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The left G2 was 12 inches and the right G2 was a whopping 14 inches and the total score was 156 1/2. "She was happy," Starkey's father said. "That deer didn't have any ground shrinkage."
Brandon Sheets, an Ohio bowhunter, spent three years tracking a massive whitetail buck. After a heart-pounding encounter, he finally harvested the legendary deer, which scored nearly 215 inches.
Walker Hilbun of Starkville harvested a 167-inch buck on Nov. 2 in Oktibbeha County after watching it grow for two years. ... Mississippi teen bags 150-class trophy buck. A food plot filled with deer
The James Jordan Buck is the 2nd highest scoring typical white-tailed deer ever harvested by a hunter in the United States (only behind the Huff buck) and the third-highest scoring in the world. James (Jim) Jordan was a 22-year-old hunter from Burnett County, Wisconsin when he shot the record buck on November 20, 1914.
The Key deer is a subspecies of white-tailed deer which migrated to the Florida Keys from the mainland over a land bridge during the Wisconsin glaciation. The earliest known written reference to Key deer comes from the writings of Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda , a Spanish sailor shipwrecked in the Florida Keys and captured by Native Americans ...
Male O. v. nelsoni with antlers in velvet. The white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus), also known commonly as the whitetail and the Virginia deer, is a medium-sized species of deer native to North America, Central America, and South America as far south as Peru and Bolivia, where it predominately inhabits high mountain terrains of the Andes. [3]
The main beams measured 27 inches and 26 6/8 inches with bases in the 5-inch range. Felter said the buck has been unofficially scored twice. One unofficial gross score came to 222 inches and ...
The initial score came out to be 342 3/8 non-typical points. Based upon the initial score, North American Whitetail Magazine declared the buck as the new world-record in the December 1983 issue of their magazine. [3] In 1986, the Hole in the Horn buck was re-measured by a judges’ panel of official Boone & Crockett scorers.