Free: Contests & Raffles.
whitetails will scrape yearround reguardless to the rut. I had 5 scrapes on trails last may-july going to a salt.
Quote from: jasnt on February 19, 2015, 05:40:38 AMWhat about the buck dogging the doe on jan 22?That would be a third rut most likely (unless it was a yearling). How hard was he dogging her.. it could have just be general interest... I have seen bucks dog does that weren't hot.. just doing a little chase but then later ignoring her.
What about the buck dogging the doe on jan 22?
Quote from: DBHAWTHORNE on February 19, 2015, 10:03:55 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 19, 2015, 05:40:38 AMWhat about the buck dogging the doe on jan 22?That would be a third rut most likely (unless it was a yearling). How hard was he dogging her.. it could have just be general interest... I have seen bucks dog does that weren't hot.. just doing a little chase but then later ignoring her.he was relentless. She kept bawling to him them take a few steps. He'd bump her in the rump while grunting quick and repeatedly She was def hot and he was persistent
Quote from: jasnt on February 18, 2015, 01:55:29 PMWhat I was pointing out is the 2nd and 3 estrus cycles. If there is plenty of bucks the does are still not getting bred quickly. This makes for late fawns and those late fawns must play catch-up to make it threw winter healthy. I see a lot of fawn drops around 1 June. one year I literally watched as a doe gave birth. I came upon her by accident and unfortunately I spooked her just as she dropped. That puts her being bred about 14 November during the first estrus. Even if you have great buck to do ratios you will almost always have a 2nd estrus because some of the yearlings will come into estrus late.. that can be anywhere between 22 Nov- 31 Dec.... A true second estrus would be right around Mid December and the third would be Early-Mid Jan... I have personally never seen rutting that late in WA but it's certainly possible.... I have seen a little bit of rutting behavior around 15 December but for the most part it dies off almost completley within the first 5-10 Days of December (in the areas I hunt). That being said.. the rifle hunters actually have the best time because they get all the build up to the rut when the bucks are moving all over the place looking for does... If they take baiting away I also believe they should remove the rifle rut and give it to the bowhunters.
What I was pointing out is the 2nd and 3 estrus cycles. If there is plenty of bucks the does are still not getting bred quickly. This makes for late fawns and those late fawns must play catch-up to make it threw winter healthy.
Quote from: jasnt on February 19, 2015, 10:10:23 AMQuote from: DBHAWTHORNE on February 19, 2015, 10:03:55 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 19, 2015, 05:40:38 AMWhat about the buck dogging the doe on jan 22?That would be a third rut most likely (unless it was a yearling). How hard was he dogging her.. it could have just be general interest... I have seen bucks dog does that weren't hot.. just doing a little chase but then later ignoring her.he was relentless. She kept bawling to him them take a few steps. He'd bump her in the rump while grunting quick and repeatedly She was def hot and he was persistentWas it a yearling doe or mature one?
Quote from: DBHAWTHORNE on February 19, 2015, 10:27:23 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 19, 2015, 10:10:23 AMQuote from: DBHAWTHORNE on February 19, 2015, 10:03:55 AMQuote from: jasnt on February 19, 2015, 05:40:38 AMWhat about the buck dogging the doe on jan 22?That would be a third rut most likely (unless it was a yearling). How hard was he dogging her.. it could have just be general interest... I have seen bucks dog does that weren't hot.. just doing a little chase but then later ignoring her.he was relentless. She kept bawling to him them take a few steps. He'd bump her in the rump while grunting quick and repeatedly She was def hot and he was persistentWas it a yearling doe or mature one?She is a big mature doe. I know her well. She had twins last year. These deer I have know for years. They all have names and visiting my food plots and feed stations daily. I average 1000-2000 pics a night from the food plots alone. Been doing this for 6 years now so I do have an intemint knowlage of this heard.
I wonder if she could have lost her fawn and came back in to heat. Definitely an outlier.
Quote from: boneaddict on February 20, 2015, 12:26:38 AMI wonder if she could have lost her fawn and came back in to heat. Definitely an outlier. that is a possibility, I hadn't thought of that.
Very likely the doe was having problems getting pregnant - just like some humans do. They will keep going into estrous and breeding until they get an egg implanted in the uterus. I read studies of Muley doe ovaries studied under microscope that indicated that many of the does had already had a unsuccessful pregnancy just prior to that year's main rutting period.I saw a blacktail fawn this year in early November that couldn't have been older than just 8 - 10 weeks. I assume they don't survive the winters well when the does are bred in mid-winter and then drop late in summer.Just my guess of what you are observing.
Well, it really kind of is a 3rd "rut", or more probably 5th, based on the late date. Bucks will always chase and breed a doe in estrous. We think of rut as a thing bucks do, but it is really a doe thing that the bucks respond to. Every 20 - 28 days, the does will come into heat again until they are impregnated. It's not really a rut, it's just the last trickles of breeding activity occurring way outside the normal window that the breeding usually takes place. One lucky buck is still gettin' some action. The others are just trying to survive winter, or in the case of this year, enjoying the sun.