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Deer check station is the place to be

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BY JOE DUGGAN / Lincoln Journal Star

Monday, Nov 17, 2008 - 12:08:36 am CST

NEBRASKA CITY — In recent years, Paap’s Sport Shop has checked about 100 deer on the opening day of the firearm season.

Someone has to be the first.

In the early hours of the 2008 season, Pat Chaney was the first to walk through the doors of the longtime Nebraska City hunting and fishing retailer.

Story Photo
State game biologist Brad Goracke checks in 14-year-old James Whittlesey of Waller, Texas, at Hogie's Gun & Sport in Auburn. (Joe Duggan)

The veteran deer hunter had killed a young doe, and he arrived at Paap’s at about 8:30 a.m.

In so doing, he set in motion a Nebraska deer hunting ritual  — going to the check station.

The check station is where stories are swapped, photos are shot and rack size is serious business. Sometimes it’s easy to forget the check station really has a scientific purpose.

Rick Schneider, a wildlife biologist with the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, collected information about Chaney’s deer — sex, where it was shot, private or public land, etc. The information will will go into a database that will help the commission manage future seasons.

A few minutes later, 21-year-old Kenny Scharp walked in. After the biologist aged Scharp’s buck and fastened a metal tag around the base of its antlers, the hunter  said he’ll definite use his bonus tag in an attempt to get a doe during the rest of the nine-day season.

“It’s the adrenaline,” he said as a smile appears beneath his AC/DC cap. “It’s just fun.”

At about 8:45 a.m., Ted Vasko of Papillion and his 12-year-old daughter, Anna, arrived with a young doe in the pickup bed.

“Are we first?” the father asked. “We wanted to be first.”

He wasn’t too disappointed to learn they were third. Anna wasn’t disappointed at all.

She told how they got up at 4 a.m. Saturday to hunt property her family owns in Otoe County. She dozed after they slipped into ground blind.

Not long after sunrise they saw their first deer. When the doe provided a clear shot at about 75 yards, she raised her .357 Rossi lever-action rifle — with open sights — and fired.

“It took me only one shot,” she said with a grin.

Her dad was happy, too. Anna is his youngest. Now all four of his children have gotten their first deer with the same rifle.

A little while later, hunters started buzzing about a nice 4x4 that had arrived at the station.

Trevor Chaney, 13, held up the beautiful rack — wide and of near perfect symmetry.

How did such a young kid shoot such a nice deer? Trevor pulled a bleat call from his pocket.

“I called and about three minutes later, he came running.”

At Hogie’s Gun & Sport in Auburn, they’ve been checking deer for the nearly three decades.

It’s good for business, said Glen Hogue, the store owner.

Since 1981, he has also organized a big-buck contest for the firearm season. On Saturday, easily more than 100 people had signed up and thrown in $5 for a chance to win a new .22-rifle.

A couple of decades ago, quail and pheasants generated the most hunters in Nebraska. Now, with about 80,000 hunters going after deer for nine days in November, the rifle season matches, if not exceeds, the upland bird season, Hogue said.

“Actually, it’s more,” he said. “There’s more excitement.”

Outside the shop, Game and Parks biologists Mark Vrtiska and Brad Goracke braved a biting north wind as they waited for hunters to arrive. Two vacuum bottles of coffee sat on a card table that also held an assortment of forms, latex gloves and filet knives.

In addition to aging the deer, Vrtiska and Goracke were collecting lymph nodes to be tested for chronic-wasting disease. So far, the fatal deer disease hasn’t been detected east of Grand Island, but the agency continues to watch for it.

Things had been pretty slow at the Auburn station — they had checked fewer than 10 deer by 10 a.m.

But Vrtiska said he knows it will pick up.

“They’re like fire ants,” he said. “They’ll mill about for a while and all of a sudden, they’re on you. That’s deer check.”

