Chicago Sun-Times

Hunters are off and shooting

Check- ins on first day of firearm deer season run like clockwork

- DALE BOWMAN

PONTIAC, Ill. — My guy Friday was Bryan Davis. He had his daughter, 12- year- old Natalie, along for her first time deer- hunting with a gun.

Illinois’ first firearm deer season opened Friday and runs through today. The second firearm season is Nov. 30- Dec. 3.

As he checked in his deer at the Livingston County check station at the Pontiac Sportsman’s Club, Davis said, ‘‘ I’m taking her back to school, then picking up my son.’’ Passing on the tradition. Check stations used to be part of the deer- hunting tradition in Illinois. That changed with electronic reporting. Now check stations are only found in counties with positive reports of chronic wasting disease ( CWD).

It is a well- defined procedure for processing check- ins. About 100 deer were expected by the 8 p. m. close Friday of the Livingston check- in.

The deer’s sex and age ( wear on teeth) were checked. Hunters were asked if they used a shotgun, handgun or muzzleload­er, then if they saw any wild turkey ( one hunter saw 22), bobcats or wild hogs. Successful hunters were given a deer pin.

District wildlife biologist John Griesbaum led a three- person crew. It was the second year for a check station in Livingston County, which has four hot spots for CWD.

Randy Smith, the manager of the wetland wildlife program for the Illinois Department of Natural Resources, did data entry and map work, pinpointin­g where deer were shot.

The ‘‘ cutter’’ was Ed Zwicker, a regional wildlife biologist in southern Illinois. With animals older than a year, the crew asked to take a sample for CWD testing. Those keeping trophies rarely allow sampling because the cuts high on the neck make mounting difficult, though the IDNR will work with taxidermis­ts.

The biggest buck I saw brought in was a 12- point with good spread ( width) and mass ( thickness or heft), shot by John Branz.

‘‘ I have a 10- point on the wall, but he pales in comparison compares to this guy,’’ Branz said.

Griesbaum discussed options so they could test Branz’s buck, including Branz bringing the head back after butchering and caping.

Even such big bucks were mostly 3- year- olds. By evening, 18- year- old Sara Gass had checked in her first deer. It was the oldest, a doe older than 5.

Dean Wessels brought in one of the other big bucks, a 13- point. He wanted his trophy tested.

‘‘ These are the deer they want to test, so I want to know,’’ he said.

He understood that old big bucks have the highest probabilit­y of CWD because of their roaming and contact with multiple deer.

In collecting data, Griesbaum led an efficient operation.

Zwicker cut the neck open to extract the retrophary­ngeal lymph node from below the jaw and the obex ( base of brain). Those were put in numbered Formalin specimen containers for CWD testing.

Tongues were cut and put in numbered plastic bags for an ongoing genetics/ CWD study by Nohra Mateus- Pinilla. All samples now go to the veterinary diagnostic lab at the University of Illinois for testing.

If a deer tests positive for CWD, the hunter is notified. It is recommende­d that deer testing positive for CWD not be eaten.

Opening day was relatively mellow statewide, with temperatur­es rising through the 40s and some rain coming later. Some snow was forecast across northern counties Saturday.

‘‘ It was lightning north of us,’’ Philip Kelly said as he checked in a deer while darkness thickened at Pontiac Sportsman’s Club.

Follow me on Twitter @ BowmanOuts­ide.

 ?? | DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? John Branz checked in his biggest buck, a 12- point, Friday at the Livingston County check station.
| DALE BOWMAN/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES John Branz checked in his biggest buck, a 12- point, Friday at the Livingston County check station.
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