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feeding whitetails smack in the middle of a bad winter is too late. Read what happened in MI years ago, spent millions to feed the deer during one of their worst winters ever, thousands of deer died with full bellys of alfalfa. When deer get to the point of starvation, enzymes in their stomachs change to ba able digest woody browse things otherwise they would never eat, spring and summer.. u introduce leafy green alfalfa and they cant break it down, bloat and die
Quote from: huntnnw on January 05, 2011, 11:44:12 PMfeeding whitetails smack in the middle of a bad winter is too late. Read what happened in MI years ago, spent millions to feed the deer during one of their worst winters ever, thousands of deer died with full bellys of alfalfa. When deer get to the point of starvation, enzymes in their stomachs change to ba able digest woody browse things otherwise they would never eat, spring and summer.. u introduce leafy green alfalfa and they cant break it down, bloat and diemy point exactly. I feed all winter and don't stop untill the deer quit coming to the feed sometime in march. That MI fiasco was sad though. UT had a similar experience also years ago. As far as baits go they are not out usually long enough to do any harm.
Quote from: buck man on January 06, 2011, 12:06:44 AMQuote from: huntnnw on January 05, 2011, 11:44:12 PMfeeding whitetails smack in the middle of a bad winter is too late. Read what happened in MI years ago, spent millions to feed the deer during one of their worst winters ever, thousands of deer died with full bellys of alfalfa. When deer get to the point of starvation, enzymes in their stomachs change to ba able digest woody browse things otherwise they would never eat, spring and summer.. u introduce leafy green alfalfa and they cant break it down, bloat and diemy point exactly. I feed all winter and don't stop untill the deer quit coming to the feed sometime in march. That MI fiasco was sad though. UT had a similar experience also years ago. As far as baits go they are not out usually long enough to do any harm. Buck I think you are spot with what you said about baiting. I think it is a rare and quite possibly non-existent occurrence that baiting during the hunting season does any harm. My biggest worry is people that start baiting when the weather turns to crap or feeding them a lot of food and then going cold turkey on them in the dead of winter. There are some strong biological arguments against baiting during the dead of winter; drawing deer to wrong wintering locations, congregating deer in an area that can't support the numbers, drawing the deer through deep snow and away from thermo cover to feed; that is why I say the state feeding is worse than baiting during hunting season. All in all I think the deer are helped more often than hurt by winter feeding...it is those circumstances of changes in diet in the dead of winter that are the worst offender.
Quote from: DBHAWTHORNE on January 06, 2011, 12:44:45 AMQuote from: buck man on January 06, 2011, 12:06:44 AMQuote from: huntnnw on January 05, 2011, 11:44:12 PMfeeding whitetails smack in the middle of a bad winter is too late. Read what happened in MI years ago, spent millions to feed the deer during one of their worst winters ever, thousands of deer died with full bellys of alfalfa. When deer get to the point of starvation, enzymes in their stomachs change to ba able digest woody browse things otherwise they would never eat, spring and summer.. u introduce leafy green alfalfa and they cant break it down, bloat and diemy point exactly. I feed all winter and don't stop untill the deer quit coming to the feed sometime in march. That MI fiasco was sad though. UT had a similar experience also years ago. As far as baits go they are not out usually long enough to do any harm. Buck I think you are spot with what you said about baiting. I think it is a rare and quite possibly non-existent occurrence that baiting during the hunting season does any harm. My biggest worry is people that start baiting when the weather turns to crap or feeding them a lot of food and then going cold turkey on them in the dead of winter. There are some strong biological arguments against baiting during the dead of winter; drawing deer to wrong wintering locations, congregating deer in an area that can't support the numbers, drawing the deer through deep snow and away from thermo cover to feed; that is why I say the state feeding is worse than baiting during hunting season. All in all I think the deer are helped more often than hurt by winter feeding...it is those circumstances of changes in diet in the dead of winter that are the worst offender. What I was trying to get at was...yes there is a difference between feeding for months as opposed to throwing out 100 lbs of corn and some hay for the deer in november then it dumps snow on them... probably/possibly not a good scenario. Lots of factors involved, weather, location, among others......I too have a good chunk of property.... I used to feed/bait on...it wasn't for hunting purposes but for finding antlers....I'd put out a few bales in early november before the snows hit and by mid December I'd have at least a dozen sets. Prior to feeding I'd find them in this general area already....still do! This is in a wintering area....there was good thermal cover etc. I wasnt bringing them far maybe a mile...maybe less. As I said before I am neither for or against this. I just think it needs to be done in a resopnsible manner. There's a lot of yahoos out there that do *censored* willy nilly just because they can.he he..... I said yahoo AND willy nilly in the same sentence Again we need to stick together not necessarliy agree but stick together...... and there seems to be a lot of debating on here lately.....
1. Get rid of user groups.2. Archery season Sep 1 - Dec 15 anybody can hunt it even if they draw other tags and it goes through all seasons (season rules like blaze orange apply)3. Limit the number of firearm tags and make them for specific units.4. Shorten the firearm season slightly but not much. (Mid Oct - First week in Nov. at latest.5. Place Antler Restrictions on all whitetail (preferably spread...aside from being able to age a deer it is the preferred method and it has been done successfully by Georgia....but point restriction is better than nothing)6. Micromanage the doe harvest as much as possible at a state level. 7. Limit the muzzleloader tags but open access statewide. If someone has an extra doe tag for a certain unit they should be able to use this weapon/season also. Season Dec 1 - Dec 158. Keep the one buck limit unless it is shown that the herd could handle more.Some people argue that this is about big bucks but it's about a healthy herd. Some people argue about winter kill/wolves getting them instead of hunters... completely invalid.. how would killing more deer during the hunting season equal better for the herd if they are being taken out by winter or wolves..it can't (unless the herd is overpopulated and dying from starvation in the winter due to the overpopulation...not a highly likely scenario.. especially if the wolves are there) You give a program like this a few years and hardly anyone would want to go back to the way it used to be. Obviously adjustments may need to be made for season dates.
People need to realize that the deer that attend these baits don't rely on them as their only source of food. It is intended and is an appealing supplement to their natural food sources. I have watched deer from my stand come to the bait and stop 40 yds away and spend 30 minutes feeding on fir needles and moss. They never came all the way in because they were too cautious for whatever reason, but they didn't leave hungry either. Small doses of feed in late fall don't have as big of an impact on our whitetails digestion as is being portrayed in my opinion. That damage occurs as has been pointed out in the later harsher months. Not during the time baiting is happening. As I said earlier if anything those baits are making those animals have a better chance at survival in the months ahead, benefiting all hunters not just those doing the baiting. If baiting (during hunting season) was hurting deer I would quit in a heartbeat! Ive only seen evidence to the contrary in our area!
DB- that is pretty much how the midwest works...... and it has worked! from a selfish standpoint.... i like having a choose your weapon state. it gives me a lot more of the woods to myself vs. having all the other predominantly gun/muzzy guys out there with me putting more pressure on deer. having said that, it would give everyone A LOT more days in the field and i have seen how well it works in other states.i'd be all over that plan if we could get it to a vote.