New Programs And Changes To Deer Season

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2025 (Volume 34, Number 3)
  • Printable Issue Number 3 2025
  • The First 20 Years of The Hardwood Ecosystem
  • Indiana’s New Prescribed Burning Law
  • Opinion: The Future of Forestry
  • Forestry Course Celebrates Over 100 Classes
  • Forestry for the Birds: A Tale of Two Woodlands
  • Purdue Researchers Seeking Landowners
  • Ask the Steward- October 2025 Dan Ernst
2025 Volume 34, Number 2
  • Storm Damaged Timber
  • Log prices and Markets Based on IDNR
  • 2024 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • 2024 Indiana Tree Farmer of the Year
  • 2024 Outdoor Laboratory of the Year
  • 5-Acre Plainfield Sand Forest Management Demonstra
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 12: Cerulean Warbler
  • Days Gone By 2024 number 2
2025 Volume 34, Number 1
  • Printable Issue 1 2025
  • 202 4 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Timber
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 11: Eastern Towhee
  • Cucumber Magnolia – Indiana Woodland Stewards
  • Be on the Lookout for Spotted Lanternfly!
  • New Foresters Directory Available
  • SWCD Woodland Steward 2024
  • Ask The Steward Number 1 2025
2024 Volume 33, Number 3
  • Printable Issue 3 2024
  • Forestry Assistance for Woodland Owners in Indiana
  • Wildlife Success Stories in Indiana
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 10: Hooded Warbler
  • Tips for First-Time Buyers of Real Christmas Trees
  • From Dream to Reality: Bryan Schmeiser's Journey
  • Ask The Steward Number 3 2024
  • Days Gone By Number 3 2024
2024 Volume 33, Number 2
  • Printable Issue 2 2024
  • An Interview with a Forester – Dan Ernst
  • 2023 Outdoor Laboratory of the Year
  • 2023 Indiana Tree Farmer of the Year
  • The EQIP program promotes native plant diversity
  • Deer Impact Toolbox – Deer Impacts
  • The Birders’Dozen Profile 9:Eastern Whip-poor-will
  • Enriching Log Landings to Benefit the Native Bees
  • Technology Corner – Merlin Bird ID App
  • Ask the Steward Volume 2, 2024
2024-Volume 33, Number 1
  • Printable Issue 1 2024
  • 2023 Ind Consulting Foresters Timber Price Report
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 7: Eastern Screech-Owl
  • Forest Management is for the Birds!
  • Flowering Dogwood
  • The PHiLL Project:
  • Ask The Steward Volume 1 2024
  • Soil and Water Conservation District 2024
2023 Volume 32 Issue 3 of The Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue 3 2023
  • Bats are Crucial to a Healthy Forest
  • Bats, Caves, and Forests
  • Restoring Sustainability for White Oak
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 8: Yellow-billed Cuckoo
  • The Sentinel Landscapes Partnership
  • Southern Indiana Sentinel Landscape
  • Ask the Steward 2023 Issue 3
  • Days Gone By 2023 Issue 3
2023 Volume 32 Issue 2 of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Issue 2 2023
  • 2022 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Timber
  • Private Land Conservation: Classified Forest
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 6: Wood Thrush
  • Early Years of Indiana’s Forestry Movement - John
  • New Foresters Directory Available
  • Pignut Hickory
  • Days Gone By 2023 Issue 2
2023 Volume 32, Number 1
  • Printable Issue Volume 1 2023
  • Early Years of Indiana’s Forestry Movement 1
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 5: Yellow-breasted Chat
  • Coyotes ‘Make a Go of It’ in Indiana
  • Foresters Honored with Statewide Award
  • 2021 Outdoor Laboratory of the Year
  • Woodland Owners Honored for their Stewardship
  • Ask the Steward 2023 Volume 1
Summer Issue 2022 (Volume 31, NO. 2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Summer 2022
  • Pawpaws: Winding Road to Pawpaw Heaven
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 4: Worm-eating Warbler
  • Assessing White-tailed Deer Browsing in Woodlands
  • Tapping into Our Roots
  • Basics of Maple Syrup Production – Indiana
  • The Licensed Timber Buyer Law
  • 2021 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • 2021 Indiana Tree Farmer of the Year
  • Mechanized Harvesters are the Future of Logging
  • Days Gone By Summer 2022
Spring Issue 2022 (Volume 31, No. 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • 2021 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Report
  • Best Management Practices Indiana’s State Forest
  • Ecological Restoration on the Hoosier NF
  • Remote Sensing, Digital Tech Advance Tools
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile: Baltimore Oriole
  • Landowners Needed for Survey of Invasive
  • Ask the Steward: Spring 2022
Winter Issue 2021 (volume 30, No 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Winter 2021
  • Presidents Message Winter 2021
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 2: American Woodcock
  • ID That Tree – Shingle Oak
  • Healthy Forests, Healthy Markets
  • Using Harvests and Fire to Promote Oak Reproductio
  • Your Woodland is Your Legacy
  • White Oak Initiative Releases Critical Action Plan
  • Should We Be Concerned About Coyotes?
