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<blockquote data-quote="Devin2009" data-source="post: 4903947" data-attributes="member: 7578"><p>The big deer do exist in a lot higher numbers than people think in Tennessee, especially in my part of Maury County. IF anyone has any doubts that deer over 150" are not common, they just need to ride the back roads and glass fields during the middle part of July. They got old for a reason and being seen during hunting season is the main reason. Some get killed each year but the majority don't ever get killed by a hunter due to the terrain being so rough, the old phosphate mine "dumps" and swamp like land caused by the mining defiantly hides ALOT of deer and turkeys, its also a good reason why Maury Co has such a high spring turkey harvest year after year. Most of the public land in the Maury county area was once old phosphate mines at one point or another.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Devin2009, post: 4903947, member: 7578"] The big deer do exist in a lot higher numbers than people think in Tennessee, especially in my part of Maury County. IF anyone has any doubts that deer over 150" are not common, they just need to ride the back roads and glass fields during the middle part of July. They got old for a reason and being seen during hunting season is the main reason. Some get killed each year but the majority don't ever get killed by a hunter due to the terrain being so rough, the old phosphate mine "dumps" and swamp like land caused by the mining defiantly hides ALOT of deer and turkeys, its also a good reason why Maury Co has such a high spring turkey harvest year after year. Most of the public land in the Maury county area was once old phosphate mines at one point or another. [/QUOTE]
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