April 15th Whitetail Deer Pictures







This album of Whitetail Deer Pictures contains digital scouting camera pictures taken in the weeks before April 15, 2005. We downloaded 382 pictures this week from these three cameras. This time of year we are not looking for antlers but we are seeing many animals and waiting for the bucks to start growing their antlers for the next year. Our EagleEye maxed out the memory card with 212 pictures again while the Leaf River took 163 pictures. We put out our new Bushnell and it took 7 pictures on Saturday morning. We also got a couple of pictures of our old friend double white throat patch. It's amazing how small a bucks neck gets after the rut. The turkeys have started to strut and we also had several pictures of them.

Whitetail buck



This is the buck that we called double white throat patch. It's good to see him hanging around. He looks healthy and it will be fun watching his antlers grow through the spring and summer.

Whitetail in the snow



On April 3rd we got a couple of inches of snow. It was real wet and melted by late afternoon but was real pretty. I thought that this was a pretty picture of a deer in the snow.

Strutting Gobblers



The turkey gobblers have started strutting. This is a neat picture of four of them together with the morning sun shining in.

Close up of a whitetail buck



It looks to me like you can still see a little blood running from the pedicals on this buck. Notice that this picture was taken on March 27th.

Whitetail Deer Chasing



I liked this picture of two running deer. It looks like the front deer is being chased off by the other deer. This is common around the feeders.

Groundhog at a mineral lick



I think that this is the first picture we have gotten of a groundhog. They must not like corn. This one is in a mineral lick.




Leave April 15th Whitetail Deer Pictures and return to the Whitetail Deer Photographs Page.

Leave April 15th Whitetail Deer Pictures and visit Game Camera Review Page.

Enjoy this page? Please pay it forward. Here's how...

Would you prefer to share this page with others by linking to it?

  1. Click on the HTML link code below.
  2. Copy and paste it, adding a note of your own, into your blog, a Web page, forums, a blog comment, your Facebook account, or anywhere that someone would find this page valuable.