Ohio's
Deer-Gun Season Opens with 22,620 Deer Harvested
Deer-gun
season remains open through Sunday, Dec. 8
COLUMBUS,
OH – Hunters checked 22,620 white-tailed deer on Monday, Dec. 2,
the opening day of Ohio’s deer-gun hunting season, according to the
Ohio Department of Natural Resources’ (ODNR) Division of Wildlife.
The
deer-gun season remains open through Sunday, Dec. 8. Hunters are
encouraged to take to the field to enjoy the six days remaining in
the deer-gun season. Hunting is the best and most effective
management tool for maintaining Ohio’s healthy deer population.
Approximately
420,000 hunters are expected to participate in this year’s season.
Find more information about deer hunting in the Ohio 2013-2014
Hunting and Trapping Regulations or at wildohio.com.
So
far this season, hunters have harvested 109,932 deer compared to
113,107 at the same point in the season last year, which represents a
3% difference.
Counties
reporting the highest numbers of deer checked in 2013: Coshocton
(940), Ashtabula (880), Tuscarawas (853), Muskingum (831), Guernsey
(742), Harrison (738), Carroll (698), Knox (645), Columbiana (584)
and Licking (572).
The
ODNR Division of Wildlife remains committed to properly managing
Ohio’s deer populations through a combination of regulatory and
programmatic changes. Progress toward reducing locally abundant herds
closer to target levels is expected and strides have already been
made in reducing deer herds in many counties that are above their
targeted levels.
Hunters
are encouraged to harvest more antlerless deer in some areas of Ohio
this season to help the needy in their area and also manage deer
populations. The ODNR Division of Wildlife is working with Farmers
and Hunters Feeding the Hungry (FHFH) to help pay for the processing
of donated venison. Hunters who donate a deer to a food bank are not
required to pay the processing cost as long as funding for the effort
is available. More information about this program can be found online
at fhfh.org.
Other
opportunities for hunters to donate venison can be pursued through
Safari Club International’s Sportsmen Against Hunger program.
Information about this program can be found at
safariclubfoundation.org. Whitetails Unlimited chapters also use
local funds for programs such as venison donation. Go to
whitetailsunlimited.com to find a local chapter and make a donation.
Deer
hunting in Ohio continues to be a popular activity for many who enjoy
the outdoors. Ohio hunters checked 218,910 deer during the 2012-2013
season. Ohio ranks fifth nationally in resident hunters and 11th in
the number of jobs associated with hunting-related industries.
Hunting has a more than $853 million economic impact in Ohio through
the sale of equipment, fuel, food, lodging and more, according to the
National Shooting Sports Foundation’s Hunting in America: An
Economic Force for Conservation publication.
ODNR
ensures a balance between wise use and protection of our natural
resources for the benefit of all. Visit the ODNR website at
ohiodnr.gov.
Editor’s
Note: A list of all white-tailed deer checked by hunters during
opening day of the 2013 deer-gun hunting season is shown below. The
first number following the county’s name shows the harvest numbers
for 2013, and the 2012 numbers are in parentheses.
Adams:
376 (478); Allen: 77 (122); Ashland: 318 (497); Ashtabula: 880 (816);
Athens: 529 (602); Auglaize: 99 (107); Belmont: 530 (674); Brown: 262
(334); Butler: 92 (100); Carroll: 698 (776); Champaign: 137 (163);
Clark: 56 (61); Clermont: 160 (268); Clinton: 68 (115); Columbiana:
584 (603); Coshocton: 940 (1,199); Crawford: 140 (164); Cuyahoga: 2
(5); Darke: 44 (91); Defiance: 269 (340); Delaware: 100 (175); Erie:
43 (61); Fairfield: 228 (325); Fayette: 24 (35); Franklin: 25 (53);
Fulton: 127 (151); Gallia: 382 (523); Geauga: 153 (157); Greene: 66
(98); Guernsey: 742 (858); Hamilton: 42 (59); Hancock: 89 (174);
Hardin: 142(148); Harrison: 738 (845); Henry: 112 (123); Highland:
294 (448); Hocking: 382 (664); Holmes: 521 (739); Huron: 338 (381);
Jackson: 325 (463); Jefferson: 448 (649); Knox: 645 (830); Lake: 30
(55); Lawrence: 276 (342); Licking: 572 (805); Logan: 186 (234);
Lorain: 157 (202); Lucas: 27 (26); Madison: 26 (39); Mahoning: 227
(242); Marion: 76 (111); Medina: 146 (202); Meigs: 435 (527); Mercer:
72 (100); Miami: 53 (54); Monroe: 364 (536); Montgomery: 34 (42);
Morgan: 387 (587); Morrow: 176 (280); Muskingum: 831 (1,102); Noble:
402 (568); Ottawa: 25 (24); Paulding: 158 (191); Perry: 419 (587);
Pickaway: 102 (168); Pike: 198 (294); Portage: 150 (189); Preble: 73
(82); Putnam: 72 (108); Richland: 314 (471); Ross: 307 (495);
Sandusky: 60 (70); Scioto: 264 (303); Seneca: 199 (254); Shelby: 111
(155); Stark: 243 (253); Summit: 23 (43); Trumbull: 482 (471);
Tuscarawas: 853 (1,091); Union: 82 (119); Van Wert: 42 (76); Vinton:
397 (544); Warren: 78 (129); Washington: 497 (747); Wayne: 190 (245);
Williams: 340 (354); Wood: 59 (67); Wyandot: 178 (239). Total: 22,620
(29,297).
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