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Call this a catch-all hunting column this week. There have been quite a few bits and pieces of news from the Pennsylvania Game Commission the past few weeks that warrant coverage. So letâs get down to business. DEER KILL BREAKDOWN AND LICENSE SALES Last fallâs deer harvest of 435,180 was up 12 percent over the 2019-20 kill, and was the highest weâve seen in the past 15 years. The buck harvest of 174,780 was the highest weâve seen since the current antler restrictions were put in place 20 years ago. And it continued a three-year trend of impressive buck-kill increases. In 2018-19, hunters shot 147,750 bucks. In 2019-20, they took 163,240. ....
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Back Mike Coakley, who farms in Yarnell, started seeing elk in his fields in 2015. Since then, he has shot three for damaging his corn and soybeans. He estimates a $4,000 loss per crop. But now the elk are digging up his hay fields and eating round bales, as well as stripping bark off trees that have lumber value. Farmers Waiting on Crop Ruling Farmers can legally shoot wildlife that damages a cultivated crop, but the Game Commission has yet to determine if hay fits into that category. Until thatâs resolved, Coakley canât do much about forage-gobbling elk. âOur legal department was looking into whether you define hay as a crop or not,â said Jeremy Banfield, the Pennsylvania Game Commissionâs elk biologist. âHopefully sometime in the near future they can come out with a determination there.â ....