Ridge Runner
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This started on Mother's and Babies, so now I'm starting this as a new OP to avoid hijacking the Mother's and Babies OP.
How many, please list your state or general hunting area ie I'm in northeast Tennessee, members here on AH that have already started their deer hunting season are still seeing late birth fawns still in full spots?
I have seen at least 12 fawns so far, in Tennessee, still in full, "bright" spots in the last couple of weeks. Our regular statewide deer season started this weekend, 24 September, which is nearly double for one particular area I hunt and seen fawns in spots in other areas I occasionally hunt in.
Either 2 or 3 past deer seasons, take as word of mouth as I don't know either of these 2 hunters met each on 2 sperate occasions, each claimed they had shot does for "freezer meat" and each found fetuses while gutting their deer. Both claims were in Tennessee's archery season around end September first-second week of October.
In talking with a local biologist, the "rut" is generally anytime between late October through early December, however if a doe isn't breed during this timeframe she'll come into heat every [ 6(?) weeks or 26 days, one or the other, or something close to these timeframes] until she is breed.
This is due to buck to doe ratio in a "given" area. Note: "given area" means how many bucks and how does are seen and counted in that particular spot at that particular timeframe be it morning, midday, or afternoon/evening that one time.
IMO no way is this acceptable to get a base line figure of the deer population of a specific area or even a hunting unit.
What I'm curious about is:
How many of you all are still seeing: relatively new born, full spotted, faint spotted, barely out of spots, fawns and how late into your respective deer seasons, ie September through February?
Are you seeing a doe with singles and/or twins and/ or triplets?
How many, please list your state or general hunting area ie I'm in northeast Tennessee, members here on AH that have already started their deer hunting season are still seeing late birth fawns still in full spots?
I have seen at least 12 fawns so far, in Tennessee, still in full, "bright" spots in the last couple of weeks. Our regular statewide deer season started this weekend, 24 September, which is nearly double for one particular area I hunt and seen fawns in spots in other areas I occasionally hunt in.
Either 2 or 3 past deer seasons, take as word of mouth as I don't know either of these 2 hunters met each on 2 sperate occasions, each claimed they had shot does for "freezer meat" and each found fetuses while gutting their deer. Both claims were in Tennessee's archery season around end September first-second week of October.
In talking with a local biologist, the "rut" is generally anytime between late October through early December, however if a doe isn't breed during this timeframe she'll come into heat every [ 6(?) weeks or 26 days, one or the other, or something close to these timeframes] until she is breed.
This is due to buck to doe ratio in a "given" area. Note: "given area" means how many bucks and how does are seen and counted in that particular spot at that particular timeframe be it morning, midday, or afternoon/evening that one time.
IMO no way is this acceptable to get a base line figure of the deer population of a specific area or even a hunting unit.
What I'm curious about is:
How many of you all are still seeing: relatively new born, full spotted, faint spotted, barely out of spots, fawns and how late into your respective deer seasons, ie September through February?
Are you seeing a doe with singles and/or twins and/ or triplets?