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Questions about old age buck....end of their lives.

md1

Well-Known Member
2,660
96
Nw
How much body weight and size will a whitetail lose in it's final years of life? Equally important question goes for its rack........I've had one around my house for years now and Im wondering if im going to actually see one come close to live out its life cycle....I have to confirm my thoughts, gather old pictures, and go over information with neighbors that also know this deer. Wondering if anyone has had experience seeing a buck year to year go downhill in age....thanks for any input.
 
Typically I’ve read and experienced a buck deers rack will max out its biggest and best rack at 6 years of age give or take a year considering overall health. Lack or nutrition and injuries can negatively effect the size and structure of their antlers as well. After 6-7 years of age they tend to continue to gain mass in beams and overall antler structure but tend to degenerate in total inches although there are exceptions to the rule. Just my take after hunting and reading over 4 decades of literature and time in the field.
As for body size and weight I’ve not read or thought much on the subject cuz they rarely live much beyond 6 years of age. I have read there is a point if they do live longer they eat less due to tooth wear or loss and pretty much like elderly humans lose weight and body mass.
 
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I have one buck that has to be close to the end of his life cycle. The year this farm was purchased was in 2019 and at the time I thought the deer to be 3 yrs old. Each year he has been on camera and has never made one of those growth jumps. We have a pile of sheds from him over the years and I am 99% certain this deer is approaching that 9-10 yr old mark.
2019
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2025
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IMG_8619.webp

IMG_8620.webp
 
Typically I’ve read and experienced a buck deers rack will max out its biggest and best rack at 6 years of age give or take a year considering overall health. Lack or nutrition and injuries can negatively effect the size and structure of their antlers as well. After 6-7 years of age they tend to continue to gain mass in beams and overall antler structure but tend to degenerate in total inches although there are exceptions to the rule. Just my take after hunting and reading over 4 decades of literature and time in the field.
Thanks for the replys. Seems very few get past 3.5 here. The buck I've watched has been declining a few years now.Screenshot_20241109-083044.webp. He may have reached mid 140s in his prime. last years photo heat of rut. This was his third year and most considerable rack decline. Big fat bases and a little junky, but only a basket rack remaining on top. I still need to get with neighbors go over photos for this year. I'm glad I missed him in his prime, was busted twice on separate years and the neighbors missing twice last year, and how many other arrows and bullets hes dodged in his life. I don't really ever want to watch or hunt a deer year after year again.