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Author Topic: Freak nasty taken in Illinois  (Read 20554 times)

Offline csaaphill

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #45 on: November 08, 2014, 01:20:23 AM »
Nice deer no matter.
Used to be a restuarant arund here where as a kid we'd go eat at and I'd look at the mounted deer they had one looked just like that big whitetail so ya they do grow that way sometimes naturally.
THis was in the 70's so it was natural.
"When my bow falls, so shall the world. When me heart ceases to pump blood to my body, it will all come crashing down. As a hunter, we are bound by duty, nay, bound by our very soul to this world. When a hunter dies we feel it, we sense it, and the world trembles with sorrow. When I die, so shall the world, from the shock of loosing such a great part of ones soul." Ezekiel, Okeanos Hunter

Offline savage.270

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #46 on: November 08, 2014, 11:46:59 PM »
horn color alone give it away as a farm raised buck, fine for him but not for me.

How do the antler color give it away?

Offline Jonathan_S

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #47 on: November 09, 2014, 07:03:21 AM »
horn color alone give it away as a farm raised buck, fine for him but not for me.

How do the antler color give it away?

Yeah that is a curious statement.  Antler color comes from what the buck rubs on after shedding velvet.  Antler is snow white until it rubs on aspen, pine, sage, etc.
Kindly do not attempt to cloud the issue with too many facts.

Offline BOWHUNTER45

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #48 on: November 09, 2014, 07:23:41 AM »
I am more impressed with the Muley  :dunno: :chuckle:

Offline Band

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #49 on: November 09, 2014, 05:40:19 PM »
horn color alone give it away as a farm raised buck, fine for him but not for me.

How do the antler color give it away?

Yeah that is a curious statement.  Antler color comes from what the buck rubs on after shedding velvet.  Antler is snow white until it rubs on aspen, pine, sage, etc.
I think that is the point of the comment.  From what I've seen some deer farms are nothing more than a stark field with no rubbing vegetation, so they don't get any darkness in their antlers from sap or whatever.

Offline Birdboy

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #50 on: November 09, 2014, 05:46:55 PM »
Great deer to the both of you!   :tup:

Offline carver52

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #51 on: November 09, 2014, 06:00:36 PM »
I have seen and killed several bucks over the years that had white antlers and in the wild.  Maybe bucks can be like humans in that some are always sparring, shadow boxing, working out and some just go about the regular day without all that.  And I haven't met a deer hunter yet who'd let one like that walk and say, "it was just too big for me, I want one smaller".  But those are just my thoughts, I may be wrong.

Offline Spawnstar

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #52 on: November 10, 2014, 08:20:36 PM »
nice buck
« Last Edit: November 14, 2014, 03:58:58 PM by Spawnstar »
Romans 8:28 Semper Fi

Offline carlyoungs

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Re: Freak nasty taken in Illinois
« Reply #53 on: November 10, 2014, 08:28:03 PM »
Who ever thinks this buck is a whitetail, they need to get there eyes checked. And since that is a mule deer, you can't just raise one of those in a pen. No one raises mule deer in pens, they don't live. This guy shot an awesome buck let's not beat him down.


I don't know what you're seeing but that is whitetail all the way. Maybe you saw the second picture that was posted of the un typical mule deer?

 


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