Wilderlife
WKR
Hi all,
I haven't posted a report for a fair while and I keep forgetting that this forum exists, so I figured I'd make a post with all of the progress of my fallow deer rut for 2019. I'll do it in installments as I have a heap of pictures from scouting various properties over summer, and I've had 2 successful hunts for the rut so far. I also now have mostly two weeks off to hunt so there will be plenty more to come.
I'll start with a little bit of the scouting.
Here in NSW, Australia, the regulations for deer hunting have recently been relaxed. You still need an R license to hunt deer on both private and public land, or just a G license if you want to hunt on private land (landowners and employees of landowners are exempt from the license). Until recently, with an R or G license, you weren't allowed to shoot fallow and red deer between November first and March the 1st of the following year. You also weren't allowed to shoot deer from a vehicle or shoot them at night using a spotlight as an aid. These regulations have recently been dropped as the deer are in enormous numbers and we are going through the worst drought ever. So with that background, in a lot of my summer scouting I was also shooting deer on one particular property as the farmer wants me to remove heaps.
So far for the year I've shot (or people with me have shot) 19 deer, and 16 of them have been from one property. I still need to shoot heaps more.
A typical summer day for me was loading up my pack with a bit of gear and doing some big walks in areas I like to hunt, to get an idea of how many does were in the area, how much feed was in the area, and also put up some trail cameras. It was always around the 40 degrees celcius mark (104F) so I was reminding myself that the weather would be toughening me up. I'm also doing a huge hike in Papua New Guinea with my brothers in September so I looked at all of this as training for that.
I found this dead head when scouting one day.
This is typical of one of the properties I hunt.
Despite the drought, the deer have been in good condition over summer. Here is my brother with a couple he shot.
It all gets loaded up and packed out.
I haven't posted a report for a fair while and I keep forgetting that this forum exists, so I figured I'd make a post with all of the progress of my fallow deer rut for 2019. I'll do it in installments as I have a heap of pictures from scouting various properties over summer, and I've had 2 successful hunts for the rut so far. I also now have mostly two weeks off to hunt so there will be plenty more to come.
I'll start with a little bit of the scouting.
Here in NSW, Australia, the regulations for deer hunting have recently been relaxed. You still need an R license to hunt deer on both private and public land, or just a G license if you want to hunt on private land (landowners and employees of landowners are exempt from the license). Until recently, with an R or G license, you weren't allowed to shoot fallow and red deer between November first and March the 1st of the following year. You also weren't allowed to shoot deer from a vehicle or shoot them at night using a spotlight as an aid. These regulations have recently been dropped as the deer are in enormous numbers and we are going through the worst drought ever. So with that background, in a lot of my summer scouting I was also shooting deer on one particular property as the farmer wants me to remove heaps.
So far for the year I've shot (or people with me have shot) 19 deer, and 16 of them have been from one property. I still need to shoot heaps more.
A typical summer day for me was loading up my pack with a bit of gear and doing some big walks in areas I like to hunt, to get an idea of how many does were in the area, how much feed was in the area, and also put up some trail cameras. It was always around the 40 degrees celcius mark (104F) so I was reminding myself that the weather would be toughening me up. I'm also doing a huge hike in Papua New Guinea with my brothers in September so I looked at all of this as training for that.
I found this dead head when scouting one day.
This is typical of one of the properties I hunt.
Despite the drought, the deer have been in good condition over summer. Here is my brother with a couple he shot.
It all gets loaded up and packed out.