For you mighty deer hunters. Enjoy.

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
I thought all you hunters might enjoy this. It's hard to believe they caught this moment.

[video=youtube;cSR1hvmvA_0]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cSR1hvmvA_0&feature=related[/video]
 

darkdestruction420

Well-Known Member
[video=youtube;9Utt_XgcWv8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Utt_XgcWv8[/video]

i dont know if anyone else has heard this but its sure as hell popular here. just driving 30 minutes from the house to the woods you'll probably hear it 2-3 times or more. The guy who wrote it was really close friends to my music teacher in middle school so he would often come in and add to the teachers info and demonstrate things and help us all learn what we were supposed to be. he was cool as hell.
 

BadAndy

Well-Known Member


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[FONT=Arial,Helvetica]Why do deer shed their antlers?[/FONT] [FONT=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica][SIZE=-1]

Deer shed their antlers annually as a prelude to the regeneration, or re-growth, of new ones.
The entire shedding process takes a mere two to three weeks to complete, and the re-growth phase takes place over the summer. The docile male deer that, with the exception of the male and the female reindeer, solely sports antlers, sheds them between January and April, after the autumn mating season draws to a close. He can do without antlers at this time, because his need for them in prior months, to attract and to impress females for his harem of mates, and to fight with his competitors for the females' affections, no longer exists.
The antlers themselves differ from the hollow horns of cattle, in that they comprise solid bone tissue with a honey combed structure. Pedicles, or knobby, skin-covered nubs protruding from the skull, support the deer's antlers, or points, which range in number from one shaft to eleven branches. The pedicles are a permanent fixture on the deer's forehead, and are the point from which the antlers annually break off.
During the first year the pedicles appear on the young deer's forehead. The following year, the youngster sprouts straight, spike-like shafts, and in the third year, the first branch appears. In successive years, as the deer matures, his antlers lengthen and, in most species, he acquires additional branches. One can actually determine the age of the deer from the number of branches on his antlers, as their number increases with age.
During the growth phase of the bony antlers, they are covered with a sensitive skin referred to as "velvet," which is filled with blood vessels that feed the antlers the vitamins and the minerals necessary to build up the bone, and to promote normal antler growth. Antler growth spans two to four months, after which time the velvet is no longer needed, and a ring, which effectively serves as a shutoff valve, forms at the base of the antlers and cuts off the blood supply to the velvet. As a result, the velvet withers, dries up, and falls off, often assisted by the deer, which rubs his antlers against tree bark. The antler regeneration is complete, and the shedding cycle will resume once mating season in the fall concludes.
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Jimmyjonestoo

Well-Known Member
Yeah that's really a pretty common happening. As the above post said they drop their antlers every year. Either by fighting or rubbing trees. I've got a couple antlers I've found on a buddies property.
 

darkdestruction420

Well-Known Member
shed hunting is a very enjoyable pass time in itself. never found anything amazing yet but ya never know, that next one might be a monster.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
shed hunting is a very enjoyable pass time in itself. never found anything amazing yet but ya never know, that next one might be a monster.
I tried it ... but those durn sheds are just too wily for me ... :dunce:
I tried calling in some sheds, but only attracted out-of-season compact pickup shells. cn
 

BadAndy

Well-Known Member
shed hunting is a very enjoyable pass time in itself. never found anything amazing yet but ya never know, that next one might be a monster.
I have only found one set of sheds in my whole careeer of hiking the woods while working...funny enough both antlers were sitting right on top of each other. It was quite a score and one of my prized possessions.

sheds pic.jpg
 

rowlman

Well-Known Member
I see like 20 trucks down the dirt roads every day from hunters. My property isn't hunted, I don't hunt,but the deer must know because I could get one with a spear they walk so close. Fuck a gun or bow, I could sling shot one between the eyes with a walmart wristrocket.
 
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