ohhhhh very cool. thank you sir! I am so glad I stumbled across this video while scrolling the feed! Very interesting have always wondered as my dad hunts them a lot with his hunting ministry groups at various ranches in central Texas. Just realized about 30 minutes ago that was completely uneducated if an axis grunts because I myself have never hunted one, but I’ve heard whitetail grunts in real time before. So now the feed is suggesting me videos like this! Again, very cool.
One about Sika would be so lovely. Finding any info about them in Texas is near impossible. Also finding info about axis and not just a video of someone hunting them is pretty hard too so thanks for all the great stuff. Cheers
I'll definitely try to do a video on Sika as well. You're right about finding info on exotics, it's very difficult to find unless they're hunting videos. I appreciate your comment!
Was hunting Axis on my friend's place last year and saw 2 Sika does. They used to be a lot more common. The ones I saw were the first he'd seen on the property in decades. On another note I've been seeing WAY more free range Axis to the point were they're starting to become a nuisance. It's a shame they're very pretty.
We have 20+ acres low fence in Leakey TX. We have a herd of about 35-40 Axis and about a dozen whitetail. When we can we put out alfalfa hay and feed corn year round. However to truly maintain the population of both you need to have the acorns and wild persimmons and the usual browse and forbes. With that being said when the feeders go off and the axis and whitetail come in I can see the axis will shoo away the WT. So there’s that. Great video
Thanks for the comment! Leakey is one of my favorite areas of the state, tons of deer and wildlife. How many bucks vs does are you seeing in that Axis heard?
Thank you ! That was very informative! We had a female in a wooded area next door making the weirdest vocal sounds like a rooster, a whale and sounded little kids . And it hung around all day and today was not there. It was by herself all day. Seen as many as 30 passing over the street on Methodist Encampment rd in Kerrville, Tx.
There is a book by Gene Fuchs (Fox) which was his Masters Thesis whereby he spent a year on the Powderhorn Ranch . near Corpus Christi. He had a tame doe which he took out into a pasture and counted the "bites" she took and which vegetation she ate. This is usually for sale at the Hunt Store if you are in the neighborhood.
I used to live in a very small rural town of Yancey, Tx. Yancey actually is in the middle of nowhere. It sits on FM 462 between Hondo and Moore and FM 2200 between Devine and D'Hanis. If you drive on FM 2200 toward D'Hanis, it actually takes you to the backside of 777 Ranch. This particular 20 mile drive is very interesting, I have seen a little bit of everything out there, including antelopes. I came across a group of about 100+ of them one day.I never looked into this but I assume antelopes are not native Texas deer. One day as I was headed to Devine on FM 2200, I did not get very far, I say about 5 ,miles or so, a very large Axis deer trotted right in front me. Now at that time, I had a large 4 wheel drive truck with 44" tires and this Axis was literally within 50 feet or so and I was in awe of the size of this deer. It looked almost like a moose, but you said it better, more like an Elk. That was the only one I seen in the area. I was told a story long ago that when the King family ( Kingsville, Tx) was buying up many many acres of land so they could raise cattle for meat for the military. ( I do not even remember what year this took place) I understood that when the King family were selling cattle to the military at 3 cents per cow, they in turn were buying all that land between Kingsville and almost all the way down to Brownsville at 2 cents an acre. I mean there is litarally 60 miles of open road once you leave Kingsville south 77 and that is all their land. The family already owned 1 million acres in Spain. So the story is that they brought Axis deer from Spain to Kingsville. Of course many have apparently escaped and now roam Texas.
