Bell968111409624374
One of my observations is that deer with drop tines rarely have great tine length. The old #5 buck from Okie, Buddy 111, and Dude at 3years are exceptions and I am sure there are many others. Very few deer will grow a 15"+ typical tine and have a drop on that side. Thumb through a sale catalog and see how many deer have a 10" g-4. Lol I have posted about tine length several times on this forum. Dr Kroll stated the premium whitetail frame is one that fills in four sides of a square frame. Our industry has many nice deer that would be incredible if they had the tine length to go vertical and fill in the top of the square frame.
I agree with Wayne's humorous his description of what a drop tine is and isn't. I don't care for bucks that round off their tines and don't finish them out.
Bell just hitting on the tine length with drops then venturing off topic a bit lol. I don't think he will have 15" tines, but Northern Yankee has G2's 12"+ and drops 14" plus. Both his drops and up tines tapper from the back tine to front as most native deer do. I'm hoping to fence my place one day and have a preserve. I can't quit my day job so I want to focus on a very small number of 300" plus hunts a year and cull / charity hunts. Again back to getting paid by the inch. Yankee has the look I want with only 2 exceptions, I want more lower profile width because antlers can never be too wide and cleaner brows. Although superior tine length isn't that important to me I'm still breeding for good tine length. I'm breeding Powerball's dam Red 16 into every deer in my program because she throws great tine length with extra's, high scores and doesn't throw "narrow" per say. I love heavy mass somewhat typicals like Complex and big square frames like Dude, but I'm not breeding for it in its pure sense because of my end goal. If Dude were mine he'd probably be in with all my Northen Yankee doe fawns this fall, but I won't pay 2500/straw. Most native deer are clean typicals so I can't see typicals as the majority of our market ever. I have no idea what the difference is in down and drop tines, LOL. But at the same time I rarely ever call a buck ugly because I think it could be taken wrong if we call our deer pretty or ugly etc but some definitely get the short end of the gene pool. Most are impressive in some way and I try to focus on the positive attributes. Assuming they make it I am breeding my most typical breed does to Turning Point (I saw him in person at 2 and his drops definitely took away from him at 3 but although there aren't many good pics I saw him in person and he was almost perfectly symmetrical and his big drops were probably 18' or better) this year and my least typical does to wide framey bucks that still hit 400 like fear factor and sun stroke. Until I've got a solid foundation I see produce 300-400" bucks on my farm I won't breed more than a couple does typically year on year. I lost the one I wanted to breed like that this year. She was Hard Times / Maximus DT / Eclipse / Poncho / Mandy and I wanted to get a female straw of Dillon to put in to stack width in the female side. My least favorite attribute is unsymmetrical deer. If a deer is symmetrical it looks right to me. If not I wonder if it was damage genetics etc and I shy away. Stickers or flyers I often interchange but typically I call off the tines stickers and going straight out from the main beam flyers. I agree 10" is good tine length. I don't think it get's impressive until it is over a ft or several are 10". Here's a pic of Yankee August 1st.