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Wisconsin Sportsman
Wisconsin's 2004 Deer Outlook
Part 2: Our Best Hunting Areas
Our state’s firearm deer harvest was up in 2003, and DNR officials want to kill even more whitetails this year. Here’s the scoop.

MORE DEER COVERAGE


• 2004 Deer Outlook, Part 1
• 2004 Rut Report in North American Whitetail Forums

 

By Gary F. Martin

When the Department of Natural Resources issued a preliminary deer-kill report after opening weekend of the 2003 regular nine-day firearm season, the numbers were up slightly compared to the previous year. The DNR expected higher kill figures, but poor hunting weather, including heavy rain and strong winds, affected much of Wisconsin. DNR officials hoped for better weather for the remainder of the season so that hunters would get out and drop the deer population down to avoid putting more deer management units (DMUs) into earn-a-buck (EAB). At the end of the nine-day gun hunt, 324,460 deer were registered. That was 46,501 more than in 2002, but it was not enough, and hunters were warned to expect EAB in some units for the 2004 season.

Chronic wasting disease (CWD) units were already in the EAB program, which requires deer hunters to kill an antlerless deer before they take an antlered deer. In 2004 the DNR added Zone T DMUs 3, 5, 6, 13, 14, 19, 20, 47, 51A, 51B, 54C, 59D, 61, 62B, 63A, 63B, 65B, 66, 67A, 67B, 68A, 72, 78, 80A, 80B and 81 to EAB. The EAB programs for the CWD management zones and Zone T units are separate. In other words, you cannot earn the authority to shoot a buck in a CWD unit by killing an antlerless deer in a Zone T EAB unit.

Three more DMUs were added to the CWD list for 2004. The current CWD Units include DMUs 54B CWD, 70 CWD, 70A CWD, 70B CWD, 70C CWD, 70D CWD, 70E CWD, 70F CWD, 70G CWD, 71 CWD, 73B CWD, 73E CWD, 75A CWD, 75B CWD, 75C CWD, 75D CWD, 76 CWD, 76A CWD, 76M CWD, 77A CWD, 77B CWD and 77C CWD.


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In 2003, over 15,000 deer were tested for CWD, and 114 were positive. All but four of those positive cases were from the disease eradication zone. Two were found in the herd reduction zone and two from the remainder of Wisconsin. Parts of Kenosha and Walworth counties (DMU 77B) are now within the CWD management zone because of the two cases of the disease found outside of the 2002 CWD area. That unit is now designated DMU 77B CWD.

The CWD management zones, as well as some metropolitan areas, offer special extended seasons, bag limits and hunting regulations. If you plan on hunting in any of the above DMUs, check with the local DNR Service Center for season dates, bag limits and special hunting regulations.

ZONE T 2004
The Zone T management tool is used where the DNR wants to kill excess antlerless deer. You can get one free, generic Zone T antlerless tag for each deer hunting license sold up to a maximum of two free tags per hunter: one with a firearms license and one with an archery license. Each tag is valid in any Zone T unit anywhere in Wisconsin during any legal deer hunting season, with the legal weapon for that season.

In addition to the Zone T earn-a-buck units listed above, 48 DMUs are classified as regular Zone T units for 2004. Last year, 47 DMUs were Zone T. This year, the total is 74 DMUs. As with last year, only the Zone T and EAB units south of U.S. Highway 8 will have the December four-day antlerless-only hunt.

Photo by BillKinney.com

REGULAR DEER SEASON
This year the Badger State will have 27 DMUs and the nine state park DMUs with regular deer seasons in November. The Hunter's Choice permit system is in effect in these DMUs, and you should have applied by July 20. However, there are plenty of bonus tags available in most of these units. Hunters are allowed to purchase two bonus permits per day at $12 each until the DNR is sold out for that particular unit. License sales outlets handle the bonus tag sales, and the tags are only valid in the DMU for which they are issued.

THE 2003 SEASON
Deer hunters must follow the DNR regulations in the specific DMU in which they hunt, so we will review the 2003 season by deer management units and group the DMUs into five categories. Wisconsin's counties often cover parts of several DMUs.

