• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Unexplored Camping

Camping News & Reviews

  • Home

whitetail

QDMA 2020 Whitetail Report: record-low yearling buck harvest


ATHENS, Ga. — The Quality Deer Management Association (QDMA) released its 12th annual Whitetail Report, a comprehensive update on the status of white-tailed deer including deer harvest trends through the 2018-19 season, the most recent hunting season with complete deer harvest data available from most whitetail states and Canadian provinces. That season, the national percentage of yearling bucks (1½ years old) in the total antlered buck harvest fell to 30%, the lowest ever recorded.

“The fact that less than one in three antlered bucks shot today is 1½ years old is amazing,” said Kip Adams, QDMA Director of Conservation. “The result is that deer populations are more socially balanced, and of course hunters are seeing and harvesting more adult bucks. The average percentage of the buck harvest that was 3½ years old or older was 37% in 2018, which is by far the highest percentage ever reported.”

While the overall national buck harvest of 2,908,155 in 2018 was slightly down, it was within 2% of the total in 2017, which was the highest national buck harvest in nearly two decades and close to the modern record buck harvest of 3.1 million set in 1999.

Meanwhile, the national antlerless deer harvest was lower than the buck harvest for the second year in a row, at 2,881,168. Modern antlerless harvests first surpassed the buck harvest in the 1999 season and remained higher for 17 consecutive seasons until 2017.

“Reduced antlerless harvests are necessary in areas where deer herds have been balanced with the habitat and when other mortality factors, such as predation or disease, are increasing,” said Adams. “However, few states should be harvesting more antlered bucks than antlerless deer on a regular basis.”

Among other facts to be found in the new Whitetail Report:

  • 66 percent of deer taken in the 2018-19 season were killed with a firearm compared to 23 percent with a bow and 10 percent with a muzzleloader.
  • Hunting-related fatalities were down from 68 nationally in 2008 to 55 in 2018 — less than 1 in 100,000 deer hunters.
  • Texas had the highest total buck harvest at 508,000.
  • Michigan killed the most bucks per square mile, at 3.7.
  • South Carolina killed the most bucks per 100 deer hunters, at 79.

Complete state-by-state estimates of total buck harvest, buck age structure, and many other harvest parameters are available in the full Whitetail Report, which also includes a look at numerous other critical issues for whitetails and deer hunters.

QDMA’s 2020 Whitetail Report is available for download free here.

— QDMA

Categories: Hunting News, Whitetail Deer
Tags: Deer, QDMA, Quality Deer Management Association, white-tailed deer, Whitetails

[Read More …]

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

Facebook – Instagram – Twitter – Pinterest – Youtube

Hear the Unexplored Podcast at any of the below…

Apple – Google – Deezer – Stitcher – Spotify – LibSyn

Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Two charged in videotaped ‘torture’ of wounded whitetail deer


HARRISBURG, Pa. — Two people accused of repeatedly kicking a wounded deer in the head and pulling off its antler were charged Friday with aggravated cruelty to animals and other offenses.

The Pennsylvania Game Commission filed charges against Alexander Brock Smith, 18, and an unnamed 17-year-old, for what was described in an arrest warrant as the torture of the buck that the 17-year-old had shot and wounded.

Video of the November attack circulated quickly on social media and generated outrage, along with pressure on investigators to solve the case.

Smith was arraigned Friday and released on $ 50,000 unsecured bail. Messages were left seeking comment from attorneys for both defendants. The 17-year-old was charged as a juvenile, and court records in his case were not immediately available. A message was left with the county prosecutor.

Smith’s arrest affidavit said both defendants told investigators what occurred after the 17-year-old shot the whitetail deer while hunting from a tree stand on Smith’s family property in a remote region, about 75 miles (120 kilometers) northeast of Pittsburgh. Both defendants live in Brookville.

The younger defendant shot the deer at about noon on Nov. 30, and he missed as he attempted to shoot the deer a second time. The 17-year-old told investigators he did not have another round of live ammunition with him.

“He and Smith began to repeatedly kick and stomp the deer, attempting to kill the deer,” according to the police affidavit.

The deer appeared to be temporarily paralyzed and was seen on video struggling with each kick, while Smith stood on the animal’s back leg, the Game Commission charged.

The video showed the right antler was removed from the animal _ it was later recovered from the 17-year-old’s home.

The deer ran off and has not been located, Game Commission spokesman Travis Lau said. Investigators searched the area and used dogs, to no avail.

“We did find other deer that had either been shot or road kills that were in there and unrecovered, but we didn’t come up with any evidence that contradicted what they told us, that the deer had run off,” Lau said.

