Show us your best shed antler find!

Whenever I've found cast antlers of wild deer they've been chewed up and not really worth keeping.
The chewing is annoying isn’t it?
I think it’s squirrels around here that get the roe antlers the most.
I have one roe antler that’s almost chewed right through.
No.
I'm just waiting for this year's set to fall off so I can add them to the collection!
Probably take me weeks to find them though!
post them up when you get them.
How old is your buck?
 
The chewing is annoying isn’t it?
I think it’s squirrels around here that get the roe antlers the most.
I have one roe antler that’s almost chewed right through.
The deer chew them mostly, for the minerals.
It's actually quite important to leave shed antlers in the woods for deer (and other wildlife) to chew at, so only pick up the best ones that you might want to keep.
How old is your buck?
I bought him as a pricket (but his pricket spikes had been sawn off, so I haven't got those).
The set of antlers nearest the camera in that photo was his sorrel head.
His next head went back due to poorer nutrition.
His 4th head (furthest from camera) is back up to same size as sorrel head, but poor density.
The head that he is about to cast looks much better, but a buck is never going to grow a decent head here due to the very low trace element levels in our soil and forage. The only way to get good antlers would be all-year-round feeding, which I'm not prepared to do.
 
The deer chew them mostly, for the minerals.
It's actually quite important to leave shed antlers in the woods for deer (and other wildlife) to chew at, so only pick up the best ones that you might want to keep.
It’s important to me to have them in my collection instead of mr 🐿️ getting them!
I left some heads up in a tree to rot instead of boiling them out and the squirrels butchered them 🤣 even chewed through the string holding them up there.
I bought him as a pricket (but his pricket spikes had been sawn off, so I haven't got those).
The set of antlers nearest the camera in that photo was his sorrel head.
His next head went back due to poorer nutrition.
His 4th head (furthest from camera) is back up to same size as sorrel head, but poor density.
The head that he is about to cast looks much better, but a buck is never going to grow a decent head here due to the very low trace element levels in our soil and forage. The only way to get good antlers would be all-year-round feeding, which I'm not prepared to do.
Interesting.
Not worth worrying about antler size if you’re growing them for meat I guess.
 
It’s important to me to have them in my collection instead of mr 🐿️ getting them!
I left some heads up in a tree to rot instead of boiling them out and the squirrels butchered them 🤣 even chewed through the string holding them up there.

Interesting.
Not worth worrying about antler size if you’re growing them for meat I guess.
Not worth worrying about antler shape, for sure. But a decent size on the antlers would indicate general wellbeing, meaning body weight ought to be half decent too.
It's a real challenge getting any livestock to thrive here. That's why I have land in Suffolk for my lambs. It's the only way to get them to grow, other than by feeding them the whole time.
 
The head that he is about to cast looks much better, but a buck is never going to grow a decent head here due to the very low trace element levels in our soil and forage. The only way to get good antlers would be all-year-round feeding, which I'm not prepared to do.

Would you be able to supplement the deer by providing natural elements that otherwise would be devoid in your area? Its been well documented whitetail deer chowing down on wolf bones of all things and returning.

I cant imagine your park has much die-off each year maybe its something you should artificially influence with empty carcasses for bone?, since your picking the antlers up?
 
I found a decent red deer antler on a recent trip (non-stalking) to the Lakes back in February, we were staying on the Graythwaite Estate and it was a trail in their forestry area. Will dig it out.
 
Not worth worrying about antler shape, for sure. But a decent size on the antlers would indicate general wellbeing, meaning body weight ought to be half decent too.
It's a real challenge getting any livestock to thrive here. That's why I have land in Suffolk for my lambs. It's the only way to get them to grow, other than by feeding them the whole time.
You are based in N. Wales but you have grazing in Suffolk? Wow.
 
You are based in N. Wales but you have grazing in Suffolk? Wow.
Yes. I am from East Anglia originally, and I started work as a shepherd in Suffolk. So I have maintained my agricultural interests in the area, despite having moved away about 30 years ago.
Believe it or not, it is more cost effective for me to transport lambs from North Wales to Suffolk for 6 months of the year then it is to keep them here.
 
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