
So nobody is a trophy hunter then??
I also reckon there may be a few trophy hunters who are in denial here!
Here’s another question then:
You are out on a nice summer afternoon and come across two roe bucks in a nice safe place to shoot – both virtually identical range and shot. They are both similar size but one is a small 4 pointer and the other is a probable silver/gold medal! Which one would you shoot? Be honest now!!!!!


You would also be amazed how many people who sell trophy deer, call themselves deer managers.
i shoot whatever is legal but would probably go for a younger/weaker animal over a mature one,but if you shoot all the younger ones you are denying them the chance of becoming a trophy one, how do you stand then?
So nobody is a trophy hunter then??
I also reckon there may be a few trophy hunters who are in denial here!
Here’s another question then:
You are out on a nice summer afternoon and come across two roe bucks in a nice safe place to shoot – both virtually identical range and shot. They are both similar size but one is a small 4 pointer and the other is a probable silver/gold medal! Which one would you shoot? Be honest now!!!!!
Id drop the Gold
At least you're honest mate!
I think another problem arises where there are a lot of smaller areas of land managed by several deer 'managers' who ultimately share the same deer. It then becomes a case of, "well, I might as well shoot the huge buck, because if I don't, my neighbour will!"
I reckon this type of opportunist trophy hunting is one of the biggest problems we have where there is no liaison or trust between neighbouring estates?
This is one of the main reasons why I don't believe that deer can be truly 'managed' unless you doing it over quite a large area. This problem is further exacerbated with the larger and more transient herding species which often get bounced from pillar to post with the best animals being taken out at every opportunity. Communication and general area deer management groups seem to work well, but not everyone is interested or in agreement. You then get the areas which won't allow any shooting! That's where you will then see a group of about 100 fallow laying out in the open sunning themselves! They're not stupid are they?!
MS

MS, are you saying that medal class deer shuold never feature in a cull plan? If so, how can you say you are managing deer across all age classes? You know the patch I shoot on and you know we have many medal class Sika. Because of the size of our cull plan you just cannot shoot one's with poor antlers/small bodies as there are too many good ones aswell. Not only that, I have shot sika that are well over ten years old and arthritic and they are still gold medals! So I believe that you can be both a deer manager and still shoot trophy deer within a balanced cull plan.