Free: Contests & Raffles.
Sorry but i dont see any way that a deers browtines actually perform the duty of protecting their eyes in a fight. Browtine is a much more accurate term. Calling them eyeguards rings about the same with me as people calling the white (not rub stained) tips of antlers "polished tips." Its nonsense. Like a deer or elk is making little circular motions just rubbing the tips of their antlers, which somehow rubs the brown off. Total absurdity.
A simple formula for eyeguards: count them on your deer, do not count them on on your buddies deer
Quote from: Bango skank on March 16, 2016, 01:49:57 AMSorry but i dont see any way that a deers browtines actually perform the duty of protecting their eyes in a fight. Browtine is a much more accurate term. Calling them eyeguards rings about the same with me as people calling the white (not rub stained) tips of antlers "polished tips." Its nonsense. Like a deer or elk is making little circular motions just rubbing the tips of their antlers, which somehow rubs the brown off. Total absurdity.It's a descriptor. It doesn't actually have to guard the eyes. Just like sword and dagger points on elk aren't actually swords or daggers.Sent from my E6782 using Tapatalk
Quote from: DOUBLELUNG on March 16, 2016, 09:25:18 AMI made the transition from eastern count to western count pretty easily. I'm still thrown by the east Lewiscountians' description of a 5-point bull as "three point double eye guards" and a 6-point as "four point double eye guards". What is the geographic range of that nomenclature, and does it have a name (e.g., Morton count)?Also, west Lewis county and Pacific county. This is how I was taught to count antler points.Sent from my E6782 using Tapatalk
I made the transition from eastern count to western count pretty easily. I'm still thrown by the east Lewiscountians' description of a 5-point bull as "three point double eye guards" and a 6-point as "four point double eye guards". What is the geographic range of that nomenclature, and does it have a name (e.g., Morton count)?
Quote from: grundy53 on March 17, 2016, 06:21:07 AMQuote from: DOUBLELUNG on March 16, 2016, 09:25:18 AMI made the transition from eastern count to western count pretty easily. I'm still thrown by the east Lewiscountians' description of a 5-point bull as "three point double eye guards" and a 6-point as "four point double eye guards". What is the geographic range of that nomenclature, and does it have a name (e.g., Morton count)?Also, west Lewis county and Pacific county. This is how I was taught to count antler points.Sent from my E6782 using TapatalkSomeone taught you right Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: chester on March 17, 2016, 08:27:43 PMQuote from: grundy53 on March 17, 2016, 06:21:07 AMQuote from: DOUBLELUNG on March 16, 2016, 09:25:18 AMI made the transition from eastern count to western count pretty easily. I'm still thrown by the east Lewiscountians' description of a 5-point bull as "three point double eye guards" and a 6-point as "four point double eye guards". What is the geographic range of that nomenclature, and does it have a name (e.g., Morton count)?Also, west Lewis county and Pacific county. This is how I was taught to count antler points.Sent from my E6782 using TapatalkSomeone taught you right Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLMAO!
Tradition, heritage, personal choice, whatever you want to call it. For legal reasons sure count it. Mule deer camp, get laughed off the mountain. If you want to be taken seriously, call a four point a four point, if it's a four point with eye guards call it that. If it's a three point with eye guards, it's not a four point. Quit trying to make your buck sound bigger. Much like finding a d cup stuffed with tissue. Most of the time this has nothing to do with elk or whitetail. That's a different campfire. Basically it can't be explained any further here, because we aren't allowed to use insults, explicitives, or really even be a manly here. The same pc world that won't let a person speak his mind on here, is the same pc world trying to count all the points on a mule deer.