KENTUCKY PRESS NEWS SERVICE
A year after establishing an overall deer harvest record, Kentucky hunters did it again.
The 2013-14 deer season in Kentucky ended Jan. 20 with a total harvest
of 144,404 animals, including more than 3,000 in Crittenden County. That represents a gain of more than 9 percent over
the previous record set during the 2012-13 season.
“This year we were ahead of the curve,” said David Yancy, deer biologist
with the Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. “Hunters
harvested more deer in September than they ever had, the October youth
weekend was the best it had been since 2008, there was a slightly better
than average muzzleloader season and then modern gun season was way
better than it normally is. It sort of held throughout.”
A spotty crop of acorns and other hard mast across Kentucky had deer on the move, and made them more vulnerable to hunters.
An increase of about 9,000 deer permits sold – about one third of those
coming through youth sportsman’s licenses – also meant there were more
hunters in the field.
“The poor acorn crop was a major factor in getting those deer out into
the open and into the harvested corn fields and the food plots,” said
Tina Brunjes, deer program coordinator with Kentucky Fish and Wildlife.
“The weather during the modern gun season and during the muzzleloader
season was not as wonderful as it was last season, but we didn’t have
any epic ice storms or some sort of huge flood. Hunters were able to get
out.”
Harvest totals for firearms, archery, muzzleloading and crossbow were up
across the board. A record 104,619 deer were taken by firearms hunters.
Archery hunters harvested 20,833 whitetails while muzzleloader hunters
bagged 15,641 deer and crossbow hunters reported taking 3,311 deer.
Male deer accounted for nearly 54 percent of the deer harvested. Out of
the 77,719 male deer taken, 9,962 were antlerless, according to
telecheck data.
Three of the top five counties in terms of estimated deer densities
produced the top harvest totals. Hunters in Owen County took 4,069
whitetails to lead the state followed by Pendleton County with 3,464 and
Crittenden County with 3,033.
Kentucky’s deer herd was estimated at approximately 900,000 prior to the
season. Herd estimates are derived through computer modeling that takes
into account harvest and age structure data.
Brunjes tempered her expectations for this past season, thinking it
might be average compared to the record harvest of 131,395 deer posted
in 2012-13.
“We ended up with a huge, record-breaking year,” she said.
After a second record harvest in as many seasons, deer are looking at a landscape that has more to offer, Brunjes said.
“The potential is there for the does that make it through this cold
winter to have really high fawning success, and those bucks that make it
through this cold winter, they’re going to be the best of the best,”
she said. “If we can get a good spring, we might not see the numbers
next year, but we’ll see a lot of quality deer out there."