Gameplay usually takes place in a thick forest or meadow during different seasons of the year. Animals and objects other than deer can be seen while playing, including Bigfoot and UFOs in some incarnations, but these serve no purpose other than scenery. Some animals may be shot and killed, but the player receives no trophy and will be penalized if the animal was a protected species. In the latest versions, players can also manage a deer herd with deer growth and genetics deciding the traits of offspring.

The Deer Hunter franchise has been around sine 1997 and has been acting as a hunting for simulator for armchair hunters who for one reason or another are unable to head off into the forest during unpleasant weather to track and hunt various trophy big game animals such as Whitetail, Mule, and Sitka Deer, Big Horn and Dall Sheep, Caribou, and Elk. Have a look at our Deer Hunter Reloaded Tips to get help in the game.


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For me, deer hunting has at times been a shared experience with friends, while at other times it has been a lonely quest. Again this year, with the luxury of a piece of land to hunt in Kenduskeag thanks to Bhraun and Leanne Parks, I had gone off to do my own thing.

In doing so, I had left behind the person who had first inspired me to become a hunter, BDN outdoor columnist John Holyoke, and hunting/fishing buddies Chris and Bill Lander. We had hunted together several times the previous three years, without any of us firing a shot.

I saw one deer (or at least its hind end) this year prior to Tuesday. I had stood up in the tree stand to stretch and was facing away from the spot where it emerged. It bounded away as I picked up the rifle and turned around.

Monday, on the way home from Kenduskeag, I had called University of Maine baseball coach Steve Trimper, himself an avid hunter. Having made the offer previously, he again welcomed me to join him and some friends the next day for a hunt on the outskirts of Orono.

When we regrouped before lunch, Trimper suggested that in the afternoon I head down to a stand that offered a good view of an open area where deer sometimes cross. With the rut in full swing, the odds likely would be even better.

Along the way, I spotted hunter orange behind a tree. I whistled to announce my presence and talked with a hunter named Arthur, whose vantage point was some 300-400 yards away from where I would be sitting.

Or, a deer can walk out within 100 yards only minutes after you walk not so stealthily through the woods, have a cell phone conversation standing in front of the tree stand, then sit in the stand and barely have time to get situated.

When the writer first visited the hunting lodge home of Seth IredellNelson (1809-1905) at Round Island, Clinton County, in August, 1899,he noticed a medium-sized set of moose-horns hanging on the wall ofthe great Nimrod's living-room. Having heard traditional storiesof the occasional appearance of the Black Moose or Original inPennsylvania, the thought flashed through his mind, "Those may bethe antlers of a Pennsylvania Moose." Upon asking Nelson where thehorns came from, the magnificent old hunter replied that they wereCanadian horns, sent to him some years before by a party who had oncehunted with him in Pennsylvania in deer season. "But," added the oldNimrod, "there once were moose in Pennsylvania." Asked if he had everseen any, he replied that he never had, that the last were gone longbefore his day, but that he had killed at least 500 elk, sometimescalled "grey moose" in the Pennsylvania forests. That same fall, thewriter heard that a farmer named John Hennessy, about 1850, as nearas could be ascertained, while grubbing stumps on the edge of theTamarack Swamp in Northern Clinton County, had unearthed a pair offresh looking moose horns. When Samuel N. Rhoads published his greatwork, "Mammals of Pennsylvania and New Jersey," in[6] 1903, the writerfound little comfort in the assumption that moose had wandered intoPennsylvania in post-Columbian days. This is what Rhoads has to sayunder title of "Eastern Moose": "The fossil remains of moose havebeen found in Pennsylvania caves. Certain statements of earliesttravellers imply that the moose was found on the west shores of theHudson River opposite New York and in Northeastern Pennsylvania. Thereis a Moosic in Lackawanna County; a Moosehead in Luzerne County,and Chickalacamoose in Clearfield County. In Doughty's 'Cabinet ofNatural History,' Volume I, Page 281, a Philadelphia correspondentsays that the horns of moose were found in a salt lick in theAllegheny Mountains, Pennsylvania, near the New York State line.These items are here noted in support of the theory that the moosein late pre-Columbian times wandered into the Allegheny Mountainsof Pennsylvania from its more favored haunts in the lake regions ofNew York. Miller states 'it once ranged throughout the State of NewYork.' If this can be verified by history it would be an interestingfact, at once removing any improbability of its range in parts ofNorthern Pennsylvania, quite as well suited to its needs." Rhoadsfurther states that fossil remains of the East American Moose (AlcesAmericanus Jardine) dating from the Pleistocene period were found inthe Durham Cave, near Reigelsville, Bucks County, and that a skeletonof Scott's Fossil Moose (cervalces scotti Lydekker) also of thePleistocene period were unearthed[7] from a shell marl beneath a bog atMount Hermon, Warren County, New Jersey. It will be the purpose of thefollowing pages to endeavor to show that the Black Moose was presentin Pennsylvania as an irregular migrant or straggler within the lastone hundred and twenty-five years, citing as evidence, the writings ofreliable travellers and historians, and the traditions of old hunterswho were themselves sons of old hunters. That it is not a case ofconfusion of Nomenclature, for Rhoads states that somewhere in Dr. B.S. Barton's writings the grey moose or wapiti is called the "Original,"will also be demonstrated, as the old-fashioned hunters were veryjealous and proud of their knowledge of the different kinds and speciesof wild animals.

