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A pretty little eight-pointer in Bedford County

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I've spent the past couple of evenings at a place I hunt in Bedford County. The first night I was checking on stands and also trying to get deer pictures. Last night I went out for a dove hunt.

On the way out from my dove hunting area I spotted four deer feeding in a field. This was one of them. I thought he was a six-pointer but in going through the pictures I could see he actually has little G3s on both sides. I'd like to think he's a great yearling, but he could also be a small 2.5 year old.

I wish I could have gotten a better picture but the light was marginal so I had to shoot with a pretty slow shutter speed, even at ISO 400.

Comments

# 1

[September 19, 2008 10:28 AM]

Backlash

WOW!!! No velvet on it's antlers all the bucks I have seen while driving still have Velvet, would also tend to reason nature has it's own calling to mate would you think so Mark meaning the rut..?

# 2

[September 19, 2008 12:34 PM]

Ryan

Mark, great shot, what kind of camera/lens did you use??

# 3

[September 19, 2008 1:20 PM]

Mark Taylor

Backlash,
Most bucks have lost their velvet in the past couple of weeks, although there still are some velvet stragglers out there.

Ryan,
Thanks. It was shot with a Nikon D2H with an old Nikkor F 3.5/400 mm manual-focus lens.
The lens is pretty good. The camera, not so good. Like other Nikon pro gear, it's tough as heck. But the technology is pretty obsolete. For example, the sensor is just 4.1 megapixels. By comparison, the Canon cameras used by our photo staff (I got the Nikon when the "real" photographers switched to Canon) have sensors that are two to three times larger. (The new Nikon pro gear is also much better, obviously.)

Because the D2H doesn't have a great sensor, low-light shooting is tough. The max ISO is 800 and at that setting images are pretty grainy. So I usually use 400 and do a lot of praying that I and the animals are still enough for a relatively sharp image.

Sorry if that's more information than you were bargaining for. This is a subject of great interest to me.

If you are shopping for a digital SLR for wildlife photography, the new Nikon and Canon prosumer cameras (such as the Nikon D80 and Canon 20D or Rebel series) are great, affordable options.

mt

# 4

[September 22, 2008 7:41 PM]

wag

mark great shot i would say if this makes it in a couple of years he will be nice good guess the on the age i would agree 2 2.5 i enjoy your blog it gets me ready for the long season ahead keep taking those great shots oh by the way those other have lost thier velvet now that you had on the last blog they look as good now as they did before . good hunting two more weeks hope to send some pictures.wag

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Mark Taylor holding a fish.

While growing up in rural Southern Oregon, Mark Taylor developed a passion for the outdoors while he and his younger brother tagged along with their father on fishing, hunting and camping adventures.

Graduating from Northwestern University in 1988, Taylor spent four years as an officer in the U.S. Navy based in Norfolk before moving into journalism.

After five years writing about the military for a Norfolk-based publishing company, he became the outdoors editor at The Roanoke Times in 1998. He lives in Roanoke with his wife and twin daughters.

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