nazfan01, i think there may be a lot of legend in your story. Not saying about your own personal story but about the other stories. But of course I do not know either. Although it could, in theory, be possible that, if indeed they did own land in Spain that, axis were first brought from India to Spain. Then brought from there to here. It is plausible! The King Ranch has so much great history no doubt! But also, 3 cents a frikkin cow? Wow!!! I am not an economist, nor historian. But my degree was in finace so those things do interest me. And if that one were going to be true, that would DEFINITELY have had to have been in the very very early days of the King Ranch, like in the 1800s, when prices would have been that low. What is the average price of a cow nowadays? To compare? What like, $2,500? I do not know, I do not ranch. But it’s in the thousands I know that for sure. Three cents a cow?!?! Woah!😅 So therefore, sir, I like your stories! But also, I suspect there’s a lot of legend tied into it, and we’d need to go investigate the documented history in the actual history books to separate the real parts from the legend parts. Also 44” tires!!?? Hell yah dude I want YOUR truck!😅
@@nozrep - Well, I remember the story about the price of cattle from Kingsville long ago. Of course that had to been early 1800s. Of course that how King Ranch became King Ranch. I do recall that when they sold cattle at 3 cent each to the government for the military. (and perhaps my memory had slipped a bit and perhaps it was 3 cents a pound) Either way, the government was clueless in what they were doing at selling land at 2 cents an acre. No brainer business deal. I know King Ranch has or had a million acres of land in Spain. Not sure of the origin of the Axis deer but do know they brought Axis deer from Spain to raise at Kings Ranch Texas. Makes sese to raise and sell cattle and large deer to sell to the government. I have friends that lives in Kigsville and I really like the area..
I'd much rather have axis than whitetail, I can hunt them all year round and they're way bigger and taste better. As far as they're overpopulation, whitetails are way more overpopulated and sickly especially in Llano county. Horseshoe Bay, Sunrise Beach, Kingsland, Llano all have sick overpopulated whitetail herds. Increase the hunting season and number of tags, and do something about them within "city limits".
Put fishing line around it. That is what saved ours. We put 4to 5 rows of it. Ankle up to above head height. The line startles them. But this was used on whitetails. So good luck.
This video has some great info. I’ve been hunting the Texas hill country and just took a nice Axis buck a couple weeks ago. These animals are just fascinating. Your video answered many questions I had including why axis are much bigger than Hill country whitetail.
Why is that? I don't think that question was answered in the video. I do know our whitetails in Texas are not considered big bodied deer like they have in the midwest and up into Canada.
@@bobgill4069 yah I don’t think they are actually much bigger in physical body size than whitetail. I think that maybe the way he typed his comment we just misunderstood. Like maybe it answered a question for himself that he had but the man making the video did not specifically address that exact question. Because their physical dimensions are not in fact much larger than a whitetail’s physical dimensions. I dunno maybe he meant the antlers? I’ve seen some monster axis racks that are well and truely amazing, like, for a whitetail equivalent, something you’d only find in a south south Texas buck, or a Kansas or Nebraska buck. But their actual body dimensions? Definitely not way larger than a whitetail, in the same way that, for example, an elk or a moose is wayeeeeeeeee bigger than a whitetail. So maybe the guy in his comment meant something else. That’s my guess.
have had a “fantasy” for a real long time, lol, fantasy because I’ve not yet taken steps to make the plan. But an idea to acquire my WMA permit and head out to the Austin area or Central TX area WMAs after whitetail season to go axis hunting. Ever since I had heard that their populations are now big enough that they have established feral populations in some of the WMAs out that way. Live in htown so it would have to be a whole road trip thing for me and that’s my excuse for not having made the plan yet.
Hey man! Great video! Were you able to find any solid info on how cold of a climate axis deer can tolerate? I hear they’re susceptible to the cold, but I know of some folks up in Indiana who raise them as well… and it gets plumb cold up there.
Great video! Thanks for the information. Are you allowed to breed and raise Axis in Texas without any license or permits? Any information would be appreciated as I can't find anything online other than mule or whitetail deer...
Thank you, I'm very glad you enjoyed it! I was actually thinking about that same topic. Yes, I'll put that next on my list for exotic species to cover! Where are you hoping to start an exotic ranch?