 

Categories: Hunting News, Whitetail Deer
Tags: Deer, Hunting, Pennsylvania Game Commission, white-tailed deer, Whitetails

[Read More …]

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

Facebook – Instagram – Twitter – Pinterest – Youtube

Hear the Unexplored Podcast at any of the below…

Apple – Google – Deezer – Stitcher – Spotify – LibSyn

Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Action is heating up in the whitetail woods


If you find a line of rubs, or several in the same area, you’ve likely found a bucks home range or travel route.

If you’re a bowhunter waiting for things to heat up before you head afield, you better gear up, now.

Bucks have really started moving over the past week with new rubs and scrapes popping up regularly.

If you ask me, this is, hands down, the best time to be in the woods. The rut is great, but once does start coming into estrus and are receptive a buck’s obsession, those bucks can get locked down with a doe and won’t leave her side  for a solid day or two. They won;t travel far and basically remain in the same, usually, secluded area. Hunting that buck can be an act in frustration.

However, right now the bocks are antsy, but the does aren’t interested yet, which drives the bucks crazy and keeps them moving. They move from doe pod to doe pod looking for the first doe in the area to go into estrus.

That’s why the woods are filling with rubs and scrapes right now. Bucks are letting does – and other bucks – know they are ready and willing. They are traveling through their known doe areas and leaving behind signs of that willingness.

Keep in mind that all rubs and scrapes are not the same, and often tell a different story.

The size of a rub can sometimes relate to the size of the buck. Big bucks will rub small, medium and large trees, but young bucks generally will only rub smaller trees. That said, if you run into a large rub or two, they almost always came from a large buck.

A buck on the move will rub up a tree here and there while he’s passing through an area, but usually won’t spend any serious amount of time in one particular area. On the other hand, if you find several rubs in the same area, or in a long line, some rubbed completely free of bark, you’ve likely found a bucks home range or travel route. They’ll rub several trees while lounging around, or en route from one spot to another, leaving telltale signs of their preferred hangouts.

Ditto with scrapes.

Bucks will always create a scrape beneath a hanging branch, or clump of vines. They’ll lick and rub their head on this overhang to leave their individual scent on it. Other deer that encounter the scrape will do the same, so each deer can tell by scent checking this “licking stick” which other deer have visited the scrape. They also mark the scrape by urinating over their tarsal glands on their back legs and letting that pungent urine run directly into the scrape.

Size matters – sometimes. If you find a relatively small scrape, say the size of a grapefruit or melon, it may be a hot scrape, or it may be a passing scrape, made while a buck is meandering through an area because that’s what they instinctively do at this time of year. He may have been in a hurry for some reason and will return to check the scrape and, perhaps enlarge it. On the other hand, he may abandon that scrape in favor of a hotter one somewhere down the line.

If you find a large scrape, say the size of a dinner plate or larger, or a cluster of two, three or more scrapes in one area, you know a buck spent some serious time there and he is likely tending to it regularly. Perhaps several deer have visited it already and added to its dimension.

I don’t disregard any rubs or scrapes. They all tell a story and were made intentionally by a buck, that visited the area and is likely still in the area. However, I do give more considerations to larger active or community scrapes and rub clusters or rub lines.

The bottom line is that bucks are on the prowl right now, looking for does and most of the does aren’t interested in breeding quite yet. If you’re hunting in an area that holds does on a daily basis, sit tight. The bucks are on the way.  It you find an area with telltale signs of a bucks presence, consider sneaking in for a hunt or two. Make sure you’re downwind and make every effort to cover your human scent.

Categories: Bloggers on Hunting, Michigan – Bill Parker, Whitetail Deer
Tags: Deer, Hunting

Be sure to visit UnexploredPodcast.com and connect with us on social below.

Facebook – Instagram – Twitter – Pinterest – Youtube

Hear the Unexplored Podcast at any of the below…

Apple – Google – Deezer – Stitcher – Spotify – LibSyn

Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Primary Sidebar

YETI Rambler 14 oz Stainless Steel Vacuum Insulated Mug with Lid CLICK IMAGE TO BUY NOW!

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • January 2021
    • December 2020
    • November 2020
    • October 2020
    • September 2020
    • August 2020
    • July 2020
    • June 2020
    • May 2020
    • April 2020
    • March 2020
    • February 2020
    • January 2020
    • December 2019
    • November 2019
    • October 2019
    • September 2019

    © Copyright 2019 · Unexplored Camping · All Rights Reserved

    Privacy Policy · Terms of Service