Free: Contests & Raffles.
Ethics are the toughest thing out there and something that you have to decide for yourself. I can say that it is legal, the fawn will probably make it through the winter and you have to decide from there. Keep in mind there is no guarantee that the fawn will make it through the winter even with it's mother.I think this is one that many hunters struggle with. Good luck on your decision.
Quote from: Rainier10 on October 19, 2016, 08:40:23 AMEthics are the toughest thing out there and something that you have to decide for yourself. I can say that it is legal, the fawn will probably make it through the winter and you have to decide from there. Keep in mind there is no guarantee that the fawn will make it through the winter even with it's mother.I think this is one that many hunters struggle with. Good luck on your decision.Just don't use an AR type rifle and you will be perfectly ethical. Everyone knows you can't ethically kill a deer with an AR Rifle variant.
I've never killed a Doe and never will because your killing the Doe,the Fawn she might have this spring,the fawn that fawn might have, it's never ending. Why our biologist think we have so many deer that we need to kill Does I will never know. I know there are some Whitetail herds that could use some thinning but I'm talking about Blacktails. If your old enough to know how many Blacktails there was 40 years ago you would understand what I'm talking about.
Quote from: JLS on October 19, 2016, 09:15:30 AMQuote from: Rob on October 19, 2016, 08:29:57 AMI have not spent much time hunting doe deer before. This time of year, many does are still with their yearlings. I would assume that the yearlings are old enough to survive without their mothers, but I am hesitant to pull the trigger on a doe with a yearling nearby.What are the ethics behind this one?Having the doe around will not have a significant affect on the likelihood of survival for the fawn. However, if you can, shoot a doe without a fawn. She is barren for a reason, either age, low fertility (this is a hereditary trait), bad teeth, etc. By removing her, you are reducing competition for cover, food, bucks that are better spent on the does that have fawns.Youre saying if a doe doesnt have fawns this time of year its because shes barren, due to health issues. Im going to have to strongly disagree. A high percentage of does in my area have no fawns by october. The reason is predators, not the does health. Bears, cougars, wolves, coyotes, hell ive seen vultures take out a newborn fawn.
Quote from: Rob on October 19, 2016, 08:29:57 AMI have not spent much time hunting doe deer before. This time of year, many does are still with their yearlings. I would assume that the yearlings are old enough to survive without their mothers, but I am hesitant to pull the trigger on a doe with a yearling nearby.What are the ethics behind this one?Having the doe around will not have a significant affect on the likelihood of survival for the fawn. However, if you can, shoot a doe without a fawn. She is barren for a reason, either age, low fertility (this is a hereditary trait), bad teeth, etc. By removing her, you are reducing competition for cover, food, bucks that are better spent on the does that have fawns.
I have not spent much time hunting doe deer before. This time of year, many does are still with their yearlings. I would assume that the yearlings are old enough to survive without their mothers, but I am hesitant to pull the trigger on a doe with a yearling nearby.What are the ethics behind this one?
Problem solved.Shoot the yearling. Not bred, might not survive, tastes awesome. I love win win's.
Quote from: Bango skank on October 19, 2016, 04:07:07 PMQuote from: JLS on October 19, 2016, 09:15:30 AMQuote from: Rob on October 19, 2016, 08:29:57 AMI have not spent much time hunting doe deer before. This time of year, many does are still with their yearlings. I would assume that the yearlings are old enough to survive without their mothers, but I am hesitant to pull the trigger on a doe with a yearling nearby.What are the ethics behind this one?Having the doe around will not have a significant affect on the likelihood of survival for the fawn. However, if you can, shoot a doe without a fawn. She is barren for a reason, either age, low fertility (this is a hereditary trait), bad teeth, etc. By removing her, you are reducing competition for cover, food, bucks that are better spent on the does that have fawns.Youre saying if a doe doesnt have fawns this time of year its because shes barren, due to health issues. Im going to have to strongly disagree. A high percentage of does in my area have no fawns by october. The reason is predators, not the does health. Bears, cougars, wolves, coyotes, hell ive seen vultures take out a newborn fawn.That's fine, we can certainly agree to disagree.