Really good info!! Finally. I got invited to go hunting in Texas this first week of June. Hoping that I get one with antlers like the one behind you, would you happen to know the possible lengths and widths of them with skull on(euro mount) I want to make sure my luggage bag is large enough to bring them back home with me as a checked bag or if I should send them via mail? Any advice via traveling with deer via plane would be helpful. Thank you!
anyone know any good spots to hunt these on public land? or is everything all just guided? Im from colorado and use to just going out and figuring it out myself
Thank you for all the info! I only own 16 acres is carrizo springs Tx . 5 years ago I had whitetail and axis , but then I got highfenced on two sides by big buck ranchers. Now I only get a couple occasional deer from my East during rut. I wish I knew how to draw more in
Thanks for leaving a comment! Carrizo Springs is a great area, especially for Whitetail. When trying to attract deer to a "Smaller" tract of land between larger ranches try do identify any limiting factors the deer have in the area. Then make your best efforts to provide whatever that limiting factor is on your property. In other words, if you look on google earth and see that there isn't much cover on surrounding ranches try to provide as much cover as possible on your 16 acres. Providing a combination of cover, water, and year round food should keep them coming back. Last tip, try to avoid excess shooting or running around on your land near season as it can easily run them off. I hope this was helpful.
I didn't know Axis were that far south. I have 12 acres in Pleasanton, haven't seen one out there yet. Theyre all over the place West of San Antonio. Huge herds out here in Roosevelt where we hunt. They're delicious! No gamey taste at all.
I’ve been looking for a place to hunt Axis deer on public land because I’m from Upshur county in deep east Texas and we just don’t have them around him. If anyone knows of where to hunt them public I’d love to hear
Thanks for the comment Aaron! There are actually many more than 50 ranches selling Axis hunts in Texas. I just limited the list. If even half of the counties that have Axis in Texas had a single ranch offering hunts you'd have close to 50. If you reply with your email I'll happily send it over to you.
Hello Robert, thank you for the comment! I haven't tried mule or alfalfa pellets but I think it will depend on what your goal for feeding is. Are you trying to bait or provide a year round nutritional supplement. If baiting, I would suggest corn as it's cheaper and attracts them well. However, if you're serious about providing a nutritional supplement year round I would contact the folks at PurinaMills. They have a solid reputation in the deer nutrition world and should be responsive if you give them a call. Best of luck on this!
New land owner, kinda, Do you still need a hunting license when hunting in private property? We live close to a hunting lease, since our land used to be part of that lease, if an animal dies in our property, and no one claims is, i doubt that would happen, but if it does, do we have to report it to anybody? How high should tree stand be?
Hi I have a question. I’ve been trying to do some axis management but I’ve run into a problem. The does are outnumbered by bucks and spikes. About four are pushing velvet and the rest have dropped horns. What should I do? Harvest ones with dropped horns or harvest spikes and wait for the others to get hard horned? Thanks
so, I have heard anecdotally also that in some parts they are now outcompeting whitetail. But I am curious like, if they taste better than whitetail, which they do imo, although as a Texan with Texas pride I hate to admit it😅because whitetail is one of our native species. Haha anyways, if they are a completely unregulated species that tastes better and you can also hunt them year round with no limit then, how and why in the world would more people not be hunting them also year round?! Thoughts like this perplex me. I mean it’s a deer it’s not like hogs, which can also be hunted year round but which kind of also have some of the “filthy animal” stigma attached to it even though their meat is more organic than any pork you could find at HEB or Kroger. Anyways…
This is a Great video, I was wondering if you could make more videos just like this on black bucks, Red Deer, and ram species. Your videos are very informative and their isn’t anything out their on other animals land owners can start breeding in breeding pens and introducing into their high fence ranches. Thanks again for your videos!
i’m that many many comments guy. Sorry. 😂Also heard anecdotally how many of them died off in the 2021 winter storm/freeze. But then you say here in the video that they range all the way to northern India himalayan foothills? didn’t know that. And they hae freeze temps there? So then, it seems to stand to reason that, their species is not actually any less cold tolerant than a whitetail or a mule? Hmmmmmm now I am wondering about this. But also some ranches did lose a lot of axis in that 2021 freeze. So are they then actually less cold tolerant or was it just extenuating and or other factors?
Hello from Texas! I haven't tried the Ezy Axis caller but you have me interested. Perhaps another viewer here has tried one? I normally have hunted out of a blind or from a vehicle moving safari style. I've never actually tried calling them in. I can imagine the challenge on calling them is that they don't go through a cyclical rut as White-tailed Deer do. It'll be hit or miss as to which bucks will respond. I am interested in learning more about them though and would like to hear if anyone has experience with this.