A few minutes later, a flatbed farm truck pulled up carrying a buck and a doe. James Whittlesey, 14, of Waller, Texas, was one proud hunter.

He got them both.

At about lunchtime at B&B Pump N Go in Syracuse, you would have felt a bit out of place without a fluorescent orange hat or coat.

A line of hunters stood in line to check their deer. Biologists Randy Stutheit and Jeff Hoffman had their hands full.

Ray Parolek, 66, of Lincoln, checked in a 3x3 buck. Although he’s hunted deer with a muzzleloader before, this was his first time hunting with a high-caliber rifle.

“It’s great,” he said.

What’s great about it?

“The outdoors,” he said. “And all of a sudden how they just appear.”

Reach Joe Duggan at 473-7239 or jduggan@journalstar.com.


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I dont like hitting deer with my car but... wrote on November 17, 2008 12:34 am:
" I find it worrisome to hear men (and their children) talk about killing an animal and saying "It's just fun." I swear I'll never understand hunting as long as I live. "

DR wrote on November 17, 2008 7:05 am:
" It is just great that we have such diverse interests for hobbies. I wouldn't waste my time hunting dear again even though I enjoyed it. I have better things to do now. I have to do some body fender work on my pickup after hitting and killing a 7x8 buck near the entrance of the Sprague Lake last Thursday. It is impossible to drive in the country without seeing dear and they have become a pest. Kudo's to the Game and Parks for allowing two deer per permit this year. It is my opinion that hunting deer with a high powered rifle is not a sport, it is just a hobby much like target practice. I think it is just great that others have a different opinion or we would be completely overrun by the deer population. "

Doug wrote on November 17, 2008 7:06 am:
" Worrisome? Hunting animals has been a tradition for centuries. It is a way of harvesting food for the table and a way to keep the deer population in check. This way you don't hit a deer with your car. What is wrong with enjoying the sport at the same time. Do you think it is better to keep a steer locked up in the same pen for all its life so it can be lined up at the slaughterhouse? I have no problem with either because I believe these animals were put on this earth for a reason. "

GG wrote on November 17, 2008 8:00 am:
" "It's just fun."...

and it helps control the population, provides food for families, and puts loads of money back in to the economy.

Thank you hunters. "

Yum... wrote on November 17, 2008 8:52 am:
" I love animals... they taste great!!! Especially deer. "

Keep At It wrote on November 17, 2008 9:15 am:
" These things are a nuisance, like big rats with antlers, so the more of them that get shot, the better. Oh, and my dog likes deer jerky a lot, so it's a great dog treat. "

Hunting is Fun wrote on November 17, 2008 10:55 am:
" Their is more to it than just shooting it with a rifle. But the reward of getting a deer is more than one can explain.
Besides the reward of a Good deer steak is more than enough to get out their in those cold winter mornings waiting for them to come close enough for a shot.
I just wished they would allow more than two, As I think it should be around 4 deer. As just look at the highways for you to know their are too many. Deer sausage is the best with some cold beer. "

John wrote on November 17, 2008 2:22 pm:
" I have take both of my daughters out deer hunting, while the youngest said it was not for her, the oldest has found it to be very rewarding. Just spending a few hours out in the fiels at that time of day is amazing. The birds you see the sound you hear, it is like nothing else. Watching as deer are able to slip in and out of the field without being heard is amazing. We don't shoot a deer just because it comes into range, we wait and select a good deer for harvesting. Let the small bucks and does go to mature. Take a nice 3 to 4 year old animal and be respectful... Make a good shot for a quick humain kill, properly feild dress the animal and make sure you eat what you harvest or find someone who will. It is a true privledge to be able to hunt and fish in our great outdoors. "

If you hit a deer... wrote on November 17, 2008 8:07 pm:
" you can keep it. You can take it home and call a deputy and they will come and tag it for you. Granted, you may not be able to use all the meat due to blood-clotting, but it's still better than leaving it on the side of the road. "