Free: Contests & Raffles.
Because I really never TRY for a deer, I just shoot the first legal deer that is dumb enough to let me get close.I shoot my deer while hunting for Elk !Also, just to respond to Quote from: woodswalker on August 26, 2011, 09:37:32 AMWhile I agree that does are tasty and fill the freezer, from a biological point of view its cutting off your nose to spite your face. When you take a buck, there will be another one to breed the does. When you take a doe you END the line of deer production of bucks AND does... Think it through....how many deer does a doe give birth to over her fertile lifetime? Lets assume for easy numbers she can give birth to 10 deer, 5 does and 5 bucks that survive to adulthood and fertility.Over her lifetime and the lifetimes of the next 2 generations you will get 10 deer from her, which will produce, over their life - using the same numbers 50 deer, 25 does and 25 bucks...and the second generation will produce 250 deer, 125 does and 125 bucks. hence if you take the does you cut OFF the deer production.I realize that this is an oversimplification but it serves to emphasize the point that taking a doe has a tremendous impact on the overall population potential for deer.Also understand that SOME places are overrun with deer, like the wheat fields full of WT's and that the GOAL is to reduce the year to year population growth...which IS wildlife management. But for the rest of the populations, we are served better by sticking to bucks.As you stated, that is an over simplification, and I used to think that way, but I do not feel that it has that much affect on populations.when numbers are low, and food is plentiful, does "twin up", meaning they have twin (2) fawns.When numbers are stable, food is normal, then a lot of them still "twin up"In bad years, they will have one fawn, in bad winters they will even abort, nature seeks a balance in all things.When it comes to deer, in a healthy herd, a few are going to get hit by cars, killed by predators, die from disease, etc.harvesting a few does has no significant impact, now harvesting a lot of does, might... But as an example, look at the Islands, lots of does killed every year, by all weapons, still a lot of deer.
While I agree that does are tasty and fill the freezer, from a biological point of view its cutting off your nose to spite your face. When you take a buck, there will be another one to breed the does. When you take a doe you END the line of deer production of bucks AND does... Think it through....how many deer does a doe give birth to over her fertile lifetime? Lets assume for easy numbers she can give birth to 10 deer, 5 does and 5 bucks that survive to adulthood and fertility.Over her lifetime and the lifetimes of the next 2 generations you will get 10 deer from her, which will produce, over their life - using the same numbers 50 deer, 25 does and 25 bucks...and the second generation will produce 250 deer, 125 does and 125 bucks. hence if you take the does you cut OFF the deer production.I realize that this is an oversimplification but it serves to emphasize the point that taking a doe has a tremendous impact on the overall population potential for deer.Also understand that SOME places are overrun with deer, like the wheat fields full of WT's and that the GOAL is to reduce the year to year population growth...which IS wildlife management. But for the rest of the populations, we are served better by sticking to bucks.
Killed my first blacktail last year.. a mature doe, and while I have a second tag this year, I dont tend to pass up legal deer. (or elk for that matter) i figure with all I put into the hunt- fuel, tag money, etc. I ought to get the freezer stocked, so thats what I do.. this might explain why I have a fair pile of small whitetail racks, I dont pass up much..