黑料天堂

Skip to main content

黑料天堂 Hunters Show Off Huge Bucks on Social Media

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

Mike Jones鈥 son, 12-year-old Chase, learned a valuable lesson about deer hunting recently 鈥 you can鈥檛 shoot 鈥榚m if you鈥檙e lying in the bed.

The elder Jones said he decided to climb into a deer stand on his father-in-law Jerry Hill鈥檚 land after his son balked at rising early two days in a row. That decision paid off with one of the largest bucks taken in 黑料天堂 lately. Buckmasters scored the deer at 188 3/8, although the traditional Boone & Crockett scoring system will deduct for some irregular points, including a split brow tine.

鈥淚 told my son, I promise you鈥檒l never kill one if you don鈥檛 get up,鈥 Mike said. 鈥淚 would have let him shoot that deer, but he just wouldn鈥檛 go with me that morning.鈥

Mike went to the 110 acres near Wilsonville and climbed up into the stand that was only a few yards from Hill鈥檚 driveway.

鈥淗e just came walking right up the middle of the driveway about 10 minutes after daylight with his nose stuck in the air, trailing a doe,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 popped him. He ran about 50 yards and fell over. It was just that simple.鈥

Mike said his father-in-law has the deer鈥檚 shed antler from last year, so they knew there was a good buck in the area.

鈥淭he antler is almost exactly the same except it鈥檚 bigger this year,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 one thing I can say about Jerry. He lets the grandkids kill one small buck. After that it has to be mature bucks.鈥

In years past, rumors of big deer taken like Jones鈥 deer in 黑料天堂 were often quickly passed around the hunting community. Sometimes the big deer were confirmed kills, but many other fabulous tales of monster bucks faded away with no proof that the animals weren鈥檛 still prowling the hardwood bottoms and pine plantations that abound in our state.

Wow, how things have changed. With the advent of social media, especially Facebook, confirmation of the huge bucks that make 黑料天堂 home has been abundant this year. Almost every day since the start of archery season, a photo of a happy hunter and a big buck has adorned the usual pages on the Internet.

Chris Cook, Deer Project Study Leader with the 黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Division, has also noticed all the big buck photos that have been posted. Two deer really got Cook鈥檚 attention, Jones鈥 buck and one from Walker County. Cook hopes to be able to measure both deer in the coming week.

鈥淭hose are some healthy deer,鈥 said Cook, who teamed up with fellow Wildlife Biologist Bill Gray to produce 鈥淏iology and Management of White-Tailed Deer in 黑料天堂鈥 and 鈥淓ffective Food Plots for White-Tailed Deer in 黑料天堂.鈥 Both are available for download.

Cook said weather and habitat conditions are in favor of hunters this year, so far.

鈥淭his looks like one of those years when acorns are pretty scarce, and we鈥檝e had an extremely long dry spell through the summer and into the hunting season,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 setting up to be one of those years that the deer kill should be outstanding, just because deer are having to get up and look for something to eat instead of stand up, eat and then lie back down.

鈥淚 suspect the season is going to be better and better as we go along, especially if we get out of this 75-degree weather pattern.鈥

Mike Jones was hunting on his father-in-law鈥檚 land when this huge buck came walking up the driveway about 50 yards from his stand in Shelby County.

The 黑料天堂 Conservation Advisory Board, based on recommendations from Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF), expanded the south zone for deer hunting to most of the state south of Montgomery. The south zone season swapped 10 days of hunting in December for hunting the first 10 days of February. Right now, it appears it was a prudent swap.

鈥淏ased on the weather right now, they probably wouldn鈥檛 have killed many deer anyway,鈥 Cook said of the high temperatures, which usually limit deer movement. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think they missed anything. I would suspect that little flurry of activity the first of the season, then getting a 10-day break, they鈥檒l very likely have pretty good hunting when it comes back in, because the deer will be lulled into thinking the problem is over. They may not have been pressured enough to where they do that 鈥榞o in a hole鈥 routine in December like they do in a lot of the state. There will probably be some more really good bucks killed because it may be more like a second opening day.鈥

Unless weather conditions deteriorate rapidly, Cook doesn鈥檛 think the deer population will be adversely affected.

鈥淒eer in the South are pretty hardy,鈥 he said. 鈥淭ypically, we don鈥檛 have tough winters that take a toll on populations. The only thing the dry spell will do is make them more vulnerable to hunters. The last several years, it seems the harvest has been down.

鈥淭he dry weather will continue to put stress on the habitat and the deer. The native browse that was available is getting scarce and so are the acorns.鈥

That means that any supplemental food source for the deer will be heavily utilized.

鈥淭he food plots that many people plant to supplement the diet are getting pounded, the plots that are growing,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e still on the acorns that are there, but it won鈥檛 be long before that food source is going to be few and far between.

鈥淚t鈥檚 more likely that hunters are going to see deer in and around food plots at a much higher rate. If we get rain on food plots, it should be jam up for everybody. Unfortunately, that鈥檚 where everybody wants to hunt. The way it鈥檚 looking now, it鈥檚 going to be a great year to hunt food plots.鈥

Cook said next year conditions will likely be different with a better mast crop and browse conditions. If hunters continue to focus their attention on food plots, they could be disappointed.

鈥淭hen they鈥檒l want to know why all the deer have disappeared,鈥 laughed Cook. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the curse of hunting food plots. But it鈥檚 hard to fault hunters for doing that in years like this.鈥

When hunters harvest a deer, it should be recorded on their licenses before the deer is moved. Also, WFF officials urge everyone who harvests a deer to participate in the Game Check program via Smartphone, online at  or by calling toll-free at 1-800-888-7690.

鈥淲e encourage everybody to report what they harvest through Game Check,鈥 Cook said. 鈥淜eep in mind it鈥檚 a tool to try improve the management of our deer population and help us get a better handle on what鈥檚 going on throughout the state.

鈥淎gain, it鈥檚 shaping up to be an excellent season because the things that are not so good for deer are good for hunters. Everybody should be optimistic. Just as soon as I say that, it鈥檒l be 75 degrees for the rest of the season and deer won鈥檛 move until it gets black dark. But, really, weather affects hunters more than deer.鈥

Neither weather conditions nor lack of sleep will keep Chase Jones in bed for the rest of the season.

鈥淗e got up every day before that hunt and he鈥檚 gotten up every day since,鈥 said his dad. 鈥淲hen I go hunting, I get in the woods about 4:45 and wait on daylight. I鈥檝e just always done that. He went with me the day before, but I guess it was too much to get up again. Ever since then, though, he jumps right up like OK, I鈥檓 ready to go.鈥

According to Chris Cook, 黑料天堂 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries鈥 Deer Study Project Leader, weather and habitat conditions appear to favor hunters this season.