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25 05, 2016

Deer Food Plots: When, How to Mow Clover

2020-06-10T09:16:48-04:00May 25th, 2016|Big Deer Stories, BigDeer, Deer Management|Comments Off on Deer Food Plots: When, How to Mow Clover

Some fellows in a hunt club in Michigan wrote and asked: Mike: How often should we mow our food plots? We generally mow ours down to 8-10" tall, approximately once a month in the summer. Also, how often should we apply herbicides? We've only applied once a year in the past, but it seems that is not enough to control the grasses and weeds on some of the plots. I reached out to the land-management experts at Biolgic, and they said: How often to mow is on a case by case, plot by plot basis. We try and limit our clover fields to around a 25% bloom. In other words, when the bloom is on we mow or clip off [...]

23 05, 2016

NRA Endorses Donald Trump for President

2020-06-10T09:16:48-04:00May 23rd, 2016|Big Deer TV, BigDeer, Hunting News|4 Comments

On Friday the NRA endorsed Donald Trump for President. This early endorsement of Trump (in a presidential election year, the NRA typically waits until much later in the fall to endorse a candidate) reveals how important the gun-rights organization feels this election will be. In a statement, NRA-ILA Executive Director Chris Cox said: "The stakes in this year's presidential election could not be higher for gun owners. If Hillary Clinton gets the opportunity to replace Antonin Scalia with an anti-gun Supreme Court justice, we will lose the individual right to keep a gun in the home for self-defense. …  So the choice for gun owners in this election is clear. And that choice is Donald Trump.” Moments after accepting the [...]

20 05, 2016

Whitetail Fawn Facts

2020-06-10T09:16:48-04:00May 20th, 2016|BigDeer, Deer Hunting, Deer Management, Deer Science|Comments Off on Whitetail Fawn Facts

We celebrate these beautiful little creatures! A fawn weighs 4 to 8 pounds at birth; their weight doubles in 2 weeks. A fawn has a unique smell that the mother doe recognizes. A fawn spends its first month in hiding, separate from the doe, except to nurse 2 to 4 times a day. A healthy fawn can outrun you when it’s only days old. A fawn has about 300 white spots. 25% of twin fawns have different fathers. Twin fawns are the norm. In a prime habitat where the soil/feed/cover is outstanding, 20% to 30% of does might drop triplets. In a habitat with poor soils and feed, a doe is lucky to have and raise one fawn. An individual [...]

19 05, 2016

Can Deer Fawns Have 2 Fathers?

2020-06-10T09:16:48-04:00May 19th, 2016|BigDeer|1 Comment

The cutest animals on Earth have started dropping, and in celebration  we’ll be posting fun and informative fawn facts over the next few weeks. Question from Dave in Alabama: Mike, I’ve heard that whitetail fawns can have more than one buck as a daddy, is that right? In the case of twins and triplets, a definite yes. A Texas A&M-Kingsville study found that 16 of 23 sets of twins had 2 different sires, typically one mature buck and another buck 2½ years or younger. Researchers suggest the younger bucks are opportunistic little devils, sneaking in to breed the doe just before or after the mature buck does. And get this: Scientists at Auburn University reported 3 different buck sires for [...]

18 05, 2016

Tennessee: New Buck Law for 2016 Deer Season

2020-06-10T09:16:48-04:00May 18th, 2016|BigDeer|2 Comments

The Tennessee Fish and Wildlife Commission (TFWC) has changed the legal definition of a buck deer for the 2016-17 hunting season. Previously, a deer with tiny spikes less than 3 inches long was considered “antlerless,” and did not count against a hunter's annual 2-buck limit. Under the new rule, any deer with boned antler “protruding above the hairline” is considered a buck and will count toward the hunter's limit. I believe that button buck fawns, where the hairline is not broken by antler, will still be considered antlerless, but don’t quote me on that. The new rule has caused a stir with Tennessee hunters. Many people point out that it can be difficult to distinguish a buck with tiny spikes [...]

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