Buck Bomb

dannymat

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I've been seeing it a fair bit on hunting shows, and I had a credit at my local hunt shop, so I picked up a can.
The stuff stinks to high hell, just curious if anyone has used it/been successful with it. Or if its just another gimic money grab
 
I actually got sick from it! Splitting headache and vomit!
Not a good combo when out hunting.
PS when you see the hunting shows spraying the stuff all around DON'T! If you gat the stuff on your hands or the wind blows mist in your face or it drips on your boot etc.
You'll be nursing a migraine all day! At least I did
 
I've been seeing it a fair bit on hunting shows, and I had a credit at my local hunt shop, so I picked up a can.
The stuff stinks to high hell, just curious if anyone has used it/been successful with it. Or if its just another gimic money grab

Just remember if you use this stuff or any attractant containing deer parts they are now banned in Ont!!
 
Here it is from the MNR website...


Attention Hunters: New Rules to Protect Ontario from Chronic Wasting Disease
If you hunt in Ontario, natural attractants containing body parts of any memberof the deer family may no longer be possessed or used for the purposes of hunting
If you hunt outside of Ontario and want to possess and/or bring in carcasses or parts of members of the deer family (i.e. deer, American elk, moose and caribou) from out of province, you need to know about the new regulations. These changes are now in effect.
Natural attractants containing body parts of any member of the deer family may no longer be possessed or used for the purposes of hunting
Possession and use of products that contain body parts of any member of the deer family, including blood, urine, gland oils, and other fluids, for the purposes of hunting, is no longer permitted. Hunters will still be allowed to possess and use artificial or plant-based products that can attract wildlife or be used as a cover scent, but they must not contain any body parts of a member of the deer family.
Possession of out-of-province harvested carcasses and their high-risk parts of moose and caribou banned
The possession in Ontario of high-risk parts of moose and caribou killed in other jurisdictions is no longer permitted. Possessing high-risk parts from all other members of the deer family killed out-of-province was banned in 2005.
Generally, it is now illegal to possess any part of the antlers, head, brain, eyes, tonsils, hide, hooves, lymph nodes, spleen, mammary glands, entrails, internal organs or spinal column of any member of the deer family that has been killed outside Ontario. For details about this regulation and limited exceptions to this prohibition, see www.ontario.ca/cwd
New requirement for transporting live white-tailed deer, American elk, moose and woodland caribou into Ontario
A person transporting live white-tailed deer, elk, moose, woodland caribou, and their hybrids into Ontario now requires a permit under the Fish & Wildlife Conservation Act. This applies to transporting these species for any purpose, including deer and elk farming and zoos.
Why the new rules?
These new regulations are in place to protect Ontario’s deer, moose, elk and caribou from chronic wasting disease, a fatal disease that affects members of the deer family. The disease has never been found in wild deer, moose, elk or caribou in Ontario, but it has been detected in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and 18 American States.
Find out more at ontario.ca/cwd
 
I bought 2 cans of this stuff. and a couple packages of smoke sticks.

hope the aerosol deer piss doesnt go off in my gear on the way into camp... Wife might not let me back into the house when i get home.
 
Have used the moose bomb so far not te buck bomb yet but i can sure tell you the moose bomb works well and just dont be dumb and spray it down wind and you will be fine.
 
so if you get it cleaned out first then you can bring it back ?

likely be stuck with a skull cap mount, likely wouldn't be able to do a shoulder or full head mount.
 
You can bring the rack back, but not the head (ie brain material).

Actually, the regs specifically prohibit unmounted antlers. IMHO, the chance of spreading a proprion disease via antlers is pretty slim->none

dutchhunter said:
makes you wonder if that stuff could live in a presurised can ,stupid

CWD is a proprion disease like CJB and mad cow disease. There's nothing "alive" per se - it's due to a mutated protein that leaves damaged "leftovers" in its wake when it is converted to other proteins by structures in the central nervous system. The left overs convert other normal proteins into mutated ones and the disease continues to spread like a cancer until eventually it gets into the peripheral nervous system and the animal starts to show visible symptoms. The only way to destroy the protein is to denature it (heat, strong acid/base, alchohol, possibly freezing to very low temperatures like -200 degrees or so).

Heating the rack enough to denature any mutated proteins will also make your rack brittle. Soaking your rack in bleach or strong alchohol long enough to fully penetrate the rack (likely weeks) followed by a short soak in a strong brine solution will make it safe even if the animal was infected - they don't show symptoms for sometimes years. Unfortunately, it won't make it legal. They need to be finished by a licensed taxidermist *eyeroll*

Consider this (devil's advocate). Someone is clattering a small rack to attract bucks during hunting season. Later, a buck licks up a chip of bone that came off the rack. That's all it takes to introduce the disease to the herd.

The rule is there to protect the herds - which don't belong to any of us. I know it sounds overbearing and inconvenient, but it would be really unfortunate to introduce this disease to ontario as it can decimate a herd. Because most animals don't show symptoms until very late in the disease, the only way to be sure it's gone is to kill the entire herd. In the case of Elk, that would be devastating. All the conservation efforts you guys have made would be for nothing.

If this were a disease that could spread to humans like rabies, no one would be making a fuss about it.
 
Used the bear Bomb anise oil it seemed to work well tried the buck bombs with no noticeable effect.
As far as Ontario goes they are so deathly afraid of CWD they are afraid of anything that could remotely be or possibly contribute to CWD!!! It is a fear of the unknown liberal Wimps
 
Used the bear Bomb anise oil it seemed to work well tried the buck bombs with no noticeable effect.
As far as Ontario goes they are so deathly afraid of CWD they are afraid of anything that could remotely be or possibly contribute to CWD!!! It is a fear of the unknown liberal Wimps

sounds just like everyone who is afraid of alberta beef.:rolleyes:
 
CWD is not something to take lightly at all. You know how impossible it would be to cull deer in Southern Ontario with all of the private property? Let alone in the thick bush of Northern Ontario? A little bit of prevention will save everyone an ass pain of problems in the future. Some people just don't understand get it. And since everyones so worried about their rights, how about loosing the right to hunt deer in an area you've been hunting for decades because CWD is present.

And for the buckbombs I haven't tried them but will be this year. I've used the bearbombs when I was guiding a couple years ago and they're great for getting a bear into the area. After theyre there though, you need something to keep him around.
 
buck bomb ad other lures using natural products are also banned for use here in Nova Scotia.but the stores can sell it.most of the big chain stores are selling it this year.which is kind of stupid.if the hunters are buying it they are using it.
 
buck bomb ad other lures using natural products are also banned for use here in Nova Scotia.but the stores can sell it.most of the big chain stores are selling it this year.which is kind of stupid.if the hunters are buying it they are using it.


Kinda like all the places that sells bongs and pipes etc. and also stores that sell pesticides and herbicides in towns where its illegal to use them.
 
Xeon,

Buckbombs in ontario are banned, you dont list where you are, so i cant say if you live here or not.

i know many hunters that are still going to use the scents they have, as there aren't many lures that are synthetic yet for deer attractant.

one of the companies that has produced the deer urine even got his whole herd checked out by a vet, proved they are clean, and the govt still wouldn't allow him to produce more to sell. if someone is willing to pay that much money to have his animals checked to make sure they are clean you would think they would allow them to produce the product.
 
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