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Kentucky Gun Deer Season Looks Promising
10/23/09
Frankfort, Kentucky - A cool, wet summer followed by an even cooler and wetter fall makes excellent conditions for deer breeding and produces lots of deer foods and cover. Whether this bounty makes for good hunting on the November 14 opening day of modern gun deer season remains to be seen.
"It could be challenging to hunt them," said Tina Brunjes, big game program coordinator for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. "Deer are fat and happy this year. Fat, happy deer don't move as much."
If Kentucky receives cold, dry weather on opening weekend, the hunting should be productive. "I am expecting an average modern gun season for this year," Brunjes explained. "The archery harvest has been very average this year, not bad, not great, just average. I expect gun season to be about the same. It is weather dependent as always. Clear and cold weather would be the ideal situation. "
Average hunting sounds like a negative, but it isn't in Kentucky. "Our average years are still good," said David Yancy, deer biologist for Kentucky Fish and Wildlife. "Although we were down a little from last year, we still had one of the better October muzzleloader seasons we've ever had in the last several years."
This year, hunters took 7,215 deer during the Oct. 17-18 early muzzleloader season. Last year, Kentucky hunters reported taking 8,384 deer during the same season. The total harvest this year so far is about 18,000 deer.
Soft mast, such as wild berries and tree fruits, abounds this year in the woods as a result of the rain, but the acorn crop is spotty across the state.
"The acorn crop is all over the place this year," Brunjes explained. "It is totally localized; it's farm to farm. No area of the state is one way or another. I don't know if it was the ice storm, a late freeze or wet weather, but acorns this year are highly variable."
If you have acorns on the farm or public area you plan to hunt, expect good hunting. Brunjes said deer gorge on acorns and devour food plots as the weather cools. "They think less about food and more about breeding as the season wears onward," she said.
The Bluegrass Region the state's deer harvest so far this year, with nearly 7,000 deer taken. The Green River Region produced the second most deer taken, with nearly 3,600 reported.
Hunters looking for large, mature bucks during this gun season should concentrate their efforts where does (female deer) lounge. Does like areas that provide food and protection from the elements such as creek bottoms, draws or a brushy gulch.
"Hunters should also target deer travel routes during modern gun season," Brunjes said. "Deer are moving in November. Saddles, draws, ridgelines and logging roads all should be productive. Where you would walk, the deer walk. When you are scouting any area, think about how you would get from point A to point B. That is where the deer trails are located."
Hunting during modern gun deer season will improve if we can avoid a repeat of what we've had nearly all year: cold and wet weather. "That kind of weather keeps hunters out of the woods," Brunjes said.
Modern gun deer season opens Nov. 14 statewide and closes Nov. 29 in Zones 1 and 2, and on Nov. 23 in Zones 3 and 4. Consult the 2009-2010 Kentucky Hunting and Trapping Guide, available at fw.ky.gov and wherever hunting licenses are sold, for more details on deer hunting in Kentucky.
Author Lee McClellan is an award-winning associate editor for Kentucky Afield magazine, the official publication of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. He is a life-long hunter and angler, with a passion for smallmouth bass fishing.
(Editors: Please email Lee.McClellan@ky.gov for photos.)
-30-
The Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources manages, regulates, enforces and promotes responsible use of all fish and wildlife species, their habitats, public wildlife areas and waterways for the benefit of those resources and for public enjoyment. Kentucky Fish and Wildlife is an agency of the Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet. For more information on the department, visit our web site at fw.ky.gov.
Contact:
Lee McClellan (800) 858-1549 ext. 4443
10/23/09
Frankfort, Kentucky - A cool, wet summer followed by an even cooler and wetter fall makes excellent conditions for deer breeding and produces lots of deer foods and cover. Whether this bounty makes for good hunting on the November 14 opening day of modern gun deer season remains to be seen.
"It could be challenging to hunt them," said Tina Brunjes, big game program coordinator for the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. "Deer are fat and happy this year. Fat, happy deer don't move as much."
If Kentucky receives cold, dry weather on opening weekend, the hunting should be productive. "I am expecting an average modern gun season for this year," Brunjes explained. "The archery harvest has been very average this year, not bad, not great, just average. I expect gun season to be about the same. It is weather dependent as always. Clear and cold weather would be the ideal situation. "
Average hunting sounds like a negative, but it isn't in Kentucky. "Our average years are still good," said David Yancy, deer biologist for Kentucky Fish and Wildlife. "Although we were down a little from last year, we still had one of the better October muzzleloader seasons we've ever had in the last several years."
This year, hunters took 7,215 deer during the Oct. 17-18 early muzzleloader season. Last year, Kentucky hunters reported taking 8,384 deer during the same season. The total harvest this year so far is about 18,000 deer.
Soft mast, such as wild berries and tree fruits, abounds this year in the woods as a result of the rain, but the acorn crop is spotty across the state.
"The acorn crop is all over the place this year," Brunjes explained. "It is totally localized; it's farm to farm. No area of the state is one way or another. I don't know if it was the ice storm, a late freeze or wet weather, but acorns this year are highly variable."
If you have acorns on the farm or public area you plan to hunt, expect good hunting. Brunjes said deer gorge on acorns and devour food plots as the weather cools. "They think less about food and more about breeding as the season wears onward," she said.
The Bluegrass Region the state's deer harvest so far this year, with nearly 7,000 deer taken. The Green River Region produced the second most deer taken, with nearly 3,600 reported.
Hunters looking for large, mature bucks during this gun season should concentrate their efforts where does (female deer) lounge. Does like areas that provide food and protection from the elements such as creek bottoms, draws or a brushy gulch.
"Hunters should also target deer travel routes during modern gun season," Brunjes said. "Deer are moving in November. Saddles, draws, ridgelines and logging roads all should be productive. Where you would walk, the deer walk. When you are scouting any area, think about how you would get from point A to point B. That is where the deer trails are located."
Hunting during modern gun deer season will improve if we can avoid a repeat of what we've had nearly all year: cold and wet weather. "That kind of weather keeps hunters out of the woods," Brunjes said.
Modern gun deer season opens Nov. 14 statewide and closes Nov. 29 in Zones 1 and 2, and on Nov. 23 in Zones 3 and 4. Consult the 2009-2010 Kentucky Hunting and Trapping Guide, available at fw.ky.gov and wherever hunting licenses are sold, for more details on deer hunting in Kentucky.
Author Lee McClellan is an award-winning associate editor for Kentucky Afield magazine, the official publication of the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. He is a life-long hunter and angler, with a passion for smallmouth bass fishing.
(Editors: Please email Lee.McClellan@ky.gov for photos.)
-30-
The Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources manages, regulates, enforces and promotes responsible use of all fish and wildlife species, their habitats, public wildlife areas and waterways for the benefit of those resources and for public enjoyment. Kentucky Fish and Wildlife is an agency of the Tourism, Arts and Heritage Cabinet. For more information on the department, visit our web site at fw.ky.gov.
Contact:
Lee McClellan (800) 858-1549 ext. 4443