The bone white color attracted
my attention almost immediately as I stepped out of the truck. There, lying in the leave were two antlers,
one large, the other small.
Shed antlers. Fallen from the deer in the middle of the winter
and probably covered with snow until the recent melt.
Its shed season, time to go deer
hunting. It should be a good year for it
too. With the deep snow, and the deer
bunched up in restricted areas, the antlers should be easier to find than normal
this spring. That is if you know where
some deer were holed up this winter.
Shed hunting can tell you if
that big buck you saw last fall escaped the other hunters and just might be
around again this year.
It can give you something much
more tangible than that game camera picture that made you sit out in the woods
all those days.
Shed antlers don’t last forever
though, squirrels and mice will chew them up pretty fast if given the chance.
I found a whole skull with
antlers once one spring and busy at the time, set it aside where I would be
sure to locate it again a few days later when I would be back in that part of
the woods. When I returned, it was about
half gone. What was interesting to me
was that the gnawing animals had chewed on the antlers, but not at all on the
skull.
If it somewhat rare to find both
sides of a bucks rack close together, but several years ago, one of the guys
was driving a tractor though the food plot before planting and a strange
movement caught his eye, it was an antler stuck into the sidewall of the
tractor tire. The white flash catching
his eye as it moved. He immediately
stopped, looked back, and there was the other antler sitting on the ground
where it had just missed getting run over.
More than once, the country
trucks have found antlers the hard way by picking them up with a tire.
There are whole web sites
dedicated to shed antlers. Shed antlers,
if they are not large enough to warrant display all by themselves are excellent
sources of craft material and you won’t be cutting up some trophy that you shot
during the normal season.
People have even trained dogs to
detect and search for shed antlers in their annual spring antler hunts.
My find of the other day was
really neat as it came unexpectedly. The
large antler had a couple unusual points.
The small antler too had its interesting features. The main beam of the larger antler was kind
of flattened and resembled a couple other deer racks that had been taken in the
area in recent times. Possibly the
distinct features indicating a family connection.
So, soon before it starts to
green up, plan a walk in the woods, scout around for some turkey sign and you
might just come up with a little trophy too.