Velvet deer antlers are beyond cool, especially when you come across a velvet buck during hunting season. It’s pretty rare, because most (but not all) bowhunting season start after bucks have shed their velvet. There are a few exceptions. States like Florida, Wyoming and Montana are a few that come to mind when it comes to early deer hunting seasons that coincide with white-tailed bucks still having full or partial racks covered in velvet.
I’ve had the good fortune of hunting several such locations over the years, and I’ve taken about a half-dozen bucks that had either full or partial velvet crowns. The most recent one was last fall in Wyoming where I shot a really cool-looking white-tailed buck as he was in the process of shedding his crimson velvet. We captured that hunt on video, and the show just aired on Pursuit Channel. If you haven’t already seen it, check it out here on our YouTube page:
You are reading: How to Preserve Velvet Deer Antlers | Deer & Deer Hunting
The unfortunate thing about all of those bucks I’ve shot is that I really don’t have one that has been properly preserved. For the most part, the velvet bucks I’ve taken were mostly hardened underneath. That makes for a really difficult job for a layman (me) or even an experienced taxidermist. With the deer hunting season already upon us (in Florida) and approaching fast (Sept. 1 in Wyoming), I spent some time on my lunch break today searching for ways to preserve velvet antlers. This video by Dick’s Taxidermy is a great tutorial for how to do it yourself. Thanks to Curt from DT for taking the time to make this video and share it with everyone!
The 5 key points to preserving velvet deer antlers are:
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For more taxidermy tips, be sure to check out the Dick’s Taxidermy page. These guys know what they are doing!
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Pursuit Channel is Top Landing Spot for Deer Hunters
Nielsen analytics for the recently completed first quarter of 2018 illustrate a winning performance for Pursuit Channel during primetime and on weekends. The report confirmed that Pursuit content, which is created by one of the world’s most notable lineups in outdoor broadcasting, outpaced expectations as a perpetual viewership machine, one capable of incrementally growing audiences during notoriously weak periods of outdoor television usage.
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With its top programming, Pursuit Channel maintained a very solid 0.05 CVG AA%* throughout the quarter during weekday primetime (8 p.m. to 11 p.m.).
Weekend primetime (8 p.m. to 11 p.m.) schedules helped spike America’s favorite outdoor network to a 0.07 CVG AA% during the same period.
“High-quality outdoor entertainment, plus a big, expanding universe and Nielsen analytics continue to collectively run out in front as one of the very best values across the entire spectrum of outdoor media,” said Pursuit CEO Rusty Faulk. “Day in and day out, week after week, this network provides the best-in-class bang for the buck.”
“Pursuit knocked it out of the park with a 0.08 CVG AA% to end the weekend daytime category (9 a.m. to 4 p.m.) of the quarter,” said Greg Sugg of Moose Media. “But that our weekends are also so well received is really no surprise. Education, conservation and down-home fun makes us the weekend go-to destination for millions of family oriented hunters, fishers and shooters.”
*Coverage AA%: Percentage of households viewing a program or daypart within its coverage area.
Source: https://raysthesteaks.com
Category: Hunting
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