Author Topic: THE MILO HANSON BUCK: STILL THE NUMBER ONE TYPICAL WHITETAIL NEARLY 30 YEARS LAT  (Read 1309 times)

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Offline Graybeard

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https://www.wideopenspaces.com/milo-hanson-buck/



Posted by Travis Smola

The Hanson Buck continues to fend off all contenders.
For most hunters, the typical whitetail world record is probably the most important of all big game records in the books today. The current world record shot by Milo Hanson outside Biggar, Saskatchewan on November 23, 1993, is now slowly closing in on three decades atop the whitetail deer hunting record books.

In all that time, the Milo Hanson buck has fended off multiple world-class challengers that either failed to measure up upon panel scoring or were denied completely due to abnormal points causing a non-typical classification.

Records are made to be broken, but at this point many whitetail hunters are starting to believe this Saskatchewan farmer's mark of 213 5/8 inches may be unbeatable for a wild typical buck.

The Story of the Hunt


https://youtu.be/qMG3-lL1UFw

As is often the case with any big whitetail buck, local hunters knew of the Hanson buck long before it hit the dirt during the 1993 rifle season. It was seen during the 1992 season, and it quickly became the buck on every hunter's hit list. The world record buck was even seen by a school bus loaded with kids at one point. At least one shed, a massive 5-point side was picked up from the animal. It is safe to say the big buck had a rather large target on his back.

Somehow the deer survived the archery and muzzleloader seasons prior to the start of Saskatchewan's rifle season. Hanson and his buddies hunted the big deer several times in the lead up to November 23, 1993 with no success. At one point Hanson and his buddy both passed on a nice, 160-inch buck because they knew the big one was still out there somewhere. It ended up being a good decision!

As for the story of the hunt, there is not much to it. Hanson and his buddies narrowed down the area the buck was hiding to one small 30-acre stand of willows. With a fresh snow to help them track, the deer hunters set up a small drive with one man pushing and three standers on either side. Hanson took the north side while his buddies covered the other and one walked up the middle following a fresh track.

It did not take long before Hanson first spotted the buck standing broadside about 150 yards from his position. He admits buck fever got the best of him here. Who would not get it with a deer of this caliber? His first shot missed the deer completely. The hunters re-grouped near where they saw the buck go into cover and jumped him out again. Hanson's second shot at the deer was a solid hit, dropping the buck down to his knees. The buck was still moving though. The next few moments were tense, as Hanson later related the tale in a Boone and Crockett Club press release:

"Unfortunately, the buck got up and ran into a nearby aspen stand," Hanson told B&C. "I ran up the hill to where it disappeared and saw it below me, standing still. I aimed through my 4-power scope and fired another shot with my .308 Winchester Model 88 lever-action. Down it went. I saw its head over a clump of willows. To ensure it stayed down, I fired another shot and the hunt ended."

Upon reaching the deer, the hunters discovered one of the .308 bullets had apparently shattered and struck the back of the buck's right main beam. While the shot cracked the antlers, fortunately, it did not break them. As news of the big deer's downing spread, the Hanson farm was overrun with curious onlookers and the phone started ringing off the hook. Hanson knew then he had something special on his hands. North American Whitetail magazine was the first to spread the news of Hanson's harvest to hunters far and wide with their February 1994 issue.

What did the Hanson buck weigh? And how hold was the deer?

https://youtu.be/ZCWnecHAhMo

Hanson has stated many times that the most frequent question he gets from other hunters is about the buck's weight. However, it seems we will never know because Hanson never weighed the deer. Field dressed or otherwise. Although he did estimate in a 2010 interview with Outdoor Life that the live weight was probably around 200 pounds. While that is a heavy deer, it is not exactly a large-bodied deer for Saskatchewan where big whitetails pack on the excess body weight to get through the long winters. Hanson is a farmer, and the Biggar area is known for agriculture, so there was no lack of food for the record deer. However, considering the fact the deer was not taken until November 23, it seems extremely likely he had lost quite a bit of weight during the rut.

The most amazing fact about this buck, other than the 213 5/8-inch score is the fact that it was aged at only 3.5 or 4.5 years old. There is almost no question the world record whitetail had not even hit his prime yet when Hanson dropped him. It makes us wonder if it would have netted over 220, or even 230 inches with another year of growth. Although no hunter would be crazy enough to pass up a buck like this!

It speaks to the quality of deer hunting in the area that Hanson shot a 171-inch buck the year after harvesting his world record. A deer that no one knows or talks about because Hanson's world record takes up all the headlines. He was in the right place at the right time to harvest such a magnificent animal.

How big is the Milo Hanson buck? And what challengers have fallen short?

It is hard to appreciate just how large the Hanson buck is unless you see it for yourself. At the time of the deer's downing, the James Jordan buck from Wisconsin was the typical world record. The Jordan buck is no slouch, but the Hanson buck has it beat on spread thanks to a 29-inch greatest spread and a 27 2/8-inch inside spread. The G2s and G3s are also ridiculously long with a few of them reaching nearly 14 inches in length. The Jordan buck does have the Hanson buck beat on main beam length. Still, the Hanson buck's 28-inch main beams are nothing to sneeze at.

As for the Hanson buck's challengers, there have been many. Most infamous was the "Rompola buck" allegedly taken in Michigan back in 1998. Hunters are still divided if the 218 5/8-inch deer was a hoax, or a hunter who simply did not like the limelight. We may never know the truth with that one.

