Deer Camp 2007 opens this week!

This is an excerpt of a column which was originally published by WisOpinion in 2005 as a part of their MilwaukeeInsight series.

As one of the few traditions of this site, we run it again today.

By Brian E. Fraley

[Later this week] nearly a hundred-thousand Milwaukee-area men and women will engage in an annual rite involving firearms and family — forgetting, if they even cared, about government, politics and the ‘06 election year. I will be proud to again be among them and pledge to be part of no press release issued during this hallowed time.

A week from this Thursday and Friday, Highway 41 and Interstates 43, 39, 90 and 94 will be packed with blaze orange-clad, rifle-toting friends and families heading north from southeast Wisconsin. For the yearly whitetail deer season is not only a tradition for rural Wisconsin, it’s as much a part of the Milwaukee area way of life as beer and brats.

Along with rooting for the Packers and the Badgers, the Deer Hunt is one of the few things that unite many of the folks in the “Big City” with their “Up Nort”’ brethren. We can even find a common bond with folks in, of all places, Madison. In fact, of the 650,000 deer hunters who will take to the woods at sun-up on Saturday, Nov. 19, more of them are likely to be from Dane County than any other.

According to the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, 29,989 gun deer licenses were issued in 2004 in Dane County, topping the list. Brown (28,363); Waukesha (23,103); Marathon (22,977); Washington (22,306) and Outagamie Counties (21,189) were next and Milwaukee placed seventh with 19,754 deer hunters.

Most hunters are like my brothers, cousins and the rest of our hunting party at my uncle’s cabin in Forest County (ok, it’s not really a “cabin” anymore since the renovation, additional rooms, running hot water and big screen TV, but you get my point). We have this date set in stone for all eternity. The Saturday before Thanksgiving is held sacrosanct. Birthdays, work deadlines, anniversaries be damned. We’ve got Sheepshead, Euchre and Cribbage to think about. Oh, yeah, and the deer.

And each other.

The Wisconsin Deer Hunt is a cultural experience. Personally, I cherish the time with my relatives, including my three brothers, who congregate in the Northwoods from more than a dozen Wisconsin cities and towns. But these few days together go far beyond male bonding. It’s about family and tradition. And memories.

I’m the odd duck in our hunting camp. I don’t know how to play Sheepshead, have been blanked in my attempts to actually slay a deer, and I always wait until the last minute to purchase my license. While no one has ever lamented my not losing 75 cents to them in cards, and there’s a mere rumbling about my streak of bad luck out in the woods, I actually think it’s become a running joke to see how high the number on my back tag will be each year. But procrastinating to buy a gun license continues to be a tradition for Wisconsin hunters. Again according to the DNR, 28 percent of all deer licenses issued in 2004 were sold within the last week before deer season and 9 percent were issued the Friday before the season opener. So it’s nice to know I won’t be alone in the next few days.

In so many ways, I’m not alone…

My father passed away a couple of years ago, just a month after my cousin succumbed following a valiant battle with brain cancer. The two of them used to be members of our hunting party, and their presence continues to be felt by us, especially during this time of year.

Remembering those who have gone before us…that’s part of the tradition passed down from generation to generation of Wisconsinites — be they from Wausau or Wauwatosa. A specific tradition with the Fraley kids had it that for our first year deer hunting, we were not allowed to shoot. Instead, we “hunted” alongside our father, and we had the “privilege” of hauling his old shotgun, which weighed somewhere in the neighborhood of 430 pounds. I remember that first hunt; not only because of the sore muscles, but as the first time my father and I spoke to each other as peers. Fellow hunters. That weekend, now more than 20 years ago, he instilled in me the respect for my firearm and the reverence for the outdoors and the abundance of God’s Earth that I carry to this day.