Hey David, very glad you enjoyed the video! I’ve personally hunted Record Buck and Big Easy Ranch and would recommend both. They’re both on the more expensive side but have great accommodations. Another ranch I’ve come to know but never hunted is called High Divide, the owners are amazing to work with.
ohhhhh very cool. thank you sir! I am so glad I stumbled across this video while scrolling the feed! Very interesting have always wondered as my dad hunts them a lot with his hunting ministry groups at various ranches in central Texas. Just realized about 30 minutes ago that was completely uneducated if an axis grunts because I myself have never hunted one, but I’ve heard whitetail grunts in real time before. So now the feed is suggesting me videos like this! Again, very cool.
this is the most complete video of axis deer on youtube, it would be awesome seeing a video of how to upgrade a land for axis deer hunting!
Great information. Thank you. We have a lot on our place in Concho County and son just bagged a doe yesterday. Can't wait to taste the meat!
Thanks for the comment! Good luck!
One about Sika would be so lovely. Finding any info about them in Texas is near impossible. Also finding info about axis and not just a video of someone hunting them is pretty hard too so thanks for all the great stuff. Cheers
I'll definitely try to do a video on Sika as well. You're right about finding info on exotics, it's very difficult to find unless they're hunting videos. I appreciate your comment!
Was hunting Axis on my friend's place last year and saw 2 Sika does. They used to be a lot more common. The ones I saw were the first he'd seen on the property in decades. On another note I've been seeing WAY more free range Axis to the point were they're starting to become a nuisance. It's a shame they're very pretty.
@@christiankneupper7011 I'd happily come take a few of those axis off your hands lol
they are easy to hunt here, and there are big specimens. you're welcome to Uruguay when you want
Good video dude. Gettin hyped for this weekend's hunt.
Hope it went well, thanks for the comment!
@@LandownerTV snagged a free-range Buck!! 145 dressed. Whoop! Thanks again
We have 20+ acres low fence in Leakey TX. We have a herd of about 35-40 Axis and about a dozen whitetail. When we can we put out alfalfa hay and feed corn year round. However to truly maintain the population of both you need to have the acorns and wild persimmons and the usual browse and forbes. With that being said when the feeders go off and the axis and whitetail come in I can see the axis will shoo away the WT. So there’s that. Great video
Thanks for the comment! Leakey is one of my favorite areas of the state, tons of deer and wildlife. How many bucks vs does are you seeing in that Axis heard?
Thank you ! That was very informative! We had a female in a wooded area next door making the weirdest vocal sounds like a rooster, a whale and sounded little kids . And it hung around all day and today was not there. It was by herself all day. Seen as many as 30 passing over the street on Methodist Encampment rd in Kerrville, Tx.
There is a book by Gene Fuchs (Fox) which was his Masters Thesis whereby he spent a year on the Powderhorn Ranch .
near Corpus Christi. He had a tame doe which he took out into a pasture and counted the "bites" she took and which vegetation she ate. This is usually for sale at the Hunt Store if you are in the neighborhood.
Thanks for the great tip William, I’ll definitely see if I can get a copy of that
Thank you for the great information !!
I appreciate the nice comment! Happy to make this content!
I used to live in a very small rural town of Yancey, Tx. Yancey actually is in the middle of nowhere. It sits on FM 462 between Hondo and Moore and FM 2200 between Devine and D'Hanis.
If you drive on FM 2200 toward D'Hanis, it actually takes you to the backside of 777 Ranch. This particular 20 mile drive is very interesting, I have seen a little bit of everything out there, including antelopes. I came across a group of about 100+ of them one day.I never looked into this but I assume antelopes are not native Texas deer.
One day as I was headed to Devine on FM 2200, I did not get very far, I say about 5 ,miles or so, a very large Axis deer trotted right in front me. Now at that time, I had a large 4 wheel drive truck with 44" tires and this Axis was literally within 50 feet or so and I was in awe of the size of this deer. It looked almost like a moose, but you said it better, more like an Elk. That was the only one I seen in the area.