  • Ask the Steward Winter 2021
Summer Issue 2021 (Volume 30, No. 2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Summer 2021
  • Spotted Lanternfly Found in Indiana
  • The 17-Year Cicada Emergence is Wrapped up
  • Cave Spring Farm—Working in the Morning
  • Clark State Forest—Then and Now
  • Hardwood Economics & Industry Update
  • The Birders’ Dozen Profile 1:Red-headed Woodpecker
  • Woods on Wheels
  • Ask the Steward Summer 2021
Spring Issue 2021 (Volume 30, No. 1) of the Wooldand Steward
  • Printable Issue Spring 2021
  • Letter from the Editor
  • Indiana’s Future Forests
  • Indiana’s Opportunity to Become a Leader
  • Climate Change Challenges for Forest Land
  • Environmental Performance of Wood and Wood Product
  • Wood Utilization, Product Development
  • Drift Watch
  • When Smoke Gets in Their Eyes!
  • Earl McCleerey Receives Recognition
  • New Foresters Directory Available
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2021
  • Days Gone By Spring 2021
Summer Issue 2020 (Volume 29, No. 2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Summer 2020
  • 2020 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Report
  • Woodland Management – Plan not Panic
  • Restore Prairie on Your Property
  • Yellowwood Cladrastis kentukea Restoration
  • Ask the Steward Summer 2020
  • Days Gone By Summer 2020
Spring Issue 2020 (Volume 29, No. 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Spring 2020
  • Woodland Owner Supply Chains
  • Preventing Deer Damage to Trees
  • Supply Chain
  • How to Select Merchantable Walnut Stumps
  • Fire in the Forest: Part 1
  • Bob Burke Serves Society of American Foresters
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2020
Winter Issue 2019 (Volume 28, No.3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Winter 2019
  • 2019 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • 2019 Indiana Tree Farmer of the Year
  • 2019 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • Into the Woods
  • Great Blue Herons
  • Cooperative Invasive Species Management Areas
  • Reversing Ruffed Grouse Declines in Indiana
  • 2019 Outdoor Laboratory of the Year
  • Ask the Steward winter 2019
  • Days Gone By Winter 2019
Fall Issue 2019 (Volume 28, Number 2)
  • Printable Issue Fall 2019
  • 2019 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Timber
  • Green Snakes in Your Woods?
  • Conservation Program Engages Women Landowners
  • Post-Harvest Blues
  • New Resources in the Battle Against Invasive Plant
  • A Simple Guide to Indiana Forest Products Prices
  • Days Gone By Fall 2019
Spring Issue 2019 ( Volume 28, Number 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Spring 2019
  • WSI Presidents Letter 2019
  • A Spring Time Evaluation of Your Woodland
  • Indiana Hardwood Strategy
  • About a Woods in North Central Indiana
  • 2018 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • 2018 Indiana Tree Farmer of the Year
  • Tick-Borne Diseases of Indiana
  • Protect Yourself this Season
  • Permanent Forest Openings Provide Early Succession
  • Terrestrial Invasive Species Rule Update
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2019
  • Spring 2019 Days Gone By
Winter Issue 2018 (Volume 27, Number 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Winter 2018
  • 2018 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • APPLE – Not Just a Fruit Anymore
  • Beneficial Forest Management Practices for Bats
  • Wintertime Invasive Plant Attack
  • Winter Tree Identification
  • Snags and Cavity Trees
  • Ask the Steward Winter 2018
  • Indiana Association of Consulting Foresters
Fall Issue 2018 (Volume 27, Number 2)of the Indiana Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Fall 2018
  • 2018 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Report
  • Conserving the Rare Cerulean Warbler in Indiana
  • Sierra Club and Audubon say Active Forestry
  • Sidebar: What is a Shelterwood Harvest?