My late cousin Ken and I shared a birthday, although he was a year older. Besides being my friend, he was my hunting tutor. Every year I would watch him and learn. And at 5 a.m. or so on each opening Saturday, I’d follow him into the woods, where he would direct me to the place where I needed to veer off the fire lane … where I’d follow the row of pine to the ridge where “my” tree stump was. Ken had a tree stand a few hundred yards behind me, and I always felt like he “had my back.” I still do.

While the TV news and many pundits may focus on some tragic and/or sensational aspects of this tradition in the next few days (it is, after all, sweeps month), I and hundreds of thousands of my fellow hunters across Wisconsin will eagerly anticipate, then embrace, this year’s hunt. Some are like me and trade in blue blazers for blaze orange for a few days. Others merely turn the cammo coat inside out.

But we’re kindred spirits who share a love of the hunt. May it be safe for all and prosperous for those who are deserving … like, say, someone who needs to bag his first deer, after so many seasons in the woods. I’m not being greedy. I’d settle for a 12-pointer.

– Fraley is the president of The Markesan Group, LLC, a national consulting firm located in the Milwaukee area. He is likely in line waiting to purchase his license as you read this.

Note, in an event that shocked my family more this year than the fact I got married, I actually purchased my license several months ago. But I’m still looking for my first deer. Here’s hoping my advance planning pays off with a change of luck in the woods.

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10 Responses to “Deer Hunting a Wisconsin Tradition, Cultural Experience”

  1. SOCTG Says:

    As always, the safest place to be in Wisconsin during deer hunting season is hanging out with the deer wherever Fraley happens to be that week.

  2. jones Says:

    Sit still even if it kills you. That is my best advice.

  3. Tom Says:

    Shoot straight; but most of all, hunt safe.

  4. Hunting on the web Blog » Blog Archive » Late breaking news Says:

    […] <b>Deer Hunting</b> a Wisconsin Tradition, Cultural Experience […]

  5. Daily Takes » Blog Archive » The Beard is Back Says:

    […] I’ve previously written about the importance of Deer Hunting to me and members of my family. […]

  6. todd Says:

    You don’t have to shoot deer to have fun. Deer hunting has always been a family tradition around here. It is the hunt and all that goes with it. Memories, family, and yes some pretty nice bucks.

  7. Judy Says:

    Deer hunting is the activity or sport of pursuing deer which began as early as 7,000 BC. There are numerous types of deer throughout the world that are hunted.

    The deer most sought after in North America, east of the Rocky Mountains, is the white-tailed deer. West of the Rockies, the mule deer is the dominant deer species. The most notable differences between the two, other than distribution, are the differences in ears, tail, antler shape, and body size.
    Whitetail Male Deer at night in Central Texas
    Whitetail Male Deer at night in Central Texas

    The mule deer’s ears are proportionally longer than the ears of a white-tailed deer, and resemble that of a mule. Mule deer have a black-tipped tail which is proportionally smaller than that of the white-tailed deer. Buck deer of both species sprout antlers; the antlers of the mule deer branch and rebranch, while white-tailed bucks have one main beam with several tines sprouting from it. White-tailed bucks are usually smaller than mule deer bucks.

    Moose and elk are also popular game animals that are technically species of deer. However, hunting them is not usually referred to as deer hunting. They are considerably larger than mule deer or white-tailed deer, which makes hunting them rather different.

    In Canada and Alaska, reindeer (caribou) are hunted extensively.

  8. Florida Hunting Guy Says:

    people hunt deers to eat them but that’s not because they don’t have anything to eat but because deers tastes great and they can also be great in the wall, so you’ve just won two prizes… :)

  9. Glory Koonce Says:

    I constantly wonder about stuff like this in the gym.. I have great form and I always pay extreme attention to all the exercises to make sure that (to the best of my knowledge) i am doing them to get the best final results.. im always scared though that if i drop my weight a bit that i wont be able to eventually get my weight high and or get bigger (since my body wont think the weight is to much and not seeing a need to grow??)

  10. maryland hunting Says:

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