Stop passing on animals waiting for "the perfect one"

Alan

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I once went home empty-handed two years in a row because I was too picky. Passed on good animals holding out for giants that never showed but this year I'm being more realistic about my expectations. Anyone else need to adjust their standards and just enjoy the hunt more?
 
I figured out that chasing perfection can suck the fun out of things. Once I started looking for decent shots instead of perfect trophies, I started enjoying being out in the woods more and I didn't get so bummed when I came back empty-handed.
 
The perfect one is always the 1st one I see! Remembering I hunt the DNR managed northern forest region. Seeing one is not only a treat but most times pure luck.
 
When I lived in Southern Wisconsin there was always an abundance of deer to shoot. I'd sit in my stand and watch lots of deer pass by me. Then all of a sudden BANG I'd have my deer. Just wasn't that animals day.
I never was a trophy hunter. I hunt for the freezer.
Now in Northern Wisconsin, deer are harder to come by with the proliferation of feeding and baiting that goes on even thought it's been outlawed now because of CWD. You have transplants from the city claiming deer as "my deer" and still feed. A lot of locals still bait too, until they get caught.
I've never baited and don't intend to start .
Now, that being said, I will drop the first legal deer I see now. Quite the difference from S WI.
 
More does need to be harvested when tags are available, there are several areas especially farmlands that are overpopulated.
Folks need to realize that harvesting does is part of the conservation process and helps manage the herds.
I have harvesting many does and cow elk over the years and they are tasty critters!!
 
I have hunted in many areas around the state, including some that are still, BUCKS ONLY. Up north, where Winterkill and Wolves are prevalent, the deer herd is thin and in many places the quest for a buck leads to fewer and fewer bucks being available which affects the deer herd almost as much as a lack of breedable does. It still takes two to tango and while a buck can take care of several does both need to be present for herds to grow. I live in Southern Wisconsin. While I am primarily a meat hunter I hunt on private land where both bucks and does are abundant. I don't shoot the first legal deer. Where I hunt both bucks and does are legal so with deer processors practicing price gouging to the extreme, pushing $200 per animal, I am looking for the biggest deer of either sex to fill my freezer. For me this means a deer, any deer pushing 200 pounds. Going hunting means a lot more than shooting a deer. If none shows up that meets my criteria then I am just as happy to go home empty handed with $200 still in my pocket. I still got out into the woods, see many deer as well as other animals, watched the bobcat population increase over the years, chipmunks scampering around, song birds that have still not headed south for the winter, turkeys wandering here and even a family of badgers a couple of years ago. There is time to read a book in the comfort of my heated blind. Deer camp is still a lot of fun, regardless of whether we get a deer or not. Traditions continue which to many of us growing older every year is sometimes more important than dragging a deer out of the woods.
 
$200 to process a deer now..... wow. I remember back in the 70's-80's of taking my deer to Plain and having Straka's process it for $25
We started doing the processing ourselves a few years later. Even then, I could take the hide to Richland Center and get a box of .30-30's for it.
The simpler "good ole days" for sure
 
$200 to process a deer now..... wow. I remember back in the 70's-80's of taking my deer to Plain and having Straka's process it for $25
We started doing the processing ourselves a few years later. Even then, I could take the hide to Richland Center and get a box of .30-30's for it.
The simpler "good ole days" for sure
I remember those days too. Would come up on leave for deer hunting, take the deer in mid afternoon and pick it up the next day wrapped and frozen for $25 too. A few days later I would be on my way back to Fort Rucker or wherever else they had sent me with a cooler full of venison. Processing was reasonable up until COVID, then it seemed that all the processors got greedy. I remember 2019 costing about $90, which adjusted for the time, was about right and reasonable. I've paid the big processing fee only to have the DNR tell me the deer tested positive. :cautious:
 

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