We have to get a permit from Wildlife to pick up shed antlers.
No permit; leave them on the ground. Besides, by the time I find them the foxes/coyotes/bears have the points chewed off them.
Elk is in fact the English name for the Moose. Wapiti is the Mountain Goat. Both are a misnomer when applied to the Canada or Carolina Stag or La Biche or Waskisew.![]()
Virginia Deer
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Elk is the British English name for moose. In case you never noticed, there are some subtle differences between English dialects in different regions. The term moose is derived from native languages, and is specific to North America. Moose live on both continents, whereas you won't find our Elk in Europe.
Its not uncommon for different places to use different common names for things. That's a major reason for the latin names in classification. For example, Canadians use Grizzly while Americans tend to use brown bear. To a taxonomist they are both referring to ursus arctos.
Regardless of this argument, the term canada stag means nothing...
I'm well aware of the purpose of Latin names.
Elk is the Moose, the name was misapplied by people who only knew the Elk was a large deer. Just like the Jaguar is known as el Tigre, the Tiger, when it is not. I know that Moose or Mooswa is Algonkian, just as the Whitetail and Mule Deer were Apsimooswa, the Little Moose to some.
Our Elk is found in Eurasia, where you have the oddity of an old world species being called Canadensis, and the even odder situation of Asian ecotypes; Tien Shen, Altai, etc being called Asian Wapitis when Wapiti is properly the Mountain Goat.
Moose have been called Elk and Flathorned Elk in this country. Just like in the interior of BC Mule Deer are sometimes called Blacktails, generally by people over 60. The Indian names for the Mule Deer range from Little Moose, to Jumper, to literally Blacktail.
My original point was about the use of the term horns for antlers, it is widely accepted, Jack O'Connor wrote about hunting along Moosehorn Creek in the Yukon, there is likely a Deerhorn Creek in most provinces, Elkhorn Creek is in Ontario (does that refer to the Elk or Moose?).
So the next time someone posts about Horn ####, I fully expect the peanut gallery to insist they call them antlers.
I'm well aware of the purpose of Latin names.
Blacktail deer is a subspecies of mule deer. Not all mules are blacktails, but all Blacktails are mulies.
I don't see what names of rivers has to do with the common names of animals?
Please show some evidence that wapiti means mountain goat (which isn't even classified as a true goat) to support your claims, because Google says it's an elk.
Lets just agree to call them sheds for the purpose of this thread!![]()
I built a 6 x 12 shed because anything over 100 sq ft requires a permit from the city . I store my deer horns on the shelve in the shed .
The Mule Deer is a post-glacial hybrid of the Blacktail and the Whitetail, if anything it is properly a subspecies of the Blacktail, not the other way around. The Boone and Crocket Club specifically set out to replace the colloquial Blacktail with the term Mule Deer.
The names of creeks is only relevant in the acceptance of the word horn for antler. It is in common usage.
As to the Wapiti, not everything is on the internet, Google doesn't sum up human knowledge.
Cool thread. And timely. I recently adopted a hound. I want to keep him busy and a friend suggested shed hunting.
How does a good thread topic get run right off the rails with people correcting horns, clips, guns, who cares. Just read on.
Most are still carrying in my area. Mules that came through my yard last weekend still had them. Haven't seen any white tails as of late. Rode the river as well and never found anything. Once I find them on the river I usually start looking in the pastures.
It is not foxes/coyotes/bears that do that... it is mice/squirrels/rabbits/hares/porqupines...




























