Completely understand. Grew up in Rotorua and learnt to hunt up in the Kaimais and Paeroa range.
I get it but in the roar its definitely alot easier to be selective even in the roar as we hunt bush here too this time of year and usually your relatively close and even a few seconds gives you a pretty good indication of mass. No ones expected to get it right shit I've made bad calls in the tops with way more time and expensive glass. I think this is the most important time to be trying to assess age as your way less likely to mistake one of the heap of other hunters if your looking closer than just it's a stag.
And yeah meat it meat mate and 40kgs of it is no joke when you see what it costs at the supermarket. n
I'm not condemning any meat hunting but there's a difference between a stag or two for meat and guys trying to hit Tallys of like 50 stags in one roar. Or shooting multiple young stags in a trip where they can't utilise the meat anyway
The assessment can be done in the bush and in close. when guiding moose in BC and assessing bulls were atleast 48 inchs wide or have 3 points on the brow etc could be down most of the time even in heavy cover. And the guys that elk hunt count points fine in the bugle.
Hunting and guiding in North America opened my eyes up a bit to what's just considered the norm. While their system wouldnt work here some parts could do and do in places like Fiordland. When you can only pick one animal you become far more selective and their compulsory utilisation is nice although not practical here if we want to control numbers. A kill there usually looks like this when your done.
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