I was told a story long ago that when the King family ( Kingsville, Tx) was buying up many many acres of land so they could raise cattle for meat for the military. ( I do not even remember what year this took place)
I understood that when the King family were selling cattle to the military at 3 cents per cow, they in turn were buying all that land between Kingsville and almost all the way down to Brownsville at 2 cents an acre.
I mean there is litarally 60 miles of open road once you leave Kingsville south 77 and that is all their land. The family already owned 1 million acres in Spain. So the story is that they brought Axis deer from Spain to Kingsville. Of course many have apparently escaped and now roam Texas.
my uncle Wade brought me hunting for Axis at 777 ranch when I was a kid.. fun stuff
nazfan01, i think there may be a lot of legend in your story. Not saying about your own personal story but about the other stories. But of course I do not know either. Although it could, in theory, be possible that, if indeed they did own land in Spain that, axis were first brought from India to Spain. Then brought from there to here. It is plausible! The King Ranch has so much great history no doubt! But also, 3 cents a frikkin cow? Wow!!! I am not an economist, nor historian. But my degree was in finace so those things do interest me. And if that one were going to be true, that would DEFINITELY have had to have been in the very very early days of the King Ranch, like in the 1800s, when prices would have been that low. What is the average price of a cow nowadays? To compare? What like, $2,500? I do not know, I do not ranch. But it’s in the thousands I know that for sure. Three cents a cow?!?! Woah!😅 So therefore, sir, I like your stories! But also, I suspect there’s a lot of legend tied into it, and we’d need to go investigate the documented history in the actual history books to separate the real parts from the legend parts. Also 44” tires!!?? Hell yah dude I want YOUR truck!😅
@@nozrep - Well, I remember the story about the price of cattle from Kingsville long ago. Of course that had to been early 1800s. Of course that how King Ranch became King Ranch. I do recall that when they sold cattle at 3 cent each to the government for the military. (and perhaps my memory had slipped a bit and perhaps it was 3 cents a pound)
Either way, the government was clueless in what they were doing at selling land at 2 cents an acre. No brainer business deal. I know King Ranch has or had a million acres of land in Spain. Not sure of the origin of the Axis deer but do know they brought Axis deer from Spain to raise at Kings Ranch Texas. Makes sese to raise and sell cattle and large deer to sell to the government.
I have friends that lives in Kigsville and I really like the area..
Very informative 👏 👌
I'd much rather have axis than whitetail, I can hunt them all year round and they're way bigger and taste better. As far as they're overpopulation, whitetails are way more overpopulated and sickly especially in Llano county. Horseshoe Bay, Sunrise Beach, Kingsland, Llano all have sick overpopulated whitetail herds. Increase the hunting season and number of tags, and do something about them within "city limits".
Great video. I harvest an axis deer every few months in my backyard lol. Can’t keep a fruit tree to save my life.
Must be nice to have the opportunity to harvest Axis anytime you want. What part of the world are you in Brandon?
Put fishing line around it. That is what saved ours. We put 4to 5 rows of it. Ankle up to above head height. The line startles them. But this was used on whitetails. So good luck.
@@1kuhl1 Great Tip Roberta!
Great video, and alot of info. Thx
Thank you Rolando, glad you enjoyed it!
Thank you Rolando, glad you enjoyed it!
Hope you do more videos about hunting in texas
This video has some great info. I’ve been hunting the Texas hill country and just took a nice Axis buck a couple weeks ago. These animals are just fascinating. Your video answered many questions I had including why axis are much bigger than Hill country whitetail.
I'm so glad you enjoyed it! Please let me know if there are any other topics you'd like me to cover in the future
Why is that? I don't think that question was answered in the video. I do know our whitetails in Texas are not considered big bodied deer like they have in the midwest and up into Canada.
