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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Delayed seasonal range shift
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<blockquote data-quote="JCDEERMAN" data-source="post: 5204684" data-attributes="member: 5787"><p>I searched and found that video last night - thanks for the heads up on it. Very encouraging video. They've had good forage for growth since the die off, but hardly any acorns until this year. I can see many changes this year compare to the past two (2019 and 2020). Many more does and fawns, and we have three 3.5+ year olds still hanging around. That's three times more than we had last year at this time <img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="🤣" title="Rolling on the floor laughing :rofl:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/8.0/png/unicode/64/1f923.png" data-shortname=":rofl:" />. I believe only one is mature, possibly two. Can't wait to see what shows up. We typically have around 8-12 what we consider shooters each year, but haven't seen those numbers since 2018. Adding 11 more acres of food should attract something this fall and hold a few more that may otherwise range shift off of us.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JCDEERMAN, post: 5204684, member: 5787"] I searched and found that video last night - thanks for the heads up on it. Very encouraging video. They've had good forage for growth since the die off, but hardly any acorns until this year. I can see many changes this year compare to the past two (2019 and 2020). Many more does and fawns, and we have three 3.5+ year olds still hanging around. That's three times more than we had last year at this time 🤣. I believe only one is mature, possibly two. Can't wait to see what shows up. We typically have around 8-12 what we consider shooters each year, but haven't seen those numbers since 2018. Adding 11 more acres of food should attract something this fall and hold a few more that may otherwise range shift off of us. [/QUOTE]
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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Delayed seasonal range shift
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