Tennessee Todd
Moderator
Hey BSK, how come everyone else posts alive and dead pictures of big bucks, and you only have pictures of them alive.....
It was an injury on his hind quarter, opposite side of rack disconfiguration.JCDEERMAN said:Dawson said:He was a huge main frame 6 on one side and only had a short main beam, a brow tine a short G2 on the other. He was limping badly and very thin. My best guess is that he was shot late in the season last year or hit by a car.
When the buck was limping, was it one of his front legs? Also, was the non-dominant antler side on the same side of the injured leg?
Dawson said:It was an injury on his hind quarter, opposite side of rack disconfiguration.JCDEERMAN said:Dawson said:He was a huge main frame 6 on one side and only had a short main beam, a brow tine a short G2 on the other. He was limping badly and very thin. My best guess is that he was shot late in the season last year or hit by a car.
When the buck was limping, was it one of his front legs? Also, was the non-dominant antler side on the same side of the injured leg?
Exactly right!JCDEERMAN said:Dawson said:It was an injury on his hind quarter, opposite side of rack disconfiguration.JCDEERMAN said:Dawson said:He was a huge main frame 6 on one side and only had a short main beam, a brow tine a short G2 on the other. He was limping badly and very thin. My best guess is that he was shot late in the season last year or hit by a car.
When the buck was limping, was it one of his front legs? Also, was the non-dominant antler side on the same side of the injured leg?
Makes perfect sense. Usually, when the injury is on one of the front legs, the antler disconfiguration is on the same side as the injury. When the injury is on the back leg, the antler configuration is usually on the opposite side
whistlinwingman said:Nice pics easy. I have to ask what is that buck doing hanging around a 3-d target in that last pic? She made a good decoy.