• If you are posting pictures, and they aren't posting in the correct orientation, please flush your browser cache and try again.

    Edge
    Safari/iOS
    Chrome

Are the glory days of deer hunting coming to a close?

Another thing I absolutely hate about the thought of earn a buck - and I will use my land as an example. We didnt kill a doe for eight years. We still only kill one or at most two a year. This year, so far, there have been nine people who hunt my land at least a day or two. That would mean if we each wanted a chance of killing a buck, we would have each had to kill a doe. Nine does. We have not killed nine deer combined in the last ten years. Five miles away on a 5000 acre lease, they were rounding members up to go during the Christmas hunt - they were trying to kill over 100 does. We are both in the same deer zone. The same regulations do not often work just a few miles apart. If we killed nine does on my place every year, we would t have a doe left in five years.
The whole point of EAB is to ensure doe harvest keeps up with buck harvest or outpaces it. It sounds like you and the biologists or commissioners that implemented the policy in your region have a fundamentally different understanding of the state of your herd. The program has merit in the correct locales.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 356
The whole point of EAB is to ensure doe harvest keeps up with buck harvest or outpaces it. It sounds like you and the biologists or commissioners that implemented the policy in your region have a fundamentally different understanding of the state of your herd. The program has merit in the correct locales.
I understand 100%. But all properties are not created equal. One of my best friends hunts a 1200 acre property that has not had a doe killed off it in 30 years. Could it withstand an EAB Program - no doubt. Maybe even kill ten does before one buck. My property had six does on it a dozen years ago and we are only two miles apart. My point is - at least in all the areas I have hunted in AR - deer densities vary wildly from one property to the next - sometimes adjacent properties. Our deer zones may cover several counties. No way would a regulation like EAB work the same on every property across several counties - or even side by side. I have several 10/20 acre neighbors that take four or five deer a year. The husband, wife, and two kids hunt that 10 acres. No way they “need” to take four does, and their neighbor, also. Personally, I think EAB programs should be reserved for DMAP programs, where they can be applied based upon individual property requirements.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 356
The whole point of EAB is to ensure doe harvest keeps up with buck harvest or outpaces it. It sounds like you and the biologists or commissioners that implemented the policy in your region have a fundamentally different understanding of the state of your herd. The program has merit in the correct locales.
There's a lot of information on this forum that discussed the lack of trust in population estimates for many states, but specifically Minnesota. I completely agree that some areas could a higher doe harvest, but many areas have too few deer. Some of the deer regulations were created without any firm population estimates and caused significant decreases in deer populations.

I think that the good hunting many of us experience would evaporate if we harvested does at the high levels requested by some state agencies.
 
There's a lot of information on this forum that discussed the lack of trust in population estimates for many states, but specifically Minnesota. I completely agree that some areas could a higher doe harvest, but many areas have too few deer. Some of the deer regulations were created without any firm population estimates and caused significant decreases in deer populations.

I think that the good hunting many of us experience would evaporate if we harvested does at the high levels requested by some state agencies.
Do the state agencies know that people don't harvest at those level? Maybe that is factored into their goals?
 
Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder........

You get a few years into this, you want more deer. A few more than than better deer. A few years after that, you see time going by and just want to enjoy the outdoors like you did when you started.

I get something easy to obtain in the freezer early........ Takes the stress of getting the one you want vs getting one in the freezer out of your system.

Im kind of in double creek's mindset. I make the harvest itself a challenge. I brag how close I shoot them. Often go in the woods with traditional iron sighted flintlocks. Have no problems with 100 or 125 yard shots when the wind and animal is calm though. So, not soo limited.

Alot of issues is camera technology and the internet. It is very discouraging for a lot of hobbies, not just hunting....... Only cool hotrod is a twin turbo LS, rust free, frame off restoration...... Cant catch a good fish unless you got a triple 350 horse offshore boat.

Happy just hunting with my old marlin lever gun and no cameras up. Enjoy my humble little mustang. Have a great time on the inlets with my old penn reels, or in the lake with my 6hp Evinrude and basic fish finder........

Grass is always greener somewhere...........
I fear that technology is replacing a lot of the old scouting skills such as tracks, shift in feeding areas with seasons, plain old hunting savvy.

I am happy to continue without cameras.

If it is legal, do what you like, I guess.
 
Do the state agencies know that people don't harvest at those level? Maybe that is factored into their goals?
Surely they are aware - and possibly they want more bucks harvested than does due to cwd
 
Do the state agencies know that people don't harvest at those level? Maybe that is factored into
Are you saying the harvest is higher or lower than what is registered?

I don’t recall them referencing anything like that. I recall them increasing higher harvest recommendations despite lower annual harvest numbers and chalking lower harvest up to wind, standing corn and low hunter effort. Never to a reduced deer herd.
 
I fear that technology is replacing a lot of the old scouting skills such as tracks, shift in feeding areas with seasons, plain old hunting savvy.

I am happy to continue without cameras.

If it is legal, do what you like, I guess.

I’m running cellular cameras and think it’s fun. But just sitting in a blind on high ground late summer through fall taught me a lot more than my cameras did this year.

I spent a lot of time in a folding chair with a pair of binoculars this year. Living where I hunt and being retired makes a difference too.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Are you saying the harvest is higher or lower than what is registered?

I don’t recall them referencing anything like that. I recall them increasing higher harvest recommendations despite lower annual harvest numbers and chalking lower harvest up to wind, standing corn and low hunter effort. Never to a reduced deer herd.
I'm saying that maybe the state agencies know that people are not likely to harvest enough does regardless of what they set the targets to and maybe they account for it?
 
Isnt MO a one buck firearm state. If that is the case, I am surprised they dont harvest more than enough does. I wish our doe harvest would drop👍🏻
 
Isnt MO a one buck firearm state. If that is the case, I am surprised they dont harvest more than enough does. I wish our doe harvest would drop👍🏻

MO is a 2 buck state. Unless you’re in a CWD zone. Then it’s either 12 bucks or 7 bucks depending on the zone. They say any Deer for CWD. But we get what that means.

Sad really, I used to think MO had a chance at being as good as IA.
 
I’m running cellular cameras and think it’s fun. But just sitting in a blind on high ground late summer through fall taught me a lot more than my cameras did this year.

I spent a lot of time in a folding chair with a pair of binoculars this year. Living where I hunt and being retired makes a difference too.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Living where we hunt and being retired gives us more time to evaluate things.

I can understand how the cell cams help those who are still working or who don’t live on their hunting property.

Muzzleloader season here has been dang cold, but I can hunt from 3-5 PM and be back in a warm house in 5-20 minutes from anywhere on the property.
 
Back
Top