Northern Forest Region
Most of the DMUs with a regular deer season for 2004 are within the Northern Forest Region. Specifically they are DMUs 7, 10, 11, 26, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 44, 45, 49A, 49B, 50 and 52. With the exception of DMUs 7, 10 and 11, these units are located in the northeastern part of our state, where heavy snow fell last winter. However, that doesn't mean there aren't any deer there. In fact, there are bonus antlerless tags available in some of these DMUs. Hunter's Choice tags were available in each unit, but the application needed to be filed in July.

DMU 38 is notable because last year fewer than 1,000 hunters applied for Hunter's Choice tags, and this year there are nearly 12,000 bonus tags available. Last year hunters only killed 1,734 deer during the nine-day firearm season in DMU 38. Nearby DMU 39, on the other hand, is one unit with fewer tags available than hunters applying for them.

This year the Northern Forest Region has eight DMUs (3, 5, 6, 13, 14, 19, 20 and 78) under Zone T EAB, and it has an additional 14 Zone T units in non-EAB. Most Zone T units in this region are north of U.S. Highway 8 and do not have the December Zone T herd-control hunt.

The northern region's best DMU in 2003 was DMU 13. This unit ranks in the top 20 for 2003 with 4,103 dead whitetails. Of those deer, 42 percent were antlered, which is near the statewide buck-kill percentage of 43 percent. DMU 2 was second with 3,721 registered deer during the nine-day hunt, with 54 percent being legal bucks. Third was DMU 3, where gun hunters bagged 3,365 whitetails, of which 1,640 were antlered.

The Northern Forest Region is the best bet for deer hunters who want to hunt big-woods whitetails. Public land is abundant and consists of hardwood forest, pine plantations and coniferous swamps. Deer hunters looking for solitude and a chance at a trophy buck will find it here.

Eastern Farmland Region
With the exception of DMUs 57A, 82 and the Menominee Indian Reservation, the Eastern Farmland units are all Zone T. In addition, units 47, 51A, 51B, 62B, 63A, 63B, 65B, 66, 80A, 80B and 81 are classified as Zone T earn-a-buck for this year. Last year, six of this region's DMUs (51B, 62A, 62B, 63A, 65B and 64) were in the top 20 list for numbers of deer killed during the regular gun season.

The best DMU in the Eastern Farmland Region last year was DMU 62B, where the nine-day season ended with 7,201 deer being registered. Of those, 2,902, or 40 percent, were antlered deer. Unit 63A came in second with a total nine-day kill of 6,013 whitetails, and 2,558, or 43 percent, were bucks. Third place is held by DMU 65B with a 2003 firearm kill of 5,577 deer, with 45 percent sporting "horns."

Deer habitat in this region is a mixture of wood lots and farmland, but some wood lots are large enough to almost be classified as small forests. The deer are well fed and grow large, but hunters are sometimes handicapped by the weather, which when too wet doesn't allow a corn harvest. Corn is a major agricultural crop. If it's standing during the November hunt, deer use it for cover and don't need to move about.

All the Eastern Farmland Region's Zone T DMUs are south of U.S. Highway 8, which means a second herd-control hunt will be held in December after the regular nine-day season.

West-Central Region
Six of our state's top 20 DMUs (15, 22A, 59A, 59B, 59C and 61) for 2003 are located in the West-Central Region. Two of these units (61 and 59C) were the top two DMUs in Wisconsin last year. During the 2003 season, gun hunters killed 10,001 whitetails in DMU 61, and 3,733, or 37 percent, were antlered. The nine-day season ended with DMU 59C hunters taking 8,924 deer, and 41 percent of them were legal bucks. Ranking third in the region, and 13th in the state, was DMU 59B. In this unit, hunters killed 5,085 whitetails, and 1,975, or 39 percent, were bucks.

Nearly all the DMUs in this region are classified as Zone T for 2004. Two exceptions are units 16 and 60A, which have regular deer regulations. But both units have an abundance of bonus tags available. The DNR is selling 13,700 bonus tags for DMU 13 and 4,850 in DMU 60A. In both cases, this is thousands more tags than the number of hunters who applied for Hunter's Choice permits in 2003.

