Ontario Whitetail Deer Records

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RDPress
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Re: Ontario Whitetail Deer Records

Post by RDPress »

Mr. Dynamite wrote:Hey Dirty Gun, is that a picture you took yourself, or is that one of that deer someone posted about on here a long time ago named "Big Bux"?

I love that picture!


RDPress wrote:I guess we'll just keep brutes like these to ourselves...

Image

The picture of the live deer is Big Bux, taken by a photographer that has followed him for years on December 6th in the morning. He was shot that afternoon in the photographer's neighbour's backyard.
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Mr. Dynamite
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Re: Ontario Whitetail Deer Records

Post by Mr. Dynamite »

Does he have a site where he has put up pictures of him?

Last I saw of him were his pics from 2006/early 07 that Taxman posted, then after that no matter how much I looked I could find nothing more on him.
Want to buy a K98 Mauser 8mm. If you have an old one sitting around someone brought back from the war please message me!
RDPress
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Re: Ontario Whitetail Deer Records

Post by RDPress »

Mr. Dynamite wrote:Does he have a site where he has put up pictures of him?

Last I saw of him were his pics from 2006/early 07 that Taxman posted, then after that no matter how much I looked I could find nothing more on him.
He put up a lot of posts here:

http://ontariohunter.proboards.com/index.cgi?

If you aren't a member already, register and then search for posts by the user: TAC. He has put up a lot of pictures of this deer over the years. The picture I put up was one of the last, since it was taken on the day he was shot.

It's unfortunate that his life ended in the manner it did, being dropped in an area where he had become comfortable around the humans that inhabited it during the Winter months. There are even a few pictures of this deer in which you can see the photographer's reflection in his eye.

A friend of the photographer's neighbour ended up asking if he could shoot this deer and literally did it in the backyard of that neighbour. What a great story he'll have to tell in years to come about this buck on his wall. :roll:
Michael Stogre
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Re: Ontario Whitetail Deer Records

Post by Michael Stogre »

Here is another take on the weight issue by Daniel Schmidt, an editor of Deer & Deer Hunting magazine.

There was a day not so long ago when deer hunters across North America were absolutely fascinated with big bucks.
No, not big racks — big bucks. Huge, giant, monstrous creatures. Or, as the old-timers called them, “real slobberknockers.”
Antlers were adored, but they were almost secondary when it came to describing a buck’s status. “What did he weigh?” was often the first question asked of a successful hunter. This infatuation hasn’t died completely. A buck’s hog-dressed weight is still a badge of honor for hunters in the Northeast, Upper Great Lakes and Canada.

Research has taught us that bucks reach peak weights when they’re 5½ to 6½ years old. Does attain top weights when they are 4½ years old.

From what we can gather, the heaviest whitetail ever shot was killed by a bow-hunter, John Annett of Ontario, in 1977. The deer field dressed 431 pounds on government-certified scales. That would have given it an estimated live weight of more than 540 pounds. However, reports indicate the buck was butchered before Canadian authorities could inspect it.

Second place seemingly belongs to a 402-pound Minnesota buck killed by Carl Lenander Jr. in 1926. Conservation officials estimated the live weight at 511 pounds.

Third place would go to a Maine buck killed by Horace R. Hinckley in 1955. Hinckley reportedly spent three days searching for a scale large enough to properly weigh his buck. With a Maine Sealer of Weights witness present, the buck officially tipped the scales at 355 pounds, giving it a live weight of 451 pounds. Hinckley’s buck had a 28-inch neck girth and a 56-inch chest girth.

Fourth place goes to a 321-pound buck killed in Bayfield County, Wisconsin, in 1938. We don’t know the hunter’s name, but the weight was verified. Fifth place would have to go to a buck killed in New York in 1946. That deer officially weighed 291 pounds dressed.

These rankings are open for debate. While researching this topic with my friend Keith McCaffery, retired deer research biologist, we found several mentions of heavier deer.

However, none of those weights were verified. Included in that list are a 1907 Wisconsin buck that allegedly weighed 437 pounds dressed, and a 1924 Wisconsin buck that weighed 386 pounds.

________

And there is no mention here of the 400+ pounds deer from Alberta & Saskatchewan.

MJS
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Surprised by its own unfolding.
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