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Facts about West Virginia buck season

DNR Press Release

SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. — The West Virginia buck firearms season will start Monday, Nov. 20 and run through Dec. 2. Here are a few facts about the season:

  • Buck firearm season is open in all counties except Logan, Mingo, McDowell and Wyoming.
  • Sunday hunting will be legal in all 55 counties on private land only for those with written permission. The only Sunday that falls within the two-week buck gun season is Nov. 26.
  • Purple paint may be used to post private land.
  • All deer harvested by hunters in Hampshire, Mason and Upshur counties on Nov. 20 and 21 are required to be brought to a designated Biological Game Examination Station. For station locations, consult page 12 of the 2017-2018 Hunting and Trapping Regulations Summary.
  • Approximately 330,000 deer hunters will be in West Virginia’s woods this season.
  • Hunters should review the 2017-2018 Hunting and Trapping Regulations Summary for detailed instructions concerning bag limits and season dates. The regulations are available at license agents, DNR district offices and online at www.wvdnr.gov.
  • All hunters must have an official DNR ID number to check game. The ID number can be found on annual hunting licenses. They also can be obtained by calling 304-558-2758 or logging on to [wvhunt.com]wvhunt.com and providing the requested information. Game may be checked by telephone at 1-844-WVCHECK, online at [wvhunt.com]www.wvhunt.com or at any hunting license agent. All field tagging, transporting and possession requirements still apply.
  • Hunters may substitute a bow or a crossbow during the buck firearms season.
  • The bag limit during the two-week buck firearms season is two (one on the base license and one on an RG [resident] or RRG [nonresident] stamp). A hunter may take no more than three antlered deer per calendar year in all archery, crossbow and firearms seasons combined.
  • A hunter may harvest two deer per day, but only one antlered deer may be harvested per day. The first deer does not have to be electronically registered before harvesting the second deer in the same day. However, all deer legally harvested must be electronically registered and legally tagged before hunting during a subsequent day.
  • The last day to purchase an additional buck deer gun tag (Class RG/RRG Stamp) is Sunday, Nov. 19. Class RG and Class RRG additional buck stamps can only be used to take an additional antlered deer during buck firearms season. Unused Class RG and Class RRG stamps may not be used in antlerless or muzzleloader seasons.
  • Fifty-one counties are open to concurrent antlerless deer season hunting during the traditional buck firearms season. Class N (resident) or Class NN (nonesident) stamps to hunt during the antlerless deer season can be purchased at any time. Antlerless deer firearms season opens Nov. 20 on private land and specified public lands. Hunters should consult the 2017-2018 Hunting and Trapping Regulations Summary for specific antlerless deer season regulations in each county and wildlife management area.
  • A bear firearms season without dogs will run concurrent with the buck firearms season in 35 counties, eight of which are by permit only. Consult the 2017-2018 Hunting and Trapping Regulations Summary for specific counties.
  • According to Southwick Associates, hunting contributes $500 million each year to the state’s economy. Deer hunters spend an estimated $230 million in West Virginia, much of it in the rural areas of the state that depend upon the deer seasons for a large portion of their annual income. Hunting is estimated to be responsible for 5,400 jobs and $35 million in sales taxes on goods and services spent in West Virginia.
  • In 2016, the traditional bucks-only firearm season harvest of antlered bucks was 46,071, a decrease of 24 percent from the 2015 harvest. This is 15 percent less than the five-year average.
  • WVDNR predicts the buck harvest will be close to than it was in 2016. Increased oak mast, especially white oak, will have deer spread out over the landscape and less visible in fields and less susceptible to bait. Several counties were positive for Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD), which may have a localized impact on the population.
  • Hunters are required to wear at least 400 square inches of blaze orange (about the size of a vest) as an outer garment for visibility and safety. Blaze orange camouflage patterns are legal as long as 400 square inches of blaze orange are displayed on the garment. A blaze orange hat is not required, but the hunter must have blaze orange visible from both the front and the back.
  • Hunting licenses may be purchased online at any time and printed out on a home computer printer. Go online to www.wvhunt.com, fill out the application and purchase it over a secure server with a credit card.
  • Hunters who wish to donate deer meat or money to the Hunters Helping the Hungry program, which distributes deer meat through the Mountaineer Food Bank and the Facing Hunger Food Bank, should call 304-924-6211 or visit the DNR website at www.wvdnr.gov to find a participating meat processor.




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