Hunting Washington Forum
Community => Taxidermy & Scoring => Topic started by: luvtohnt on March 19, 2009, 10:22:54 AM
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I decided I want to score my sheds. I only have 2 but thought what the heck it will help me field judge better if I knew the scores of ones I have held in my hands. So a couple questions without a matched set how can you figure approximate inside, outside and tip to tip spread on an elk? My sheds are both 6 points so do I measure the main beam length and the length of the 6th point? Any and all advice is welcome and appreciated.
Brandon
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Unofficially, for folks I think that the average bull they give 45 inches as a standard for inside spread. None of the others count anyway. I think thats right anyway. You measure all points and the last one counts as your mainbeam.
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this may help.
http://www.shedantlers.org/forms/elk%20score%20sheet.pdf (http://www.shedantlers.org/forms/elk%20score%20sheet.pdf)
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Only measure the main beam, its a 6x6 so the individual points are g-1 through g-5 and then the main beam length. As for inside spread on a roosie safe inside on a descent bull is around 32- 35 could be wider could be narrower. Tip to tip doesnt get added into the score so it doesnt matter. Only width you get is inside spread . Bone I would say 40 inch inside for rockeys.
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Ok, so I split the difference and went with 42 4/8 as inside spread. I got what would be a 290 bull and a 300 bull. With a error margine of +/- 10 inches since this is my first attempt at scoring. I would have thought they scored the opposite but I guess all those extra inch here and there add up pretty fast, and the mass on the smaller one didn't help it catch up much. Thanks guys.
Brandon
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Pretty sure M-Ray told me his big sheds were only given a 40" credit. :dunno:
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Might be 40!
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40" is pretty common, if you look inthe WA state record book a lot of the bulls are upper 30's to low 40's.
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I need to get some pics up here... I think my Rocky Mountain Bull is 54-55"...