Hardwood11
It is going to be a good fall!
In 2000-2010, think about what we didn’t have … cell cams, Redneck Blinds, less range in weapons. This stuff all adds up. It’s not just how many does you shoot, but I do think it can be a factor .
I agree, there are several factors that have gone in the favor of hunters to make us more deadly in the last 20 years. Not the least of which is the efficient spread of knowledge. I remember when monthly magazines were my greatest tool for learning and every buck I saw was a stranger to me.In 2000-2010, think about what we didn’t have … cell cams, Redneck Blinds, less range in weapons. This stuff all adds up. It’s not just how many does you shoot, but I do think it can be a factor .
I believe I have heard Winke say he wouldn’t shoot as many does again. Do to how susceptible it made his farm to being wiped out completely by EHD like it it did in 2012What county in IL are you in? What I often wonder when I read guys saying they have really high deer numbers is if both things are true….meaning maybe you do have pretty high numbers but at the same time there was still 10-25% more deer on your farm in that decade. For example, I hear guys say what you are, I’ll hear “I saw 30 deer in my field last night!”. Ok, that may be “a lot” of deer to one person. But if in 2007 there was 20% more deer that same field had 36 deer in it. Psychologically 30 or 36 registers the exact same for most people- which is “a lot of deer!”. But you do that across the county level and it makes a big difference in terms of the number of 2, 3, and 4 yr old bucks that are able to slip through the cracks if that makes sense.
On Winke, I’ve communicated back and forth w him and we just don’t agree on this topic (and I respect the guy a ton). If less deer on his farm was better then he should’ve had better hunting from 2014-2018 and he didn’t….it was significantly noticeable how his quality was nowhere near as good as it was pre ehd when his deer numbers were way higher. His current farm also has way less deer and at least last year (we will see going forward) he didn’t have anything all that special on it.
Literally every metric I’ve ever seen along with what 90% of the die hard guys will tell you is that the hunting was by far the best during that 2000-2010 stretch and the deer #’s were the highest they’d ever been. So I just can’t understand how guys like Winke and tons of others try to overcomplicate that and try to suggest otherwise. The experiment has been done both ways now, and the evidence seems overwhelmingly conclusive to me.
yes he did. I think he's taken one buck the each of the past two season. Nice bucks, but not giants I think both might be 140s. For a property that size it has surprised me he hasnt had any bigger deer on it. Well, he has the "jordan buck" (named after his daughter) that was bigger than what he killed last year, but he has been holding off on chasing that deer for his daughter. Its a bit bigger, if its around this year I'd think it should be 160's for sure. But still, a property that big I would think there'd would be a couple bigger deer on it.Did winke shoot a buck in '23? Didn't he say a year or 2 ago that he was only going to give it another year or so on that new farm before moving on to greener pastures?
The deer he killed in 2022 on his farm was a lot bigger than 140's I'm pretty sure? 160s maybeyes he did. I think he's taken one buck the each of the past two season. Nice bucks, but not giants I think both might be 140s. For a property that size it has surprised me he hasnt had any bigger deer on it. Well, he has the "jordan buck" (named after his daughter) that was bigger than what he killed last year, but he has been holding off on chasing that deer for his daughter. Its a bit bigger, if its around this year I'd think it should be 160's for sure. But still, a property that big I would think there'd would be a couple bigger deer on it.
He does shoot every doe that comes in range. Last year any doe that came in bow range he would shoot. It confuses me because of how few deer he seems to see, last year late season he had several episodes sitting over standing food and not seeing a single deer and you could see his frustration, yet he will shoot any doe he can. He knows a heck of a lot more than me though, but...
He does shoot every doe that comes in range. Last year any doe that came in bow range he would shoot. It confuses me because of how few deer he seems to see, last year late season he had several episodes sitting over standing food and not seeing a single deer and you could see his frustration, yet he will shoot any doe he can. He knows a heck of a lot more than me though, but...
yes, thinking back it was bigger than 140s.The deer he killed in 2022 on his farm was a lot bigger than 140's I'm pretty sure? 160s maybe
I'm pretty sure they were 140's type. He should have never gave up that lease he has few miles away. Two years in that lease and killed two booners. Tell you how important location is. Even less than two miles away his farm he bought is a far cry from what his lease produced. One negative in filming everything on his farm is everyone can see his farm isn't good which would make it awfully hard for him to sell for a profit and move into new farm..The deer he killed in 2022 on his farm was a lot bigger than 140's I'm pretty sure? 160s maybe
One negative in filming everything on his farm is everyone can see his farm isn't good which would make it awfully hard for him to sell for a profit and move into new farm..
Most hunters want to shoot a buck and if the biggest one around is 140s it will probably get shot and so with lower populations we are not seeing these deer make it another year with the same frequency we used to see. Just my hypothesis on why higher deer populations resulted in bigger buck sightings.
I guess I’m just not sure about this 1983. Technically what you are saying is correct imo and I don’t necessarily disagree. However what I struggle with is 1) for vast majority of hunters too many does or not enough is incredibly subjective and not based on any real data (which usually leads to I want to hear my gun go bang so yes I have too many does) and 2) so when looking at the data at a county and state level the deer harvest is down by HALF and deer vehicle accidents are down 20-45% that leads me to believe that an incredibly high % of the landscape/farms need to reduce doe harvest IF one believes as I do that to have the best and most quality bucks we should try to mirror when there was the best and most big bucks.Shooting or not shooting does is so farm specific it is impossible to discuss on a county basis, let alone at a state level.
I have a farm I've shot 3 does off of in 7 years. Another we shoot 30-60 per year and it's STILL over run.
No question that there are factors other than size of the herd in any particular state that has contributed to less “big” bucks. Cell cams is definitely a big one, crossguns is a huge one, etc…I'll throw this thought out there too... with cell cams, it's harder and harder for bucks to make it to 5+, so that may be contributing to the overall reduction in top-enders. It's similar, IMO, to how Illinois used to be great... then outfitters bring in guys that kill the best 2 & 3 year olds and eventually you have fewer high-end mature bucks getting killed. Parceling off of land there has also contributed... among other things. Buffalo County is a perfect example of this decline too, but neither of these are Iowa, so I digress. Just keeping @Sligh1 motivated to Keep Iowa Great! LOL