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SHED HUNTING TIPS: HOW WINTER SEVERITY CHANGES ANTLER DENSITY | 🎙️ EP. 132

Episode 132 Published 4 months ago
Description

In this episode Matt Hartsky breaks down how winter severity really impacts shed density—and why it misleads Western shed hunters year after year. After more than three decades of chasing elk and mule deer sheds across the Rockies, Matt explains why terms like “hard winter” and “mild winter” don’t automatically point you to stacked antlers. Winter severity is a macro condition, but shed density is a micro result driven by how animals adjust their movement, bedding time, travel efficiency, and energy conservation under stress.

Matt walks through why mild winters often increase movement and spread antlers across a wider footprint, while harsh winters can tighten daily loops and concentrate sheds—but only in terrain that solves multiple survival constraints at once. He also addresses the die-off myth, why mortality zones rarely match true shed zones, and how winter stress reshapes behavior in subtle ways that most hunters overlook. This episode is built around behavior and prediction, not guesswork, and will help you stop chasing weather headlines and start reading real patterns on the landscape.

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