What is the difference between typical and non typical deer




















To qualify as a "Booner" a typical whitetail buck must have antlers that score at least after deductions , known as the "net" score. If you know anything about measuring antlers you know that a buck with a gross score of , for example, could score as low as or less after deductions. Hunting, predation, accidents, habitat quality and disease are factors in mortality. A deer's "points" are determined by the number of tines on their antlers , so an eight pointed male deer has eight distinct tines.

Antlers are very interesting and quite unique physical structures. Having a shape similar to that of a hand with the fingers extended. Some kinds of coral and the antlers of moose and certain deer are palmate. Botany Having three or more veins, leaflets, or lobes radiating from one point.

Jordan was certain that it was his long-lost buck. The new owner requested an official scoring by Boone and Crockett. White-tailed deer may grow deformed antlers as a result of an injury. Leg, pedicle and velvet injuries can all lead to antler deformations. Nontypical antler growth can be caused by genetic predisposition to abnormal branching, which is typically seen on both antlers.

The story of the top whitetail ever shot is as great as the deer. When year-old Tony Lovstuen pulled the trigger of his muzzleloader on the afternoon of Sept.

A inch buck is a slammer, and a is the buck of a lifetime for about 99 percent of today's hunters. Wisconsin is the 1 ranked state with 1, total entries and six counties in the top 20 U. There is really no precise way to accurately do deer aging while hunting, other than looking at the teeth. Despite the many stories hunters tell each other, the size of the antlers and the number of points on the antlers is not a reliable age guide.

Missouri produces numerous world-class whitetail deer, but it wasn't until fall that the state acquired bragging rights to the world's record non-typical whitetail Odocoileus virginianus. And it only did so because a hunter, David Beckman, had a keen eye and an interest in an animal he spotted on private land. On that day, November 15, , Beckman met conservation agent Michael Helland along a road in northern St.

Louis County. Beckman had killed a deer and asked Helland to officially check and seal it, which would save the hunter from a drive to an official check station. View Score Chart. When Helland arrived the men talked for a few minutes after sealing the deer, and then Beckman drove away.

Not long after, Beckman saw a dead buck with a very large rack lying inside a fence along the road. Judging the length of the main beams is next. A general rule of thumb is to look for a buck whose main beams appear to extend forward as far as the tip of his nose. Also, be aware of the buck whose beams tower above its head before sweeping forward as this adds valuable inches to an otherwise average looking main beam. Next, and to many, the most impressive features of a trophy whitetail are the number and lengths of the points on his rack.

Points may be quickly counted by assuming that an overwhelming majority of mature whitetail bucks grow a brow tine on each antler and that the main beam tip usually lies almost horizontally.

This allows us to count the standing normal points G-2, G-3, G-4, etc. Nearly all the bucks that make the records book have at least five normal points per side. How much bigger is the antler? If it were half again bigger, the circumference measurement at that point would be about six inches. Ideally, the rack should be viewed from the front and the side especially when judging the main beams. But beware of the rear view, as it can be deceiving. The most practical way to practice your field-judging skills is to estimate the score of mounted heads.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000