@@bobgill4069 yah I don’t think they are actually much bigger in physical body size than whitetail. I think that maybe the way he typed his comment we just misunderstood. Like maybe it answered a question for himself that he had but the man making the video did not specifically address that exact question. Because their physical dimensions are not in fact much larger than a whitetail’s physical dimensions. I dunno maybe he meant the antlers? I’ve seen some monster axis racks that are well and truely amazing, like, for a whitetail equivalent, something you’d only find in a south south Texas buck, or a Kansas or Nebraska buck. But their actual body dimensions? Definitely not way larger than a whitetail, in the same way that, for example, an elk or a moose is wayeeeeeeeee bigger than a whitetail. So maybe the guy in his comment meant something else. That’s my guess.
have had a “fantasy” for a real long time, lol, fantasy because I’ve not yet taken steps to make the plan. But an idea to acquire my WMA permit and head out to the Austin area or Central TX area WMAs after whitetail season to go axis hunting. Ever since I had heard that their populations are now big enough that they have established feral populations in some of the WMAs out that way. Live in htown so it would have to be a whole road trip thing for me and that’s my excuse for not having made the plan yet.
When I clicked on this video I wasn’t expecting Junction to be mentioned since I hunt close to Junction
Great video. So informative.
Good video Bro !
Hey man! Great video! Were you able to find any solid info on how cold of a climate axis deer can tolerate? I hear they’re susceptible to the cold, but I know of some folks up in Indiana who raise them as well… and it gets plumb cold up there.
Great video! Thanks for the information. Are you allowed to breed and raise Axis in Texas without any license or permits? Any information would be appreciated as I can't find anything online other than mule or whitetail deer...
Great video
Thank you Kyle, I’m very glad you enjoyed it. Also, I appreciate the recommendation for the outfitters below.
Love it man! This helped a lot. We are trying to start an exotic ranch and this helped a bunch. Can you do one about black bucks
Thank you, I'm very glad you enjoyed it! I was actually thinking about that same topic. Yes, I'll put that next on my list for exotic species to cover! Where are you hoping to start an exotic ranch?
LandownerTV lampasas Tx
I'm in livingston tx. I saw 1 one day about a year ago. I thought it looked different. Dam I wish I would have known then.
There needs to be more axis deer in the wild
Really good info!! Finally. I got invited to go hunting in Texas this first week of June. Hoping that I get one with antlers like the one behind you, would you happen to know the possible lengths and widths of them with skull on(euro mount) I want to make sure my luggage bag is large enough to bring them back home with me as a checked bag or if I should send them via mail? Any advice via traveling with deer via plane would be helpful. Thank you!
anyone know any good spots to hunt these on public land? or is everything all just guided? Im from colorado and use to just going out and figuring it out myself
Thank you for all the info! I only own 16 acres is carrizo springs Tx . 5 years ago I had whitetail and axis , but then I got highfenced on two sides by big buck ranchers. Now I only get a couple occasional deer from my East during rut. I wish I knew how to draw more in
Thanks for leaving a comment! Carrizo Springs is a great area, especially for Whitetail. When trying to attract deer to a "Smaller" tract of land between larger ranches try do identify any limiting factors the deer have in the area. Then make your best efforts to provide whatever that limiting factor is on your property. In other words, if you look on google earth and see that there isn't much cover on surrounding ranches try to provide as much cover as possible on your 16 acres. Providing a combination of cover, water, and year round food should keep them coming back. Last tip, try to avoid excess shooting or running around on your land near season as it can easily run them off. I hope this was helpful.
I didn't know Axis were that far south. I have 12 acres in Pleasanton, haven't seen one out there yet. Theyre all over the place West of San Antonio. Huge herds out here in Roosevelt where we hunt. They're delicious! No gamey taste at all.
Make a video on Sika
I’ve been looking for a place to hunt Axis deer on public land because I’m from Upshur county in deep east Texas and we just don’t have them around him. If anyone knows of where to hunt them public I’d love to hear
I would love to see your list of 50 ranches, been searching for the most economical hunting options and don't think I found 50 outfitters, lol
Thanks for the comment Aaron! There are actually many more than 50 ranches selling Axis hunts in Texas. I just limited the list. If even half of the counties that have Axis in Texas had a single ranch offering hunts you'd have close to 50. If you reply with your email I'll happily send it over to you.
