Antlerless Hunting - Cows w/ calves, Does w/ fawns...

cnelk

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Mar 1, 2012
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Colorado
If you have an antlerless only tag [cow tag/doe tag] do you shoot a cow or doe that has a young one alongside?

This could be a cow moose, cow elk, doe deer, doe antelope, etc.

Thoughts?
 

Geewhiz

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Aug 6, 2020
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SW MT
I would do my very best to not shoot a cow with a calf or a doe with a fawn. Rarely if ever is that your only option. And if it was I think I’d pass.
 

Hnthrdr

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Jan 29, 2022
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Tend to not get antlerless tags, but I have had a couple and I would get one if it was between not hunting and getting some good meat. Full disclosure so some think I’m not in an ivory tower my first archery kill was a calf that I called in for the second time that day, best elk meat I’ve had… just wish there was more haha but still yielded as much as most big muley bucks. No i would pass on shooting a mature female with a little one

Isn’t it illegal to shoot a cow moose with a calf in Co?
 

Pacific_Fork

Well Known Rokslider
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North Idaho
I’d have to be desperate or starving. Killing does/cows is relatively easy enough, so I’d find one without YOTY with her.
 

Tick

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Jun 2, 2017
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Given a shot side by side, I'd shoot the dry cow/doe. I also have no problem shooting a cow/doe with offspring if it is the only opportunity and legal. Hunting today is a management tool.
 

crich

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Jul 7, 2018
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AK
No I pass if there are littles with her unless its a January gun season or something real late.

I had this personal policy prior to this incident but I arrowed a doe once that went down within sight. Unknowingly, she had twin fawns that were born late (young but no spots) that were bedded in a nearby thicket. Within a few minutes they had run over and laid down next to her. I walked up and nearly had to physically remove them as they stayed next to her and kept bleating. Eventually they slowly walked off after standing 10 yards away watching me field dress their mom. I felt horrible for a long time after that one.
 
Joined
Nov 28, 2022
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I base my decision on the age of the young, proximity to a herd that would likely pick them up, and severity of winters in the area. I’d imagine calf elk are much more likely to survive winter with a herd than deer fawns in an area that deer don’t congregate during winter.
Sometimes it’s totally fine, others seem more like a death sentence.
 

wytx

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Joined
Feb 2, 2017
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2,313
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Wyoming
If I'm using a cow tag or doe /fawn license it is because the area needs some doe or cows taken out of it. I'm shooting whatever gives me the good shot.
No cow moose with calf at it's side in Wyoming either.
 

Hnthrdr

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Jan 29, 2022
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The West
There’s nothing in the CPW Regs about that.
I get to see lots of cow/calf moose and it seems those calves will hang with mom for a longggg time, honestly it seems more rare to find a cow moose without calves these days
 

Yoder

WKR
Joined
Jan 12, 2021
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1,682
I've killed a doe with fawns and I've accidently killed fawns that I thought were full grown. I think the biggest thing is how late in the season and what is the population like in your area.
 

bpa556

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 25, 2021
Messages
142
Yes I will. Hunting in North America is a game management tool. If the state issues tags, they want those mouths off the range. Any biologist (I work with them constantly down here in Texas) will tell you to shoot either sex of ALL age classes to fill the quota. That’s how nature works.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

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