Sunday, December 5, 2010

Record Whitetail Harvest in Nebraska!

LINCOLN, Neb. – Nebraska’s November firearm deer harvest set a record this fall, rising 18 percent over last year, according to the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission.

The 2010 November firearm deer harvest was 63,300, compared to 53,767 in 2009. Most of the increase is from antlerless white-tailed deer harvest, as 21,000 bonus antlerless white-tailed deer tags were added this year.

Good weather benefited hunters and farmers as the corn harvest was nearly complete at the start of the November firearm season, compared to 2009 when more than half of the crop was still in the field at the start of the season.

The following are harvest figures for each region of the state, with the percentage increase from 2009:

Panhandle (District I) – 6,580, 9 percent; north-central (District II) – 11,885, 13 percent; northeast (District III) – 13,791, 32 percent; southwest (District IV) – 7,042, 20 percent; southeast (District V) – 13,709, 11 percent; and south-central (District VI) – 10,325, 13 percent.

“This is a good step toward our goal of a 25-percent reduction in the deer herd in eastern Nebraska over the next 3 years,” said Kit Hams, big game program manager for Game and Parks. “The use of Earn-a-Buck rules on Elkhorn and Wahoo permits and the October firearm antlerless season (3,000 deer harvested) in 2010 have both been successful in increasing doe harvest.”

Earn-a-Buck rules required hunters to check in an antlerless deer before or at the same time they checked a buck.

Assuming normal harvest rates during archery, muzzleloader and January antlerless seasons, hunters should harvest about 90,000 deer in Nebraska for the 2010 seasons, compared to the previous record of 80,400 in 2008 and 78,000 last year.

Nebraska has enjoyed excellent deer hunting the past three years, with record harvest numbers and record deer. A state record nontypical white-tailed deer was taken last year in Richardson County. A potential state record typical white-tailed deer was harvested this November north of Seward.

Best to you,
Scott Croner
Nebraska Hunting Company




Hunting Bastards: Osterholt Scams: Sue Kowzlowski or Mark Rommel Osterholt?Osterholt Scams: Sue Kowzlowski or Mark Rommel Osterholt?Albert A RaschIn Afghanistan™Albert A RaschScott Croner, Nebraska HuntingScott CronerScott Croner

The Rasch Outdoor Chronicles: After the Shot, Tracking and Trailing

© 2010 Scott Croner and
Nebraska Hunting Company™

So you have taken your shot, waited the as long as you could, went to where your sure your Whitetail fell, and he's not there! What do you do?

Our friend and fellow sportsman, Albert A Rasch, has an instructive post on his blog The Rasch Outdoor Chronicles on tracking and trailing.

His post, The Rasch Outdoor Chronicles: After the Shot, Tracking and Trailing is a great primer and sure to get you off on the right track... so to speak!

Albert has told me that he is working on an updated post on tracking animals, and is looking forward to putting the finishing touches on it and sharing it with us.

See Albert Rasch at:

The Rasch Outdoor Chronicles



Best to you,
Scott Croner
Nebraska Hunting Company


Albert A Rasch
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