I have never hunted Kansas or Indiana. Why would I? I guess I have always thought why travel to hunt whitetails or buy land in another State when I am fortunate enough to have the opportunity to own and hunt in my home State of Iowa. The most highly coveted tag in the country and I have access to three buck tags and doe tags if needed to manage my property. Why would I ever need to leave Iowa to hunt whitetails? Better question would be…Why would I want to sit in a tree in Kansas or Indiana in November when I could be in Iowa on my own farm? Could I buy a farm in Kansas or Indiana? Probably, why don’t I? Because I think about the kid who lives in those States that loves to deer hunt that dreams about owning his own deer hunting place. Just like I did when I was a kid. How does that help him when me or a thousand other NR come in and buy everything up and price him out and then tell him good luck finding a piece to own, or even hunt on in his own State? Or tell him he has to eat ramen the first half of his life every meal and never drive a decent vehicle, then maybe just maybe he could buy a 40 or an 80 if he is lucky.
I guess I’d rather be part of the solution than part of the problem. I have spent too much time over the last two decades trying to protect what Iowa has to turn around and throw in the towel or buy in other States. How many times has someone on IW (myself included) said fix your own State don’t come here and buy. Then follow that up with…if you do buy here don’t complain and then try to change our rules. It would be hypocritical for me to buy in other States because for years I have been opposed to increased NR tags, increased NR land ownership and NR landowners being guaranteed tags. I have always fought to help insulate the next generation of Iowa residents from loosing more acres to NR ownership. So kids who live here might have a chance to own their own slice of heaven just like I have been able to do.
I guess I could go hunt public in Kansas or Indiana but then I would competing with some local that likely doesn’t have somewhere else to go or more NR.
I guess a guy who lives in Iowa and feels the need to buy in surrounding States when they have three buck tags available to them here have way more antler lust than I do, or they are doing it to make money by driving prices higher on the next generation which is even worse in my opinion.
I would tell Iowa landowners that feel the need buy in other States and crisscross the midwest trying to punch tags and rack up inches of antler annually that you can probably quit chasing notoriety because nobody over the age of 25 really cares anymore. At least no one over the age of 25 that knows anything. So get over yourself because you’re only impressing naïve kids who don’t know any better.
I know I quit caring about what other people shot 20 years ago. Because even back then with enough money you could buy inches of antler by locking up acres, either buying it or leasing it. Killing big deer annually has more to do with the size of your pocket book than your hunting ability.
So my opinions which I present come from 40+ years of bowhunting whitetails, 30+ years gun hunting whitetails, 20+ years of managing my own land, 20+ years of contacting legislators and political groups fighting to protect Iowa’s resources, thousands of hours studying, listening and learning about whitetail management including habitat management, deer studies, deer behavior and herd management. But more importantly, my opinions are based on science, research, experience, common sense and the ability to recognize BS when the numbers don’t add up or when I am trying to be sold something.
I assure you and everyone on this site. If I believed for one minute that a one buck limit would improve the quality of hunting for all of Iowa’s deer hunters and would increase our top end potential I would be in favor of it. I don’t believe for one second that it will. It will lead to intensified high grading and less top end bucks and more 130” 5 year old eight points. (If that is your idea of improving age structure and improving Iowa) then I am not in support of it. How can I come to that conclusion? Common sense from looking at and studying the numbers. Also, because we can look at the 20,000 acre Amana Colonies one buck limit for the last 20+ years to back my position. It is basically a case study done right here in Iowa, not in Indiana, not in Kansas, right here in Iowa. What was their conclusion after 20+ years? Their one buck limit led to even greater high grading (due to nobody wanting to waste their only buck tag on a cull buck) and decreased the number of top end bucks inside that 20,000 acres even more so than what was present just outside of it. Their solution, they went back to Iowa’s current tag system to encourage culling.
You don’t have to believe me. Call Jase Elliott, the DNR Deer Biologist, he is a great guy to discuss deer herd management with, he has told me straight up that going to a one buck limit won’t improve the number of top end bucks. He has also made the comment to me that he doesn’t know why people would think that it would. He confirmed what I have been saying, we don’t harvest enough second or third bucks to even make a difference. He also agreed that getting the population up is the answer to improving the hunting for everyone including guys looking for top end bucks. He also feels it is important for the future of deer hunting in Iowa that bowhunters have to opportunity to also gun hunt. Likewise, he feels it is important that gun hunters also have the opportunity to bow hunt. He did say that they will be decreasing doe quotas even more for next year. They are on top of it. Let them manage the herd. This will take 3-5 years to recover. Have some patience.
I have presented the numbers for Iowa, then Indiana and now Kansas. I have broke the numbers down and tried to make the case for the importance of having more does on the landscape to improve buck quantity and quality.
We had our best hunting when we had similar deer populations as what Indiana and Kansas currently have now. That is not a coincidence. We didn’t have a one buck limit then and we sure don’t need it implemented now. We need more does on our landscape. As myself and many others have said, It has to do with producing significantly more bucks than what are being harvested so that you’re constantly back filling and stacking up your buck population. That is what allows more bucks to reach the next age class and ultimately age 4,5,6.
As booneriverbucks indicated, those with basic math skills and an understanding of deer herd management can figure this out very quickly.
We can’t take things (buck tags, cell cams, weapons, etc,) away from people or manage our deer herd based on “feelings” or “I think” this will make a difference. We have to manage our herd based on science.
Jase and I were discussing top end potential bucks during one conversation and I mentioned to him I always felt maybe 1 out of 10 bucks had the potential to reach 180” plus. I asked what he thought? His response was “if that”. Let that sink in.
The guys you watch on youtube who are killing 180-200”+ bucks regularly, most are doing that on literally thousands of acres of controlled land with unlimited food and almost zero hunting pressure.
As booneriverbucks said…Guys lower your expectations.