John's Journal...

Shed Antlers: The Ultimate Tip to Trophy Buck Locations with Bob Zaiglin

Day 3: Determining the Condition of the Deer Herd by Studying Sheds with Bob Zaiglin

Editor’s Note: Searching for shed antlers and hunting bucks without a gun when the season is over will help you compile the most-complete information about the whereabouts of deer. Well-known deer manager and writer, Bob Zaiglin of Houston, Texas, a certified wildlife biologist, has overseen numerous Texas ranches through the years. According to Zaiglin, hunting sheds helps you learn where deer are concentrated on any particular piece of property. The area where you find the most sheds will be the regions where you will discover the most deer. Also sportsmen can pinpoint the corridors deer are using to enter agricultural fields to feed, water and bed and the places where the deer are hiding from hunting pressure.

Click for Larger ViewThe best time to lease land or to look for a place to hunt is after the rut. If a hunter is considering leasing a particular piece of property and wants to know the condition of the deer on the land, he should be able to walk over the lease and find sheds. If he doesn't discover any sheds, then he must question how-many deer are on the lease. The same is true of public lands. If public lands are available where you plan to hunt this season, but you aren't sure what the condition of the deer herd is on those lands, then walk the land after the season, and search for sheds. Too, sheds will tell sportsmen how well they're doing with their deer-management program. Click for Larger ViewFor instance, if your hunting club is attempting to produce numbers of bucks, and your members don't find very-many sheds, then realize something is wrong in your deer-management program. Also sheds will tell you the size of bucks you have on the property and the general condition of those bucks.

Click for Larger ViewOn some of the ranches I’ve managed, we collect all the sheds we can discover every year. Then we measure every shed. Although the data doesn't give us any age criteria, it does give us a bio mass of antlers. We can tell by the sheer volume of antlers we pick-up, whether we have a number of bucks or a few bucks, and whether we have little or big bucks. I've personally been collecting and weighing sheds for years. I'm attempting to evaluate from the sheds whether we've had a good year, a great year or an average year for antler development on the properties we manage. Something else we're able to determine from sheds is that we can better predict for the hunter what size bucks he'll have to hunt the upcoming year. If we find numbers of small, scrappy antlers, then we can project that hunters may not bag very-many large trophies the coming year. Click for Larger ViewBut if we locate some quality racks, we'll know our hunters the following year can expect to harvest some trophy bucks. So, collecting sheds helps the sportsman keep his expectations of the upcoming buck harvest within more-reasonable bounds. Bass fishermen have learned that bass usually are in only 10-percent of a lake's area. Deer follow much the same pattern in the woods. Shed hunters quickly will learn where their chances are best on any piece of property to find a deer.

Tomorrow: Wildlife Biologist Bob Zaiglin Explains the Significance of Locked Deer Antlers


Check back each day this week for more about "Shed Antlers: The Ultimate Tip to Trophy Buck Locations with Bob Zaiglin "

Day 1: Looking for Shed Deer Antlers with Bob Zaiglin
Day 2: Locating Dead Whitetails When Hunting Sheds with Bob Zaiglin
Day 3: Determining the Condition of the Deer Herd by Studying Sheds with Bob Zaiglin
Day 4: Wildlife Biologist Bob Zaiglin Explains the Significance of Locked Deer Antlers
Day 5: Bob Zaiglin on Why Becoming a Year-Round Deer Hunter Can Help You Take Trophy Bucks

ALL CONTENT PROTECTED UNDER THE DIGITAL MILLENIUM COPYRIGHT ACT. Content theft, either printed or electronic is a federal offense.

 

Entry 614, Day 3