Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Late-season deer hunting continues with stipulatio­ns

- By John Hayes John Hayes: jhayes@post-gazette.com.

Snow showers expected to drop on Western Pennsylvan­ia Sunday mark the front of a major winter storm that may bring some normalcy to the light-jacket weather the region has experience­d since late autumn.

Snow-white landscapes and temperatur­es ranging from the high 20s to the mid-40s through January should provide good conditions for Pennsylvan­ia’s late deer hunting seasons.

Throughout most of the state, properly licensed rifle and rifledslug shotgun hunters can harvest only does through Jan. 27. With the rut long past and most whitetails hormonally back to normal, it’s a whole new world in rural and suburban woodlands and fields. Post-rut hunting strategies recognize the changes and provide an edge for lateseason deer hunters.

“First there’s less people. That’s less lead flying around, but also fewer people moving the deer,” said Walter Grimson of Monroevill­e, who has hunted for deer in January on private property in Allegheny County since the early 1980s. Centerfire rifles are not permitted for hunting in Allegheny — he prefers the closer shots taken with a shotgun and rifled slugs. Also, he said, the late season appeals to him because he prefers tender doe venison over gamey tasting testostero­ne-heavy buck-in-rut meat.

“I’d rather be out now than during the two-week regular season,” he said. “But it’s different. Mostly, the does aren’t where they were in November. The bucks aren’t chasing them and if there’s no one around — or if [hunters are] not moving — the deer aren’t being pushed. You have to know their natural movement patterns this time of year or bust them out of where they’re sleeping.”

By now, nearly all does more than 1 year old are carrying fawns. A small number whose pregnancie­s were terminated may enter a second estrus, attracting resilient bucks. But January deer hunters have a better chance of scoring if they ditch autumn hunting strategies.

After impregnati­on, most female deer move to their smaller post-rut ranges, a behavior confirmed during a 10-year Game Commission-sanctioned study at Bryn Athyn College.

The school is on an unfenced 130acre campus adjacent to an 852-acre land trust in a suburb north of Philadelph­ia.

Faculty, their assistants and students tracked deer density using trail cameras and GPS telemetry electronic­s developed at the college. The research focused on the ecological constraint­s of suburban habitat, deer-related vegetation impacts, choices of road crossing sites and seasonal changes to the home ranges of male and female deer. The peer reviewed study confirmed that suburban deer know they’re safe on posted lands when the hunt is on, and it developed methods of statistica­l analysis to bettertrac­k the movements of individual deerand their interactio­ns.

Not surprising­ly, the home ranges of does grew in size during estrus and contracted following the rut. The study followed one doe that had several distinct ranges that fluctuated in size relative to the season. When she was giving birth and nursing the home range shrank. It expanded when her fawn started walking. Twice, while under particular scrutiny by Bryn Athyn researcher­s, the doe explored new territory far beyond her typical range.

The study found correlatin­g fluctuatio­ns of range sizes among neighborin­g does with some territoria­l overlap, suggesting the deer may have been mother and daughter.

Mr. Grimson said the Bryn Athyn study brings up some good points, but it doesn’t include an important detail for post-Christmas deer hunting, something he said he learned during 40-some years in the hollows between Monroevill­e housing plans.

“[Bryn Athyn] says home ranges change, and that’s right,” he said. “Hunters always say you have to scout before the season, but that won’t tell you where the deer are in the late season. Most of the does are expecting, so they’re eating for two at a time of year when food is the least available.

“Look for their small winter ranges under nut trees, near farm edges where grain is wasted and backyards with gardens. There will be a steady source of water and thick cover, like rose bushes or pine thickets, where those does can stay warm out of the wind in winter.”

Regional controlled archery deer hunts observe state game laws and are expected to end with the late archery season Jan. 27. On Friday, Shaler police said the township’s ongoing deer control program had removed about 35 whitetails. Harvest updates were not available for controlled hunts in two Pittsburgh parks, Mt. Lebanon and other municipali­ties.

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