What is Ohio State record for whitetail buck?

What is Ohio State record for whitetail buck?

The Beatty Buck, harvested in Greene County in 2000 by bowhunter Mike Beatty, holds the Ohio record for non-typical antlers at 304 6/8 inches. Ohio’s largest typical white-tailed deer was killed Brad Jerman in 2004 in Warren County. Its antlers scored 201 1/8 inches.

What’s the biggest buck in Ohio?

The Beatty buck is a shoe-in to become the largest bow-killed buck ever in Ohio, and is surpassed only by the legendary Hole-In-Horn buck, which was found dead along a railroad track in Portage County in 1940. The antlers later were discovered hanging in a bar in Kent; they scored at 3281/4.

What is the biggest buck killed in Ohio this year?

Ohio Hunter Takes 260-inch Whitetail Worthy of Warrior Statu – North American Whitetail.

Can You Hunt Trophy Bucks in Ohio?

If you think targeting trophy bucks to hunt here in Ohio means targeting private land, think again. We worked with Boone & Crockett (B&C) to scour their records books and identify the Buckeye States’ top counties for relinquishing whitetails with record-book qualifying racks over the past half- decade.

What is the second largest whitetail deer in the world?

This tank was found dead in Portage County, Ohio. The crazy trash this deer has hanging off it propelled its score all the way up to being the second largest known whitetail ever to become legend in the Boone & Crockett record books. It’s a hoss. And it has plenty to boast about.

How big will the Ohio whitetail deer head be?

Kline is waiting on an official measurement, but suspects the deer will gross over 220 inches. If that’s the case, it’ll rank in the top 50 non-typical whitetails for Ohio and go down as one of the biggest dead heads of all-time.

What are the ‘best bests’ for big deer in Ohio?

Among them are that four that the Wildlife Management Supervisor for Ohio Division of Wildlife District Four, which includes Muskingum County, considers “best bests” for whitetail hunters seeking big deer. “They are all large and they all have a good mix of (whitetail) habitat types either on or around them,” explained wildlife biologist Jim Hill.