Were yall happy with the results?I used to do it back when I was guiding in the King ranch back in '03-'06. We used to skin the lower jaw back and with some tree loppers, cut the front incisors off, tag them and ship them to the lab. I don't remember the lab we would send them to. This is the most accurate way to determine the age of the deer.
THIS!I've used deer age the last 5 years. Very interesting to know how old they are. Waiting on two right now. My in laws farm and ranch so we send in the bigger bucks we shoot on their farm. People think they can age deer. I'm skeptical unless they have lots of history.
Cementum annuli looks at the rings of the tooth, similar to aging and tree, not the wear. They have to grind the tooth down or something.. not exact sure of the process.THIS!
I hear people ALL THE TIME say how old the deer is that they got or saw on trail cam (heck even just saw the rack on the cape). I always asked how they know... It's never by tooth wear. It's always body shape, face length, whatever mumbo jumbo they have used. And, essentially nobody can argue it since nobody ever knows
I put about as much stock in that as I do with people guessing bear weight... They're usually within a couple hundred pounds
I was looking at that a little bit, I'm sure that's the most scientific way to age them. Pretty cool stuff!Cementum annuli looks at the rings of the tooth, similar to aging and tree, not the wear. They have to grind the tooth down or something.. not exact sure of the process.
In Minnesota you have to send a tooth in for black bear kills. They send you the info back. Buddy got one that was 15.5 years old.
Gotta say it really changed our perspective of the animal compared to a deer that rarely makes 4.5 old.