I wonder about the deer too. With our mild winters, 4 feet or rain per year, and incredible growth of plants, I would think that we'd have allot of deer and some very large racks on them. But it's just not so.
There are the rare bucks that get very, very large, but they just don't happen very often here. There are also some areas with quite a few deer per acre, but not here.
My theory is a combination of too many coyotes, too much hunting preasure and we're on a natural low population cycle. The coyotes are very numerous. We've been trying to take out as many as possible, and from what I can see of watching for tracks, we might be succeeding on a limited basis. There are fewer tracks out there now then I've ever seen. This land and the surrounding land was leased to a guy who shot allot of deer. I confronted him when I bought the land and he wanted to still hunt it, but I found five kill sites when he hunted it and you are only allowed one deer a year here. He either lied about how many he killed, how many people he had on here, or there were others tresspassing and shooting the deer. It's probably a combination of all three. I also guess that I'm lucky if I found half of the gut piles from before I bought the land. I had an option on the land during deer season and access to be on the land at that time.
There is some evidence that the populations are just on a low cycle. Lots of deer, few coyotes and the population increase. Then the coyote level increases and the deer population declines. The coyotes are very good at finding and killing fawns, so that's why I've been so determined to kill as many coyotes as possible this past winter.
From following their tracks, we've learned that they really like it around the edges of the lake area and other areas that I've cleared. We've seen some sign in our fields, but most of them are concentrated along the edges of our woods and open areas. That might be the biggest reason for how many deer we have. It's just too thick for them and even though there's all sorts of trees, brush and shurbs, there's not allot of food for them because it's too thick to support large numbers of deer.
Eddie