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Does with Fawns. What do you do?
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<blockquote data-quote="shootermcgavin" data-source="post: 2322045" data-attributes="member: 4527"><p>My brother and I were discussing this yesterday. My theory is "if it has a spot, no shot. If it is brown, it goes down." Of the same sentiment, if any deer with it has spots, I'll take no shots. My first shot would be a mature doe as quantity over quality, but I have no reserves about picking some delicious tender morsels of young doe off the land. </p><p></p><p>My second doe I ever shot was a mom of twins. We were trying to do a stalk of sorts through the land. We spotted them on a neighbors land and they kept charging the fence like they wanted to jump, but couldn't. We went around the corner of the field and when we reached the edge of the woods she spotted us again, and she jumped the fence onto the land I had rights to, and kept running. her fawns were to small to try and jump the fence. I stayed put and after about 8 minutes she came walking back to her fawns and I capped her. Her fawns did stick close by the whole time, but hopefully watching me cut open their mom taught them to fear men.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shootermcgavin, post: 2322045, member: 4527"] My brother and I were discussing this yesterday. My theory is "if it has a spot, no shot. If it is brown, it goes down." Of the same sentiment, if any deer with it has spots, I'll take no shots. My first shot would be a mature doe as quantity over quality, but I have no reserves about picking some delicious tender morsels of young doe off the land. My second doe I ever shot was a mom of twins. We were trying to do a stalk of sorts through the land. We spotted them on a neighbors land and they kept charging the fence like they wanted to jump, but couldn't. We went around the corner of the field and when we reached the edge of the woods she spotted us again, and she jumped the fence onto the land I had rights to, and kept running. her fawns were to small to try and jump the fence. I stayed put and after about 8 minutes she came walking back to her fawns and I capped her. Her fawns did stick close by the whole time, but hopefully watching me cut open their mom taught them to fear men. [/QUOTE]
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