Historical evidence of the presence of the Black Moose in Pennsylvania,though not plentiful, is convincing. Dr. J. D. Schoepf, thedistinguished German army surgeon and naturalist, who travelled throughPennsylvania in 1783-1784, has this to say inhis "Travels in the Confederation," Vol. I, Page 161, in speaking ofthe vicinity of Heller's Tavern, one mile south of the Wind Gap inNorthampton County: "The farmers were not well content with theirlands. The nearness of the mountains brings them in Winter unpleasantvisits from wolves and now and then, bears. And there is no lack ofother sort of game; deer and foxes are numerous: elks wander hitherat times. From several descriptions furnished by people hereabouts,it seems that they give the name Elk to the Moose as well as to theCanadian stag, and so give rise to errors. Both animals come down fromthe North, where one is known as Moose, Black Moose or Original, andthe other (the Canadian stag) as Grey Moose to distinguish it fromthe first." On page 243 of the same volume, the talented author, inspeaking of the Allegheny Mountains between Carlisle and Fort Pitt(Pittsburg) remarks: "The commonest wild animal is the Virginia deer:the Grey Moose, very similar to the European stag has also been seen inthese woods, but it is more numerous in Canada.

This gigantic deer is, however, almost extinct in the Adirondacks,and I would suggest that it be made, in future, unlawful to kill ordestroy the animal at any season." From the above it will be noted thatthe Black Moose held on in its Northern fastnesses for three quartersof a century after its extirpation in Pennsylvania. Moose have sincebeen re-introduced in New York, but it is not known for certain whetherthe experiment will prove a success. In the Catskills, situated midwaybetween the Adirondacks and the Alleghenies of Pennsylvania, BlackMoose were noticed during the first decade of the Nineteenth Century.At one time, at least, Moose were found in Connecticut, and a cow moosewas killed within two miles of Boston, Massachusetts, in 1721. JimJacobs, the discoverer of the Moose horns in the swamp in Littleton,now called Bradford, McKean County, was one of the most interestingfigures in the sporting annals of Pennsylvania. He was a grandson ofCaptain Jacobs, the brave defender of Fort Kittanning, and his motherwas a daughter of the Seneca chieftain, Cornplanter. He was thereforeof the Indian aristocracy. "The Seneca Bear Hunter," as the greatNimrod was generally called, was born near Gawango, on Cornplanter'sReservation in Warren County (the house, the oldest in the Reservation,is still standing) in 1790. From the time he was old enough to "totea gun" he was noted as a[14] slayer of big game. Innumerable were theelks, deer and bears that fell before his unerring rifle. On June 25,1814, with Captain John Titus and other Senecas, he participated inthe famous march, 80 miles, between sunrise and sunset, between ColdSpring on the Seneca Reservation and Lundy's Lane, on the NiagaraRiver, participating in the battle of that name and helping to winthe victory for the American forces. In 1867 he killed an elk in FlagSwamp, Elk County, that by some authorities is held to be the lastnative wild elk killed in Pennsylvania. He was several times married.By his first wife, according to C. W. Dickinson, he had one daughter,who died of consumption while still in her teens. By other wives hehad two sons. John C. French says that probably Jim Jacobson (also anoted elk hunter) and "Dan" Gleason, the wolf hunter, were his sons. Onthe night of February 24, 1880, there was a great blizzard in NorthernPennsylvania. Jacobs, then in his 90th year, happened on the tracks ofthe Erie Railroad, near Bradford, when he was hit by a freight trainand killed. P. L. Webster, an aged citizen of Littleton or Bradford,who died recently, is authority for this account of the "Bear Hunter's"taking off. John C. French of Roulette, Potter County, historian andlitterateur, states that in Indian summer, 1881, while in the SenecaReservation near Carrolltown, he met Jim Jacobs in the forest, carryinghis long rifle, and that he engaged in an interesting conversationwith him. He was seen by others in the Reservation up to that[15] time andlater. "But," adds Mr. French, "my seeing 'The Seneca Bear Hunter' doesnot prove that he was alive. The Indians were firm believers in ghosts,and if he was actually killed a year or two previously, they wouldhave said that I merely saw his shade revisiting the favorite huntinggrounds." be457b7860

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