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Tennessee Hunting Forums
Quality Deer Management
Growing Mature Bucks
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<blockquote data-quote="DeerCamp" data-source="post: 5505200" data-attributes="member: 21011"><p>Yeah, it's a question of causation. Like I said earlier, any time BSK disagrees with something I believe, it gives me serious pause to reconsider. </p><p></p><p>But I still believe the 3 buck limit and the history of harvests in TN suggests we have probably contributed our fair share to high grading. </p><p></p><p>Somewhere around 2007 I killed a buck in Benton County that was in the 115-120" range - Now, I'm not going to say that this deer was a yearling, but the deer's live weight was 110 lbs (They weighed it at the corner store there on hwy 70). His pictures look like he is a yearling. He was a tiny, tiny deer. </p><p></p><p>No telling what that buck would have been in 3-4 years. </p><p></p><p>But he was running around like a goofball chasing does too early - just like a yearling. No caution at all. I definitely would pass that deer now.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DeerCamp, post: 5505200, member: 21011"] Yeah, it's a question of causation. Like I said earlier, any time BSK disagrees with something I believe, it gives me serious pause to reconsider. But I still believe the 3 buck limit and the history of harvests in TN suggests we have probably contributed our fair share to high grading. Somewhere around 2007 I killed a buck in Benton County that was in the 115-120" range - Now, I'm not going to say that this deer was a yearling, but the deer's live weight was 110 lbs (They weighed it at the corner store there on hwy 70). His pictures look like he is a yearling. He was a tiny, tiny deer. No telling what that buck would have been in 3-4 years. But he was running around like a goofball chasing does too early - just like a yearling. No caution at all. I definitely would pass that deer now. [/QUOTE]
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