The other two exceptions are DMUs 61 and 59D. Both are Zone T EAB in 2004. DMU 61 covers a large portion of Buffalo County, which is Wisconsin's and the country's best trophy-buck-producing area. It will be interesting to see if the EAB regulations affect the buck kill this year, and in fact, if it does result in a higher antlerless harvest as the DNR hopes.

Central Forest Region
Our Central Forest Region is a small and unique deer management area of five (53, 54A, 55, 56 and 58) DMUs. Three of these, 54A, 55 and 58, made the top 20 list for last year. DMU 58 was the region's top deer producer during the nine-day gun hunt in 2003. Hunters killed 7,391 whitetails, of which 2,652 (36 percent) were legal bucks. In second was DMU 54A with 6,634 dead deer, and 39 percent of them, or 2,569, were antlered. In third was DMU 55 with 5,274 registered whitetails. Of those, 2,267 were bucks.

This year DMUs 55, 56 and 58 have regular firearms seasons, while DMUs 53 and 54A are non-EAB Zone T units. The Central Forest Region is the only region without any DMUs under EAB for this year.

Southern Farmland Region
The Southern Farmland Region has all four types of deer hunting units for 2004. Two DMUs (69 and 73D) will have regular deer seasons, and thousands of bonus antlerless tags are available in each unit. Five units (54C, 67A, 67B, 68A and 72) come under Zone T earn-a-buck. Seven units (66B, 73B, 74A, 74B, 76A, 77C and 77M) are non-EAB Zone T. Of course, the entire CWD management area with its special regulations and seasons is within this region.

DMU 71 CWD was the No. 1 deer-kill unit in this region in 2003 with a total of 7,263 dead whitetails, of which 2,338, or 32 percent, wore antlers. But note that for the CWD management zone, the DNR's nine-day firearm season harvest numbers include the animals killed during special gun hunting seasons in October and November. No other CWD unit made the top 20 list, although there was a good deer kill in each of them.

Unit 67A was the region's second-place DMU with 6,052 deer falling to hunters, and 2,750 of them were tagged with buck tags. Third was DMU 72, where 5,308 deer died during the nine-day gun season, and 2,564 of those were antlered.

CONCLUSION
The current DNR CWD management strategy calls for the reduction of the deer population in those areas where CWD is found. This means increased hunting opportunities for deer hunters as the CWD management zone expands. Herd reduction is hoped to decrease the transmission rate of CWD and eventually result in the eradication of the disease from Wisconsin. Hunters and landowners need to cooperate and do their part for this strategy to work.

Deer hunters will need to do their part outside of the CWD zone as well, because herd reduction is also a priority. Although the 2003 kill increased over 2002's numbers, it wasn't enough. For those who refused to shoot antlerless deer in the past, the EAB program now forces them to shoot a doe before they can take a buck. By early next year the DNR will know whether the 2004 EAB was a success or failure. If successful, there may be more units under the program in 2005.

Hunter cooperation also entails taking part in the special Zone T antlerless-only herd-control hunts, and purchasing bonus tags and filling them. Zone T and bonus tags can be filled during any deer season, but the greatest number of deer hunters focus on the nine-day firearm hunt.

Deer hunters who fear they may end up with too much venison need only stop in at their local DNR Service Center and find out where they can donate the carcasses or processed meat. You can also log on to www.huntforthehungry.com and find out information about the Hunt For The Hungry program and other deer donations programs around the state, or call Lee Dudek at (920) 498-1522. Whole deer donations - in the hide - are accepted by Hunt For The Hungry so long as the deer has been properly field-dressed, tagged and registered. If the temperature is above 40 degrees, please place one bag of ice in the chest cavity and one between the hindquarters to help preserve the venison before processing. There is no cost to make this donation of venison. Frozen, packaged wild game from previous hunts will be accepted all year long if the meat is in good condition.

For more information and statistics on deer hunting and chronic wasting disease in Wisconsin, log on to www.dnr.wi.gov.



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