Interesting article and you be the judge.http://hunting.scout.com/story/1408...1&spJobID=483113964&spReportId=NDgzMTEzOTY0S0
Yea putting out minerals IMO is a good thing and help deer maintain healthy weight and supports antler growth. I have deer tracts by my 2 mineral sites all year round. I mix my own. Havnt had much luck with the store bought kind
I've done a ton of research on minerals and have formed my own opinion, one I feel is very informed. My opinion is that minerals help does and herd health more than antler growth. There is a ton of research on cattle that outlines the positive impacts of mineral supplementation. The research on whitetails is less substantial. However they are both ruminants and have similar digestive processes, so it is reasonable to assume certain comparisons are safe to make. Minerals supplementation has been proven to improve protein retention in the milk of dairy cattle. Milk richer in protein makes for healthier calves and healthier calves can grow bigger, stronger, faster. My experience in 9 years of mineral supplementation on our farm is that fawn weight (as estimated from pictures) has increased. I truly believe our does are healthier because they have access to minerals (much like we are when we have a proper diet) and in turn, they produce healthier fawns.
As for buck and big racks, I do not believe minerals will take a 140 to a 160. For a buck to grow his biggest rack he needs genetics, age and nutrition in that order. Mineral supplementation can very well add a few inches of antler over the life of a buck, but it will not make a genetically inferior or unhealthy deer grow a much larger rack. By filling the gap in his diet, minerals can help him maintain a healthy diet and over the course of his life, it will help him maximize skeletal development which ultimately helps him focus on growing his best rack. A buck born to a healthy doe who has milk richer in protein thanks to minerals, gets the full benefit of mineral supplementation from birth to death.
Minerals are no wonder substance, but are often marketed as such. Nor are they worthless. Be realistic about their place in the scheme of things and you won't be disappointed.