This young lady has a heck of a family Honey Hole
Interesting that she is wearing a short sleeve shirt. Must have been a warm day that far north. If I saw something like that from my stand, it wouldn't matter if it was 85 degrees or 15 below! And yes, she is ruined now because anything in the future will look like a cull, but it's a great "problem" to have!!
https://ksoutdoors.com/Hunting/When-to-HuntDeer Season - Youth and Disability
Date: 09/05/2020 - 09/13/2020
Location: Statewide
Youth 16 and younger, who possess a valid deer permit, may hunt during this special deer season only while under the immediate supervision of an adult 18 or older. Any person who possesses a valid deer permit and has a permit to hunt from a vehicle pursuant to KAR 115-18-4 or a disability assistance permit issued pursuant to KAR 115-18-15 may also hunt during this season. All resident and nonresident permits are valid, and equipment restrictions designated on permits apply. Hunter orange is required.
I don't know why, I just want to know, and when something like this is posted with no details the first question I think of is HF or LF lol. It doesn't matter, I just want to know. For any others like me the article says fair chase.
The articles I read don't say, but I'm pretty sure it was HF - article says they've been watching it grow for 3 years........
https://www.hutchnews.com/sports/20...sas-girl-shot-this-monster-40-point-buckThe youth deer hunting season got off to a doozy of a start this past week.
A potentially record-breaking doozy.
Fourteen-year-old Paslie Werth, of Cimarron, shot a once-in-a-lifetime deer last Sunday — a 40-point, free-range whitetail buck tallying a gross green score of 282 6/8 inches —
while rifle hunting on family property with her father, Kurt, in Kiowa County.Paslie didn’t have to wait long this season to get the beast in her crosshairs, shooting it just two days into the youth season, which began Sept. 5.
“I hunted all day Saturday, opening day, and all day Sunday,” Paslie said. “It was Sunday evening when I had the opportunity to shoot him.”
Despite the relatively short wait time to find her deer this season, actually shooting the deer was a process several years in the making.
“We’ve actually been watching him grow for the last three years,” Paslie’s mother, Dionne, told The Topeka Capital-Journal on Thursday. “We feel very fortunate that she was the one that was able to harvest him.”
Despite having seen the bruiser in trail camera photographs, seeing the huge rack in person was a whole other experience entirely for Paslie.
“When he stood up 25 yards away, I was in shock of his massive rack,” the teen said.
Paslie, who also enjoys fishing and competes in 4-H shooting sports, air pistol and archery, said this was her fourth buck she’s harvested in her burgeoning young hunting career.
“My next biggest was a 12-point whitetail that scored 178,” Paslie said.