In 2006, it looked like Wisconsin would regain its crown as the holder of the typical world record with the Johnny King buck. That deer initially grossed over 220 inches and netted around 218 as a typical. That was until a Boone and Crockett scoring panel determined the buck's G3 and G2 points shared a common base, causing massive deductions that resulted in a score around 180 inches net. Hunters are still arguing about that one.

Then there was "The General," a massive whitetail that roamed Nebraska back in 1958 and did not resurface until the 1990s. This buck had massive 32-inch main beams, 14-inch G2s, and 7-inch mass measurements. The antlers gross nearly 240 inches and net in the 220s. There is just one problem. It is a set of sheds. Because of this, the inside spread is unknown, and B&C do not recognize sheds in the record books.

What is the Hanson buck worth?

Many hunters assume that once you bag a world record whitetail, you are set for life. After all, there are endorsement deals, paid appearances at hunting shows, and replicas you can sell. However, the truth is that while shooting a new world record did make Hanson quite a bit of money, he did not start living on easy street after killing the deer. In fact, it made Hanson's life more hectic, as he told the Spokesman-Review back in 1995.

"Actually, I'm working harder than ever," Hanson told the paper. "I'm still a farmer."

His touring schedule did get quite busy. He still does a little bit of it today. Many years later, he has clarified exactly how much he made from the buck in all that time. In a 2010 interview with Outdoor Life, Hanson estimated he made $60,000 a year off his record buck for almost a decade. So, he made at least $600,000, which is a serious amount of money. However, it is hardly enough to retire or quit working. While many world-class whitetails have found their way into private collections over the years, the Hanson buck remains in the hunter's possession. In that same interview, he noted he has never received an offer close to what he has made on the deer. Make of that what you will.

As we approach another season, hunters across North America are likely watching and waiting to see if this will finally be the year the Hanson buck record falls. Until that happens, this Saskatchewan giant will remain a legend in the world of deer hunting.


Bill aka the Graybeard
President, Graybeard Outdoor Enterprises
256-435-1125

I am not a lawyer and do not give legal advice.

Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life anyone who believes in Him will have everlasting life!

Offline Buckskin

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And that was in 1993, well before any talk of QDM.  Nowadays in some areas they are treated practically as livestock and harvested only when reach maturing rack wise and they still can't beat that buck.

He was lucky that 308 hit to the antler wasn't a 30-06 or that buck would just be another big buck, a broken rack would have negated the record.

I think deductions on scores of antlers is ridiculous, the more the better.  They should just do a water displacement measurement and be done with it, no room for argument.

The Johnny King Buck is no slouch either and should have a higher score imo.
Buckskin

"I have tried to live my life so that my family would love me and my friends respect me. The others can do whatever the hell they please.   --John Wayne

Offline Ranger99

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Those are nice, that's for sure

Personally I've never been a
" trophy " hunter and I've never
had one mounted. I don't begrudge
those who do .
I only wish the many in my area
would confine their great love of
big antlered buck deer to their
own hunting pursuits, and not
worry about me if I feel like
shooting a 3 year old buck
to put in the freezer, or to
shoot whatever does I'm legally
allowed to take
18 MINUTES.  . . . . . .

Offline BUGEYE

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Those are nice, that's for sure

Personally I've never been a
" trophy " hunter and I've never
had one mounted. I don't begrudge
those who do .
I only wish the many in my area
would confine their great love of
big antlered buck deer to their
own hunting pursuits, and not
worry about me if I feel like
shooting a 3 year old buck
to put in the freezer, or to
shoot whatever does I'm legally
allowed to take
Yeah, I took a fawn in 93 or 94 and the people in a hunting forum gave me such a hard time about it that I quit going there.
Give me liberty, or give me death
                                     Patrick Henry

Give me liberty, or give me death
                                     bugeye

Offline Ranger99

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Been some photos here and on
the old GB of what I would say
were nice deer,  but with the trophy
laws we have here now they'd be
illegal deer,  and would draw plenty
of ire on the hunting forums.

Just me, I'd say great job
18 MINUTES.  . . . . . .

Offline Buckskin

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Our hunting group between 4 landowners has a substantial amount of great hunting land and would easily do QDM and produce true monsters of near above quality but have no interest in that.  Our group is free to shoot whatever tickles them and we still get a plenty of little bucks to big bucks and booner every couple years.  We are adjacent to about 240 acres of public as well.

It doesn't bother me that people have their harvest rules, but I grew up on a farm and doing that seems more like farming than hunting.  I have several mounted, but am done with that.  I like to see the kids shoot the big ones now days anyway and I will just pop a doe if we need another for the freezer.
Buckskin

"I have tried to live my life so that my family would love me and my friends respect me. The others can do whatever the hell they please.   --John Wayne

Offline Ranger99

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Lots of people in this region
chew on me and some hate me
because I care little if at all for antler
size and " quality "
98% of the time it's " why don't
you let em grow and see what
potential they have.  . "
The only problem with that is
that a free ranging wild animal
roams around with an invisible
target on it.
Diseases, parasites, predators,
other competing deer, bad weather,
poor nutrition, poachers, road
hunters, highway traffic, etc.
are trying to kill free ranging deer
from birth.
The only real way to " let em grow "
is to have a HF ranch and cull
everything with unknown genetics
and feed tons of high protein feed
and minerals and medicines and
such just exactly like a cattle ranch.
When I say that they come unglued.

Id be perfectly content if everyone
would hunt their own hunt and
let me hunt mine
18 MINUTES.  . . . . . .