Yes, evidence of daylight movement of bucks around these parts.
The boys have got romance on their minds...
Door County, Wisconsin, USA - Where the strong survive and the weak are killed and eaten.
Yes, evidence of daylight movement of bucks around these parts.
The boys have got romance on their minds...
Including this dandy Big Boy that showed-up on one of the trail cameras.
Rub
Scrapes
Above the scrapes there is the licking branch
Trail
This short, silent, video vignette was captured at the very beginning of November.
That is a dandy buck chasing a girl deer - and if I'm not mistaken he's got loving on his mind. And she's either playing hard-to-get or attempting to beat it out of Dodge.
Female
whitetails generally come into estrus within a shared window of
opportunity beginning in mid-October into mid-December. Gestation is
around 200 days with fawn drop beginning in April and into June. Unbred
does will come into heat again 28 days later.
The rut is kicking it into high gear now and the chase is on as male whitetails have romance on their minds.
There's been plenty more daylight deer activity so it's appropriate to share some more buck and doe photos.
Including a mutant!
Now that the pre-rut has commenced more bucks are making themselves evident than a month or so ago.
As they've busted out of the bachelor groups they've dispersed to establish bragging rights to their own breeding territory.
And with very few exceptions almost all of the images have been nocturnal...
Same buck as the one in the video above? |
As the pre-rut begins another behavior that bucks engage-in is sparring.
It's all about establishing dominance and thus breeding rights when the main rut kicks-in.
It's not often you witness this behavior in person.
Thusly, it is infrequent to capture it digitally...
If you encounter a whiff of deer pee redolent in the autumn air look carefully beneath any shoulder height tree branches that are close by. You may locate a bare patch of dirt in the turf that is trampled with deer hoof prints. This is called a scrape. Bucks create scrapes by using their hoofs to dig at the ground. Once the soil is stirred up they urinate on the scrape.
Bucks don’t pee the way those of us males of the human species do. We try to keep it off of our legs and boots. Whitetail bucks actually try to pee on their own legs. The object is to hit their tarsal glands in an effort to leave their scent on the scrape. Every deer has its own unique scent. The tarsal glands hold concentrated amounts of that scent.
This short, silent, video vignette was captured at the very end of January.
Two weeks before Valentines Day there is no mistaking the behavior captured digitally by an ever-vigilant trail camera.
That is a dandy buck chasing a girl deer - and if I'm not mistaken he's got loving on his mind.
An occurrence more common in the southern latitudes - this behavior is less common here half-way between the equator and the north pole. Nevertheless, it is not entirely unknown.
Female whitetails generally come into estrus within a shared window of opportunity beginning in mid-October into mid-December. Gestation is around 200 days with fawn drop beginning in April and into June. Unbred does will come into heat again 28 days later.
With better nutritional resources here in farm country female deer born in the spring are often bred in their first year of life. These younger mothers will come into estrus later than mature does and their fawns are delivered in July and sometimes as late as August.
It is these late-bred does that explains the arrival of newborn fawns on the landscape in summer. These fawns are at a disadvantage going into the fall as they lack the head start necessary to put on sufficient bulk and fat reserves than those with the earlier start.
While some may not survive their first winter - around here (food sources), the absence of large predators (wolves and black bear) and the moderating impact of water on opposite coastlines - these late arrivals stand a better chance of survival than their brethren born in Wisconsin's north woods.
A remarkably adaptable animal the whitetail deer is.
This is a buck rub. Every day we see more of them while out on our daily walk.
Around here the tree of choice for rubbing seems to be willow, younger aspen and tamarack. This happens to be an assault on a basswood tree planted about a decade and a half ago and happens to be in our front yard. Is it something about the bark? Is it the diameter of the tree? Is there a scent imparted by the tree to the deer? Or vice versa?
It's actually the versa.
So here's the rub. If you've ever had an opportunity to watch my Labrador retriever in action it's all about scent. When she is running hot on a trail she isn’t following with her eyes as much as she is following her nose. Deer scrapes are much-ado about scent-marking. A deer rub carries with it a sensory experience that engages scent and visual impact.
The rub above was made by a dominant buck - brought about by the impact of testosterone overload. It would not be unusual for other bucks to add their contribution to the rub but it's more to do with establishing the hierarchy amongst the local bucks.
The term dominant buck is apropos given that one of the reasons for this behavior is to mark their territory and curb and intimidate the lesser bucks both psychologically and hormonally. This suppresses testosterone levels in the subordinate males allowing the dominant whitetail to exert his influence.
The glands located in the forehead of the dominant male send a signal that this is my turf. It also signals to the ladies of the male's readiness to mate. It is the whitetail equivalent of leaving your name and phone number with someone at the bar.
If I had to hazard a guess I think I am witnessing pre-rut activity - colloquially the same as the beginning of the breeding season.
Speaking of the rut after the morning walk this was discovered in the south corner of our front yard.
This basswood tree had been planted about fifteen years ago as a tiny potted 'stick' of a tree. And over the last decade and a half it has grown into a handsome and straight native hardwood of about 3+ inches in diameter near its base.
Overnight Mr. Buck decided to pay a nocturnal visit and tear-up the bark on the south-facing side of the trunk to mark his territory and establish dominance.
Grrrrr.......
The whitetail rut has commenced.
From our walk yesterday morning (Saturday) there was evidence of a fresh scrape in the foreground of this trail camera.
And following the upload of the contents of the SD card was evidence of Mr. Buck freshening it the evening beforehand....
Grainy images and really crappy composition but I think you get the picture of the what these fellas will do to stake-out their territory and signal a willingness to breed.
That is at least a ten-point buck too.
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