News

I'd heard plenty of rumors about the phantom buck, but I had no idea he would become the biggest archery buck in the state at ...
The world-record nontypical mark was set at 284⅜ inches when Larry Raveling shot an Iowa giant during the 1973 season. Raveling’s world-class whitetail—his first buck—boasted 29 scorable ...
The most celebrated record in all of hunting is, without question, the world record typical whitetail buck, held by Milo Hanson. He killed the buck in November 1993, which means that if it survives ...
Both the Jordan head, which currently holds the world record. and the Breen head, which is the top rack in Minnesota, are examples of what can happen in the ins and outs of shooting. tracking and ...
SUMNER COUNTY, Tenn. — A hunter in Tennessee is celebrating the hunt of a lifetime. Stephen Tucker shot the buck with a muzzleloader in Sumner County, Tennessee. The Tennessee Wildlife Resources ...
CIMARRON, Kan. (KSNW) – With hunting seasons well underway in the state of Kansas, a Cimarron teen harvested what is now a buck breaking record. On September 6, just one day after the opening of ...
Tucker’s buck broke the current world record holder of 307-5/8 inches. That deer was a non-typical 38-pointer taken by a 15-year old in Iowa in 2003.
Sports; Outdoors; World record buck: This one’s for real, trust me Thu., March 10, 2011 Is this deer hunting photo of a world record whitetail buck a hoax? We think so. (Anonymous ...
If that green score holds, the Tucker buck will just beat the current world-record non-typical, which was shot in Iowa in 2003 and netted 307 5/8. Grandstaff aged the buck at 4 ½ years old.
A 14-year-old girl has set a world record after taking down a buck with 42-scorable points. Now, the teen holds the record for the largest non-typical whitetail shot by a female hunter.
The current world record deer was taken in Iowa and in 2003 and was 307 5/8ths inches. The current Tennessee record, which was also bagged in Sumner County, is 244 3/8ths inches.
This story from the archives appeared in the February 1984 issue of Outdoor Life. It was later discovered that several nontypical points had been removed from the deer to improve its score, and it ...