Near-record harvest possible for deer season

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  • AGarbers

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    24   0   0
    Feb 4, 2009
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    Martinsville
    Near-record harvest possible for deer season

    Indiana’s annual firearms season for white-tailed deer opens Saturday (Nov. 13) with near-record harvest expected for all deer seasons combined.

    The record overall deer harvest is 132,752, set last year, with roughly 83,000 being harvested during the firearms season, including almost 36,000 on opening weekend.

    Department of Natural Resources biologists expect hunters to kill more than 80,000 deer again this year during the 16-day firearms season, which ends Nov. 28.

    “Harvest numbers for the season will always be about the same as the previous year,” DNR deer biologist Chad Stewart said. “With the dry fall we’ve been having, the corn harvest is vastly accelerated compared to last year, which means less potential cover for deer.

    “I anticipate a record or near-record harvest, and obviously, the firearms season is a major component of that harvest.”

    Harvest composition on opening weekend is typically an approximate 60:40 split favoring antlered deer, but more antlerless deer are typically harvested than antlered deer by the end of the firearms season.

    “Hunters will always want to go out on opening day with the hopes of harvesting a buck,” Stewart said. “That’s what causes hunters to lie awake the night before and it’s what they think about while sitting in their hunting stand while it’s still pitch black out that opening morning. So hunters are undoubtedly selecting their bucks to harvest on that opening weekend.

    “But as the season progresses, since more does are able to be killed than bucks, the numbers eventually catch and surpass the buck total.”

    Biologists will again be at nearly 40 check stations across the state on opening day to collect age information and biological samples from deer checked, testing primarily for the presence of chronic wasting disease and bovine tuberculosis.

    “So far, we have not detected either in free-ranging deer in Indiana,” Stewart said.

    Favorable weather conditions were a factor in hunters killing 35,898 deer on the opening weekend of firearms season in 2009, an increase of more than 4,700 over the first two days of the 2008 firearms season. A weather system that went through on opening day of the 2008 season brought rain, sleet, and freezing rain to much of Indiana, reducing the harvest during opening day of that year.

    The number of deer harvested in individual counties last year ranged from a low of 96 deer in Tipton County to 4,102 deer in Steuben County. Harvest exceeded 1,000 deer in 62 counties; exceeded 2,000 deer in 19 of those counties; and exceeded 3,000 deer in five of those counties.

    Unless otherwise exempted, a license is required to hunt deer during the firearms season. Licenses can be purchased online at IndianaOutdoor.IN.gov, by calling 317-232-4200, or at a retailer or DNR site listed at IndianaOutdoor.IN.gov.

    License exemptions and other deer hunting information can be found in the online DNR Deer Hunting Guide at www.dnr.IN.gov/fishwild/2343.htm
     

    combat45acp

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    Oct 27, 2010
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    DeMotte
    It seem funny to me that everyone I talk to claims this "blue tongue disease" is going to make it a record low. I have seen a ton of deer and taken a few already. But some hunters claim they have been out a lot and have seen nothing...hmm someone has to be wrong, and I side with the DNR on this one.

    Good luck everyone!
     

    NealWright

    Plinker
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    4   0   0
    May 14, 2010
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    East Central Indiana
    I guess it's all speculation ... but same story around here. Very few deer spottings. Maybe they'll all come out for firearm season Saturday, but I don't think there are that many hiding.
     

    redneckmedic

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    Jan 20, 2009
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    Greenfield
    I just don't understand. If this is suppose to be a record season, then why is proposed next year to shorten Shotgun Season next year by a week and Muzzle loader by a week. From the IN DNR website, the reason they are doing it is to create more harvest. They are speculating that two weeks shorter season will cause more deer to be taken. I'm not sure if I agree, but hey they are the professionals.
     

    trophy hunter

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    Feb 15, 2009
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    southern indiana
    I just don't understand. If this is suppose to be a record season, then why is proposed next year to shorten Shotgun Season next year by a week and Muzzle loader by a week. From the IN DNR website, the reason they are doing it is to create more harvest. They are speculating that two weeks shorter season will cause more deer to be taken. I'm not sure if I agree, but hey they are the professionals.

    thats old news.... they have decided to not do that...so there back to work on a new `plan`..
     

    AGarbers

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    Feb 4, 2009
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    Martinsville
    I just don't understand. If this is suppose to be a record season, then why is proposed next year to shorten Shotgun Season next year by a week and Muzzle loader by a week. From the IN DNR website, the reason they are doing it is to create more harvest. They are speculating that two weeks shorter season will cause more deer to be taken. I'm not sure if I agree, but hey they are the professionals.

    The thinking behind the change was to encourage hunters to not bypass smaller bucks and does early in the season. Many folks don't shoot a small buck or doe on the first weekend in hopes a nice buck will come by later on since there is still two weeks to go. However, once the season gets going the deer get wary, and if that nice buck never comes by, the does and smaller bucks that we will now settle for aren’t as easy to find and harvest.
    So basically by shortening the seaon, they wanted the mentality; you see a deer opening weekend, shoot it.
     
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