I think it’s a double edged sword, I hunt the okanagon in bc a lot for whitetails my parents live up their, been hunting it for years, I don’t take a doe every year I take usually every second year, I see a lot of whitetail does up their and a lot of dry does, what I don’t see a lot that I used to is muledeer, between logging, the any mule deer buck season that used to be their (now 4 point or better all season) and with whitetails pushing them out it’s taken it’s toll on them.
Population has to be managed and the whitetails up their I’ve noticed have adapted heavily to pressure come hunting season the does are even more weary and stay in the thick stuff over the last few years I’ve bumped into plenty of hunter who just road hunt and most barely see anything and automatically assume the open doe season has slaughtered them.... no they just adapted.I hike or tree stand or ground blind hunt I still see a lot. In my opinion it is good to have a fairly balanced buck to doe ratio if you have an overpopulated amount of does you will have young bucks who are inexperienced pushing the does around before their ready and a lot of the times they will miss getting impregnated the first estrus cycle, does impregnated on the first cycle have the fawns quicker in the spring obviously which makes it more probable for the fawn to survive the winter also the early fawns can be impregnated that same year in December if they come into estrus. I’m not 100 percent myself on board with popping a doe every year but I feel that if we hunt deer we have to manage them, and every second year if I see a nice dry doe I’ll take it. And I always feel bad because I associate a doe with being a mom.
More bucks equals more fawns..... In my experience this isn’t the case I hunt blacktail deer in the lower mainland in bc where you can’t shoot does, over the last 6 years I’ve hunted an area hard every year 40 plus days. See a lot of dry does a lot of spikes and a lot of 2 points, with the odd 3 and 4 point.I would always pass on the small bucks. three years ago I took my 2 friends in their amd said only small bucks and we shot 5 bucks all spikes or small twos, ( your aloud 2 bucks per season down here each) the next year more does with fawns, less spikes and 2’s more mature bucks spotted.Less small bucks running does equals bigger bucks having to move around more in the rut.Now each year between me and my buddy it’s one of us shoots a Mature buck the other takes a small buck.Balance is key in my opinion to many bucks is a problem to many does is a problem it all comes down to us as individuals sure we all have different ideas on how we think areas should be managed every area can be different due to feed and the eco system/ Hunting pressure ect. As hunters we are conservationists and through what we see out their in all our hunting areas each of us should make rational decision on how we manage the area giving the allocation for tags and seasons in that area to keep it sustainable for years to come
In the end I am for whitetail doe season on a conservation stand point in areas that are overpopulated or areas where muledeer are getting pushed out, on a personal stand point it still bothers me dropping a doe
Population has to be managed and the whitetails up their I’ve noticed have adapted heavily to pressure come hunting season the does are even more weary and stay in the thick stuff over the last few years I’ve bumped into plenty of hunter who just road hunt and most barely see anything and automatically assume the open doe season has slaughtered them.... no they just adapted.I hike or tree stand or ground blind hunt I still see a lot. In my opinion it is good to have a fairly balanced buck to doe ratio if you have an overpopulated amount of does you will have young bucks who are inexperienced pushing the does around before their ready and a lot of the times they will miss getting impregnated the first estrus cycle, does impregnated on the first cycle have the fawns quicker in the spring obviously which makes it more probable for the fawn to survive the winter also the early fawns can be impregnated that same year in December if they come into estrus. I’m not 100 percent myself on board with popping a doe every year but I feel that if we hunt deer we have to manage them, and every second year if I see a nice dry doe I’ll take it. And I always feel bad because I associate a doe with being a mom.
More bucks equals more fawns..... In my experience this isn’t the case I hunt blacktail deer in the lower mainland in bc where you can’t shoot does, over the last 6 years I’ve hunted an area hard every year 40 plus days. See a lot of dry does a lot of spikes and a lot of 2 points, with the odd 3 and 4 point.I would always pass on the small bucks. three years ago I took my 2 friends in their amd said only small bucks and we shot 5 bucks all spikes or small twos, ( your aloud 2 bucks per season down here each) the next year more does with fawns, less spikes and 2’s more mature bucks spotted.Less small bucks running does equals bigger bucks having to move around more in the rut.Now each year between me and my buddy it’s one of us shoots a Mature buck the other takes a small buck.Balance is key in my opinion to many bucks is a problem to many does is a problem it all comes down to us as individuals sure we all have different ideas on how we think areas should be managed every area can be different due to feed and the eco system/ Hunting pressure ect. As hunters we are conservationists and through what we see out their in all our hunting areas each of us should make rational decision on how we manage the area giving the allocation for tags and seasons in that area to keep it sustainable for years to come
In the end I am for whitetail doe season on a conservation stand point in areas that are overpopulated or areas where muledeer are getting pushed out, on a personal stand point it still bothers me dropping a doe