I have verified that the rut has started........Happy doe.
G
Yep4 different bucks
G
Thanks, and yes, "Stickers" is the one that I want to see again next year the most!It'll be interesting to follow along and see how many make it to next year. I think I like "stickers" the best,, if he makes it to next year, I'd say that he has the potential to be a one in a lifetime buck. The main thing that most of these bucks need is just to live to be 5 years old.
Yes, and nest predators like coons are a real problem too.Coyote thinning is a good step in the right direction for wildlife survival rates
A bounty on predators would be a simple thing to manage, and the biggest boost to game populations that wildlife management agencies could ever do. But the liberal thought process in the schools teaching these people says we need predators, not hunters, to balance the ecosystem.Good on you Native, coons, possums, bobcats, coyotes, and any number of other predators have stacked the odds against us ever having any huntable numbers of turkeys in East Texas. Right after I bought my place around thirty years ago, we had eight hens on our place. I saw them in person twice, on cameras a few time and each time there were fewer of them until they were gone. It took two years.
TPWD has spent thousands to restock Easterns in East Texas with very little success.
Yep, used to have a bounty on yotes here but that ended a long time ago. We should have controlled feral hogs too, but the powers that be didn’t even take a swing at that.A bounty on predators would be a simple thing to manage, and the biggest boost to game populations that wildlife management agencies could ever do. But the liberal thought process in the schools teaching these people says we need predators, not hunters, to balance the ecosystem.
Sounds like you must have had a few wash down your branch after all of the big rains....I know one thing, Kentucky needs a bounty on cans and bottles.
G