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“Velvet Buck” by Trevor Pottelberg, features a handsome buck pausing in the open meadow to show off his promising velvet antlers.
These antlers are the fastest growing bone material known to man and will continue to grow at a rapid pace in the coming months.
Antlers begin growing in late March and really intensify in size by July and August. The growth is very much dependent on environmental conditions. A relatively wet summer will produce more nutrition for the buck from growing foliage/grasses, resulting in a larger rack.
During August, blood flow to the antlers decreases, causing the antlers to harden over the course of a month or less. The velvet covering shrinks as blood flow slows and the buck will peel the velvet off in September by rubbing against trees.
There are no cookie cutter bucks. All antlers are unique and distinctive. No two are alike, making the whitetail deer so interesting. Eventually, the antlers will fall off and the cycle will repeat itself the following spring.
Photographed in Oxford County, Ontario, Canada
“Velvet Buck” by Trevor Pottelberg, features a handsome buck pausing in the open meadow to show off his promising velvet antlers.
These antlers are the fastest growing bone material known to man and will continue to grow at a rapid pace in the coming months.
Antlers begin growing in late March and really intensify in size by July and August. The growth is very much dependent on environmental conditions. A relatively wet summer will produce more nutrition for the buck from growing foliage/grasses, resulting in a larger rack.
During August, blood flow to the antlers decreases, causing the antlers to harden over the course of a month or less. The velvet covering shrinks as blood flow slows and the buck will peel the velvet off in September by rubbing against trees.
There are no cookie cutter bucks. All antlers are unique and distinctive. No two are alike, making the whitetail deer so interesting. Eventually, the antlers will fall off and the cycle will repeat itself the following spring.
Photographed in Oxford County, Ontario, Canada
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