Would love to see information on scimitar oryx in the Hill Country
We have them on our exotic ranch In south texas
Have you tried horse and mule or alpfalpha pellets or protein? What works best as far as pellets?
Hello Robert, thank you for the comment! I haven't tried mule or alfalfa pellets but I think it will depend on what your goal for feeding is. Are you trying to bait or provide a year round nutritional supplement. If baiting, I would suggest corn as it's cheaper and attracts them well. However, if you're serious about providing a nutritional supplement year round I would contact the folks at PurinaMills. They have a solid reputation in the deer nutrition world and should be responsive if you give them a call. Best of luck on this!
New land owner, kinda,
Do you still need a hunting license when hunting in private property?
We live close to a hunting lease, since our land used to be part of that lease, if an animal dies in our property, and no one claims is, i doubt that would happen, but if it does, do we have to report it to anybody?
How high should tree stand be?
Hi I have a question. I’ve been trying to do some axis management but I’ve run into a problem. The does are outnumbered by bucks and spikes. About four are pushing velvet and the rest have dropped horns. What should I do? Harvest ones with dropped horns or harvest spikes and wait for the others to get hard horned? Thanks
Bucks are only virile when in hard antler. Leave them alone to service the does.
Wow to go hunt a axis deer we can just drive down a road and see hundreds of axis deer here in hawaii there are thousands of axis deer in Hawaii
Wow, you really do have it all in Hawaii. Makes me want to move there even more!
so, I have heard anecdotally also that in some parts they are now outcompeting whitetail. But I am curious like, if they taste better than whitetail, which they do imo, although as a Texan with Texas pride I hate to admit it😅because whitetail is one of our native species. Haha anyways, if they are a completely unregulated species that tastes better and you can also hunt them year round with no limit then, how and why in the world would more people not be hunting them also year round?! Thoughts like this perplex me. I mean it’s a deer it’s not like hogs, which can also be hunted year round but which kind of also have some of the “filthy animal” stigma attached to it even though their meat is more organic than any pork you could find at HEB or Kroger. Anyways…
Good thing axis tastes so good or it would be a tragedy
No kidding, it is nice to have them as a hunting option when white-tail are out of season.
This is a Great video, I was wondering if you could make more videos just like this on black bucks, Red Deer, and ram species. Your videos are very informative and their isn’t anything out their on other animals land owners can start breeding in breeding pens and introducing into their high fence ranches. Thanks again for your videos!
Thank you Grant! I'm certainly glad you enjoyed it, I'll get to work on a video on other exotic species in Texas.
I’m
i’m that many many comments guy. Sorry. 😂Also heard anecdotally how many of them died off in the 2021 winter storm/freeze. But then you say here in the video that they range all the way to northern India himalayan foothills? didn’t know that. And they hae freeze temps there? So then, it seems to stand to reason that, their species is not actually any less cold tolerant than a whitetail or a mule? Hmmmmmm now I am wondering about this. But also some ranches did lose a lot of axis in that 2021 freeze. So are they then actually less cold tolerant or was it just extenuating and or other factors?
Hello from Argentina!!! Have you ever tried to hunt them down using an ezy axis caller or are those callers a lie? Thanks for the videos !!
Hello from Texas! I haven't tried the Ezy Axis caller but you have me interested. Perhaps another viewer here has tried one? I normally have hunted out of a blind or from a vehicle moving safari style. I've never actually tried calling them in. I can imagine the challenge on calling them is that they don't go through a cyclical rut as White-tailed Deer do. It'll be hit or miss as to which bucks will respond. I am interested in learning more about them though and would like to hear if anyone has experience with this.
Great video. I'm planning an axis deer hunt. Any suggested ranches?
Hey David, very glad you enjoyed the video! I’ve personally hunted Record Buck and Big Easy Ranch and would recommend both. They’re both on the more expensive side but have great accommodations. Another ranch I’ve come to know but never hunted is called High Divide, the owners are amazing to work with.
David LaHaie A7 Outfitters has some unbelievable Axis at affordable rate.
What is an Axis Deer favorite food?
Uvalde,Tx
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