Fwiw this is my buck from this year with a 15 1/2 inside spread. Doesn't clear the "outside the ears" moniker but I suppose it's all relative.
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Here is one for the brain trust here to consider…..
I let my best friend and his son hunt on my land for gun deer season. Neither of them are avid deer hunters and have only killed a couple deer each in a lifetime before hunting my land so I always set them in my best stands on opening weekend.
They certainly know how much time, money and effort I put in and they are very appreciative. They even come to my place a day a year and I put them to work on ball buster projects. Never a complaint….only appreciation.
But the last 2 years in a row my friends son has shot “my” best up and coming 2 year old on opening morning. I passed them during bow season and showed pics but I never said “don’t” shoot them either…..so it’s technically my fault.
The problem we have is that when he sees a rack outside the ears, he can’t stay off the trigger. I tell him that there are bigger, more mature bucks and plenty of does (he LOVES venison) but that 14” wide 8 pointer is too much to resist for a guy who has seen only a handful of bucks in his life from a stand.
I talked to him this year about how those 2.5’s really blow into nice bucks in a year, if they make it, and I know he understands. But then I think about how excited he and his dad are when he shoots a buck…..and I feel guilty for potentially taking that away from them.
I have about 300 acres and I know we can’t truly protect those bucks. Between my neighbors shooting everything with a rack and the wolves straight up eating everything else, I’m about 90% sure passing 2.5’s won’t make a difference anyway.
But how can I teach an inexperienced hunter that “outside the ears” means almost nothing??
Spikes would be great.The rule on my place is if you shoot it then you mount it, so if you are happy enough with it to pay for the mount which is expensive then it is a trophy and I say good for you.
I sorta find it ironic though that everyone wants their neighbors to only hunt mature deer, I want my neighbors to shoot spikes and then sleep in for the rest on the season. Always a better chance they will see a dink before a mature buck and then I can hunt the big boys. I know there is a chance that dink will be 160 one day but I think there is a better cahnce they shoot a 135 every year while I eat tag soup. They should be proud of spikes, I am proud of them
Personally I don’t think you should.Here is one for the brain trust here to consider…..
I let my best friend and his son hunt on my land for gun deer season. Neither of them are avid deer hunters and have only killed a couple deer each in a lifetime before hunting my land so I always set them in my best stands on opening weekend.
They certainly know how much time, money and effort I put in and they are very appreciative. They even come to my place a day a year and I put them to work on ball buster projects. Never a complaint….only appreciation.
But the last 2 years in a row my friends son has shot “my” best up and coming 2 year old on opening morning. I passed them during bow season and showed pics but I never said “don’t” shoot them either…..so it’s technically my fault.
The problem we have is that when he sees a rack outside the ears, he can’t stay off the trigger. I tell him that there are bigger, more mature bucks and plenty of does (he LOVES venison) but that 14” wide 8 pointer is too much to resist for a guy who has seen only a handful of bucks in his life from a stand.
I talked to him this year about how those 2.5’s really blow into nice bucks in a year, if they make it, and I know he understands. But then I think about how excited he and his dad are when he shoots a buck…..and I feel guilty for potentially taking that away from them.
I have about 300 acres and I know we can’t truly protect those bucks. Between my neighbors shooting everything with a rack and the wolves straight up eating everything else, I’m about 90% sure passing 2.5’s won’t make a difference anyway.
But how can I teach an inexperienced hunter that “outside the ears” means almost nothing??