Dori found this little fawn and took its picture.
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Saturday, January 23, 2010
This is getting boring...just more pictures of bucks. When in a little while the horns will fall off and then it is not as easy to tell the bucks for the does. There is getting to be not too many deer left in Utah. It is time to shut the hunting seasons down for a couple of years and build the herd back. But that would mean no or little money for the Fish & Game to buy more pickups and people to ride around it them. Or they could just got to a total lottery with very few permits and build a herd again.
I can remember the the 1980s in Nevada they went to lottery on all permits. This resulted in a great increase in the deer heard. I can remember on hunting season I saw 68 head of buck and did not fire a shot. Did not find the one I was looking for. There were some pretty good bucks in Nevada at that time. What they did worked. Nothing beats success like success.
I like to see large sagebrush. The fine example is between the loading chute and the cabin at the Wolf Den ranch. I wish I was a man of sufficient means to own a place like the Wolf Den. I would probably not come to town very often. There would be not need. I can live with all of the China made gadgits and dodads that you find at Walmarts.
Thursday, January 21, 2010
Being that I am talking about horns and antlers this is a good example of horns. Horns are not shed every year but antlers are. A cow, antelope, sheep or rhino are examples of horns. Deer, elk, moose, and caribou are examples of antlers. But I will still refer to deer and elk as having horns, even though I know it is the wrong usage of the word.
When you see a big buck from the rear it is easy to over estimate the width of the spread especially when his ears are layed back and he is moving. A mature buck with ears outstreched to the widest is about 21 inches. So if the horns go beyond the ears it gets interesting. When they are are 3 or 4 inches beyond it is real interesting. This buck is about 26 inches wide and horns are willowy and not heavy. He is in his prime and in a couple or 3 years would be a very nice buck.
Wednesday, January 20, 2010
The frozen White river on a cold day. The line across center of picture is a natural gas pipeline on suspension cables. I have a friend that walked across the pipeline when he was a boy. In fact he crosses the pipeline twice. He likes to have a little excitement in his life. I can do without things like that. But I will take my hat off to him. It tooks a lot of guts to cross the pipeline. But then he has done some very interesting things in his lifetime.
Tuesday, January 19, 2010
Friday, January 15, 2010
Wednesday, January 13, 2010

It is interesting how a tree gives shelter in all kinds of weather. The needles and branches keep the snow off the ground during the storm. The sun then melts the snow from the tree branches. The tree offers shade in the summer and shelter during a storm. I have seen deer bedded down under trees out of the snow and using the tree as a windbreak. The tree also offers concealment to the animals. Birds roast among the thick branches and needles and birds of prey have a hard time seeing them, and getting to them in the thick branches.
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