We told you about the rise of deer as livestock,
that are now bred on farms for venison. That’s somewhat equivalent to
raising cattle for beef, but it’s not the most lucrative use of
specifically-bred deer. Another kind of deer farm breeds deer for their
antlers: the bigger, the better.
Hunters give antlers a
score by measuring features like the length and spread of the main
beams and the number and length of the smaller tines that grow out of
them. Out in the wild, a really big buck might score 200 inches, if he’s
got a “typical” rack, with the main beams curving out from his forehead
and an orderly line of tines pointing towards the sky. On a
“non-typical” rack, the main beam might split and split again, and the
irregular tines will wind chaotically outward. The largest of these, on
wild deer, come in over 300 inches.
The antlers that are being
produced on deer farms grow much, much larger. In the past five years,
farmers have produced non-typical antlers with scores of more than
500 — even more than 600 — inches. It’s not unusual to find deer with
400-inch racks, while racks in the 200-inch range, which on a wild deer
would be amazing, are becoming standard for deer raised on farms. Much
as the poultry industry has super-sized chicken breasts to meet humans’
culinary preferences, the deer industry has succeeded in enlarging
antlers to meet their aesthetic ones.
So what good
are big antlers? Hunters are willing to pay a premium for the
opportunity to hunt a deer with a spectacular rack they can show off as a
trophy. Hunting preserves buy big-antlered deer to attract big-money
hunters. And the practice will continue as long as people are impressed
with antlers hanging on someone’s wall. However, the most avid opponents
of breeding deer for antlers are other hunters.
Read more about antler farms at Modern Farmer.
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