limited genetic pool you could lose so many (in a bad enough event) as to essentially lose that population. The remaining few would not have enough genetic differences to carry the population forward.
160". His fronts were quite a bit shorter than I thought. Other than that, basically what I thought. I'm sending in his teeth, you can guess age by pics and teeth.How did that 170 that you were hunting turn out? Did it turn into a 150 once it got blasted?