Good to hear from you Buckly. Here is no way of knowing for sure but I think the deer that live off of the wild apple forests are the absolute best tasting deer ever. Most people that don't get to see the use of apple trees first hand would likely never realize just how many months a year the apple trees are the go to spots. Here I would say the following months are apple tree months for the deer; January, February, March, July, August, September, October, November and December. April, May and June might be a little slow around the apple trees but we can just imagine how many apple tree seedlings sprout and are eaten during those months. Say one has five hundred trees times even only five hundred apples per tree times an absolute guess of six seeds per apple at 50% germination, that could result in 3/4 million apple tree seedlings to the spring/summer browse menu which could add April, May, and June to the list of heavy deer use months of apple tree products. Likely the number of apple seeds distributed throughout the property is many times more than that even.
As far as antler growth this spring and summer goes, while this winter had some especially tough periods, the few buck pictures we have gotten show some very healthy deer. Thus we can realistically hope for great things this fall. In addition one would think or at least I did at times that with all of the trail cam pics we get that all of the better bucks living or visiting on ones property are known but I am convinced that that is not the case. In fact I know it is not the case and I wonder Is there a Giant living on about every property that has never been photographed or seen? I'm becoming more convinced each year that likely there is.
Buck hunter, all questions and comments are always welcome and no hijacking issues ever. So no I really can not pin down an exceptional antler growth to one great/easy winter. My sense though is that two or three in a row would create that as might a low population and ton's of regrowth browse at the same time. Our sampling is just too small to make conclusions on that. For example let's say I shoot a 180 next season (about 40 bigger than any I have shot here to date). Would it mean a great antler year or should the 180 have been a 220? It is just too small of a sampling. Still we get excited when bucks come out of the winter in better shape than normal because logically they will have a better chance to have the nutrition needed to grow larger bodies and larger antlers. And if we have three "easy" winters in a row then we really probably have a chance. Unless you have hunted here you just can't imagine how small of a rack many 180 lb. plus dressed 3 1/2 year old deer have compared to other parts of the country. It appears to be not the effect of one winter but rather the cumulative effect of all the winters of a deer's life. But as I said, our sampling, the amount of deer we take is not enough for us to really understand the total picture from first hand experience.