The "Art" of Shed Hunting

Jaden Bales

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Joined
Jan 25, 2018
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Location
Montaña
COVER-IMAGE-420-Elk-Sheds.jpg
This was such an interesting deep dive into the long history of shed hunting that @AHayes111 has. It has it all. Giant bucks. 400" bulls. It was a blast to record with @robby denning adding some great questions, too!


Personally, just was doing a little winter range scouting and we still have a little while of bucks still packing, so maybe this will help folks shed hunt better and smarter this spring!

That said, even non-shed hunters can really learn something from this one. Hope you enjoy it!
 
Thanks, Robby and Jaden for giving my the opportunity talk antlers. It was quite a bit of fun. When I get more time I will post up more pictures to help illiterate some of the stories. If any one else has some follow up questions, I would be happy to answer, except GPS coordinates. Ask for those an I am going to be deceptive.
 
Thanks for posting the pictures Robby, The big elk shed I am holding are the best elk antlers I have ever found. The right is 186 and the left is 189. The live elk is him the next year. The sheds were only a few hundred yards from where he is standing at the time.
The buck I am holding is the nontypical my dad and I shot when I was young. The sheds below him are his. I wound the right during the summer of 81 and the left in Feb of 82. The single, I picked up out of the landowners shed pile. It is easy to see all the similarities with the antlers.
The big set I am holding is from the buck that a year or two later scored in the 220's. The set is 207. I believe it is highly likely that this buck it the brother to the buck that was killed five mile away during the rut. the bottom forks on his left and the bottom fork on the other buck are nearly copied. Plenty of other similarities also.DSCN4932.JPG
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The last picture is the antler I found with the bullet lodged in the G4. The buck was clearly running away and the marksman hit something else first as the bullet was expanded and tumbling when it hit.
 
This is the buck my father shot back in 1972 and the antler I found 42 years later. Has the same kink in the MB and even has the same sticker by the brow tine.100_0211.JPG100_0215.JPGDSCN4884.JPG
 
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