Main Discussion Area > Shooting and Hunting
Does
Knocker:
I'll bet some of you have enough hunting experience to know the answer to this. The area that I am deer hunting in Western Washington this year is either sex. I was looking for a buck in the early season, but in the late will take what I can get! :-) Some of the does I have seen have young ones tagging along. Can someone tell me if a fawn this time of year would be able to make it throught the winter without the doe? Or is taking a doe pretty much a death sentence for the young one?
Thanks,
Keith
armymedic.2:
keith, i have seen many a dink survive without mama around. the key is that tghe winter is not incredibly harsh. a good example is that we ween our calfs off of mama at 4-5 months. that is to ensure they aere very big. you can ween them at three months. i think cattle and deer are alike in many ways, including that they are ruminents. anyway, to your point, go ahead and add mama to the freezer, cause you won't hurt them dinks a bit. the onl;y timw i would suggest leaving the mamas, is during very harsh winters, and that would only be so that the dinks learn to forage through heavy sniow and such. whenh the does come into estrus they will ussually run off their fawns anyway. whack em and stack em.
tomm:
where in washington are you going to be hunting? I have hunted up around Mt Staint Hellans the last two years haven't seen but two deer. Misted a 5x5 elk though. I live in southwest washington haven't taken a deer with a bow but have gotten a few with a muzzle loader. I hunt 504 Stella in the early season if I hunt with a bow hunt the same area in late season if I hunt with a muzzle loader. I have also hunted in the cowemen area with a muzzle loader but I think that its open for bow in the early season. by this time of year the fawns are ab;e to go it on their own so don't pass up a shot the fawns will be fine. have a good hunt tomm
Hillbilly:
Like everybody said, unless they're unusually small, they should be fine by now to make it. Most of the fawns here are nearly as big as their mamas by now, and most of this year's doe fawns will get bred in the secondary rut in Dec and become mamas themselves. As a matter of fact, those 50-60 pounds fawns taste awful good, too, nice and tender. >:D
DBernier:
As Hillbilly said, down here the fawns are about if not as big as the mothers now. The one I shot at (see hunting update thread) is the fawn in the photo to the doe in the photo. I watched it grow from a spotted fawn to a near mature doe. It was well able to take care of its self and often appeared alone feeding in the evening.
Dick
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