Perhaps the 2 younger aged bucks you saw were actually very old and hence this is why they looked scrawny? Young bucks cast much later than old bucks. That's a fact that I personally have never seen to be wrong. They would therefore still be growing antlers for another month yet.Seen 2 younger aged bucks, both fairly scrawny looking body,clean as a whistle. One very large bodied buck, still with few shreds hanging, truly large buck. Not only in the body conformation but antlers are at least twice ear length.
So much for old bucks being cleaner earlier than young bucks
Just hoping that old chap spreads his genes, lovely looking beast.
Sometimes nature throughs out an anomaly.Perhaps the 2 younger aged bucks you saw were actually very old and hence this is why they looked scrawny? Young bucks cast much later than old bucks. That's a fact that I personally have never seen to be wrong. They would therefore still be growing antlers for another month yet.
Absolutely. The ones mentioned may be twins with a special trait? Who knows? For true youngster to be clean in the first week of March would be highly unusual though as most true youngsters and certainly most youngsters that make up my cull are culled in the first two or three weeks of April and are all in velvet. That's been the case in both East Anglia and Hampshire.Sometimes nature throughs out an anomaly.
A couple of years ago I had a fallow pricket with hard clean antler on 30th May, two months earlier than would be expected. Some of the older deer in the herd hadn't even cast the previous year's antlers by that date!
Going of topic a bit, but just to add to my story:Absolutely. The ones mentioned may be twins with a special trait? Who knows? For true youngster to be clean in the first week of March would be highly unusual though as most true youngsters and certainly most youngsters that make up my cull are culled in the first two or three weeks of April and are all in velvet. That's been the case in both East Anglia and Hampshire.
Some of the findings by the Game Biology Station at Kalo in Denmark re roe deer make you reread the findings. Eg a known yearling buck producing a gold medal head.Sometimes nature throughs out an anomaly.
A couple of years ago I had a fallow pricket with hard clean antler on 30th May, two months earlier than would be expected. Some of the older deer in the herd hadn't even cast the previous year's antlers by that date!
Very tall head. Long tines.but a bit on the thin side .but nice to seeLooks like a good ‘un