As I predicted in my last post, the deer kill this year was below 7,000 coming in at 6790 animals taken. This number would have been much lower if we didn't have snow and colder weather during most of the 2014 deer season. Our deer herd was just starting to rally a bit when we were hit with a brutal winter last year in 2013. Unfortunately, our province is near the northern extreme of the whitetail deer's habitat and due to extensive logging on our crown forest and industries spraying of succulent hardwoods, deer face an uphill battle during the winter. Many folks think that deer need a mature canopy of forest cover to survive in the winter but I think access to a food source such as cedar is much more important. Mother Nature equips animals with coats that allow them to survive freezing temperatures but without food they certainly cannot survive. That is why I am a strong advocate of planting cedar adjacent to our buffer zones. Whitetail deer in our province flock to cedar instinctively as soon as the temperature drops whether there is snow on the ground or not. I am hoping that the QDMA and hunting fraternity in our province can exert enough pressure on government and forestry companies to implement a cedar planting program to assist our deer herd in growing and sustaining itself. This is at the top of my Christmas wish list and I think it will stay that way until a positive change happens before it is too late for our whitetails.
Despite having everything going against them, hunters still manage to bag some beautiful bucks each fall here in New Brunswick. Our herd has the genetics and potential to produce trophy bucks but unfortunately we lack the numbers to make for good deer hunting. I have gathered some photos of deer taken in the southern half of New Brunswick this year and I'm sure my readers will agree there were some beautiful bucks taken again this year. The following photo shows a well known hunter from the Sussex area with the nice buck he took this year to complete a New Brunswick Grand Slam.
Despite having everything going against them, hunters still manage to bag some beautiful bucks each fall here in New Brunswick. Our herd has the genetics and potential to produce trophy bucks but unfortunately we lack the numbers to make for good deer hunting. I have gathered some photos of deer taken in the southern half of New Brunswick this year and I'm sure my readers will agree there were some beautiful bucks taken again this year. The following photo shows a well known hunter from the Sussex area with the nice buck he took this year to complete a New Brunswick Grand Slam.
This is quite an accomplishment for any hunter and I extend congratulations to this young sportsman from Sussex. WTG Brad!
I've got a few photos of some heavyweight bucks taken last year. Two brothers from the Woodstock area took two dandies in the first week of the season. The first photo is of a 260 lb. buck taken on the first day.
This buck was taken in the Miramichi area, sported a beautiful ten point rack and dressed out at 235 lbs.
The next 2014 buck dressed out at 215 lbs. and had a nice 12 point rack. This buck was killed in southern New Brunswick.
Next is a photo of another buck with a nice 8 point rack taken in the snow during this years season.
The next photo shows a hunter with a trophy buck that he hunted for three seasons and finally killed it this year. This deer was taken near Fredericton Junction.
This next photo is a little bloodier than I prefer but I wanted to include it because this buck was a real hog at 255 lbs. dressed. Big swollen neck on that boy! It also had a beautiful fourteen point rack. A true New Brunswick trophy buck!
The next photo shows a massive fourteen pointer that dressed out at 245 lbs. This guy must have been wearing his lucky underwear when he took this buck!
This big buck was taken near Riley Brook in the northern half of the province. This area was famous for its hardwood ridges and the big bucks that ran them back in the day. I guess there is still a few left. A nice ten point rack that was twenty-five and a quarter inches wide.
This next buck was one of the heaviest racked bucks to be taken in zone 17 in 2014. Taken by a hunter from Minto just on the outskirts of town.
The next photo shows a buck killed on the Trans Canada Highway in southern New Brunswick this past hunting season.
This next buck was a very nice trophy that came in over 200lbs and had a great rack. That's one happy hunter right there!
This next photo shows a nice buck that dressed out at 220 lbs and grossed 165 B&C points. Not too shabby!
This nice ten point buck was taken in Coles Island near to the Pioneer Lodge. This is all good deer country down that way.
The next photo shows a group of resident hunters with the bucks they took during the 2014 season. Nice!
The next photo shows a nice buck taken on the last day of the 2014 season. Couldn't end any better for this hunter!
I saved this photo until last because it was one of the better bucks killed this past season and the photo of this buck and the hunter who harvested it exemplifies the thrill and honor of being able to harvest a buck of this calibre. This trophy buck was killed in Charlotte county and had a heavy eighteen point rack. What a buck and congratulations to the resident hunter who took him!
As you can see from the photos in this piece, there were some great bucks taken during the 2014 deer season. I have shown some of the nice bucks taken in our province last season but by no means all of them. It isn't an easy feat to kill a dressed two hundred lb. buck nowadays here in New Brunswick. I really don't expect that to change a lot in the near future but that doesn't mean we shouldn't start trying to help them along in any way we can. Especially on crown land. If you look at New Brunswick's official coat of arms you will see that two of the most prominent images on our shield are the whitetail buck and the Atlantic salmon.
I find it disturbing that two of the creatures that lie at the very core of who we are as a people and province are in serious trouble because of low numbers. Is this because of neglect or is it that we just don't care? Due to recent developments in New Brunswick's social consciousness, I am seeing a glimmer of hope for the future of our beautiful province. You might say I'm cautiously optimistic. After all, this is the year of the Green Parties entry to the Legislature and a moratorium on Fracking by the newly elected N.B. Liberals. More and more over the last few years I've noticed that residents of this province are awakening to the fact that change is within their power in our Democracy. This can only be a good thing, in my opinion.
From all of us, to all of you, I want to wish everyone a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
This is Dale Bauer saying " Happy Trails to You.....Until we Meet Again!"
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