  • Thousand Cankers Disease: An Indiana Perspective
  • A Foe, Insidious and Merciless is Advancing
  • Ask the Steward Fall 2018
  • Days Gone By Fall 2018
Spring Issue 2018 (Volume 27, No. 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Spring 2018
  • Presidents Letter Spring 2018
  • Sustainable Trails Program
  • Invasive Species Watch – Mile-a-Minute Vine
  • 2017 Tree Farmer of the Year
  • EQIP Financial Assistance for Woodland Owners
  • Indiana Terrestrial Invasive Species Rule Update
  • Mark your property: ‘Purple Paint Law’ in effect
  • Support Forest Owners in the Farm Bill
  • Forest Inventory Programs
  • Days Gone By Spring 2018
Winter Issue 2018 (Volume 26, No. 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Winter 2018
  • 2017 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • Bourbon – Kentucky’s Aged Spirit
  • Wild Pigs: Nature’s Unwanted House Guest!
  • Management of Indiana State Forests
  • Contribution Agreements – Fight Invasive Plants
Summer Issue 2017 (Volume 26, #2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Summer 2017
  • Indiana Consulting Foresters Timber Price Report
  • Regeneration Openings
  • Timber Sale Process on the Hoosier National Forest
  • Ecological Effects of White-tailed Deer
  • They Can’t See the Trees for the Forest?
  • Coyotes Around the Home – Should You Be Concerned?
  • Ask The Steward Summer 2017
  • Days Gone By Summer 2017
Spring 2017 (Volume 26, Number 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Spring 2017
  • The Ugly of Forest Management
  • Utilization of American Black Walnut Plantation
  • 2016 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • Tree Farmer of the Year
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2017
  • The Callery Pear – Friend or Foe?
  • Private Woodland Owners and Invasive Plants
  • Days Gone By Spring 2017
Winter Issue 2016 (Volume 25, No. 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Winter 2016
  • 2016 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • Managing Forests for Birds in Indiana
  • The State Forest Timber Sale Process
  • Controlling Ailanthus
  • Scout Oak Trees to Identify the Best Mast Producer
  • Ask the Steward Winter 2016
Summer Issue 2016 (Volume 26, No. 2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Summer 2016 PDF
  • 2016 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Timber
  • Stopping the Sale of Invasive Plants in Indiana –
  • Black Bears and Other Large Predators in Indiana
  • Tree Farm: The Sign of Good Forestry
  • Forest Management Plan: The Key to Cost Share Fund
  • Indiana State Forest Facts
  • Indiana Family Forest Owners Rule
  • A Snapshot of a WSI Member Organization
  • Ask the Steward Summer 2016
  • Days Gone By Summer 2016
Spring 2016 (Volume 25, Number 1)
  • Printable Issue Spring 2016 PDF
  • Forest Management is the Right Thing to Do
  • Invasive Vegetation Control Costs
  • 2015 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • The Other Silent Spring – Disappearing Birds
  • Project to Help Restore Indiana Forests, Habitat
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2016
  • Thousand Cankers Disease – Update
  • Property Tax Assessment of Indiana’s Woodlands
  • Days Gone By Spring 2016
Fall 2015 (Volume 24, Number 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue Fall 2015 PDF
  • 2015 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • A Brief Biography of a Forester
  • Love the Landscape
  • Pollinator’s Who They Are
  • Trees are Important for Pollinators too
  • National Forests Practice Multiple Use Management
  • Soil and Water Conservation District Supporters
Summer Issue 2015 (Volume 24, Number 2) of the Woodland Stewasd
  • Printable Issue PDF Summer 2015
  • 2015 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Price
  • Thinning Mixed Hardwood Plantings
  • When Smoke Gets in Their Eyes!
  • Reducing Your Risk: The Firewood Factor
  • Thousand Cankers Disease and Black Walnut
  • Ask the Steward Summer 2015
  • Days Gone By Summer 2015
Spring Issue 2015 (Volume 24, No. 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue PDF Spring 2015
  • President’s Letter 2015
  • Northern Long-Eared Bat Listed
  • The Value of Endangered Species
  • Invasive Species – How Do They Impact
  • A Recipe for Success: Otter
  • A Regulated Trapping Season for River Otter
  • Bats Exploit Dynamic Forests
  • Woodland Steward Prescribed Grazing
  • 2014 Indiana Logger of the Year
  • Days Gone By Spring 2015
Winter Issue 2014 (Volume 23, No. 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue PDF Winter 2014
  • 2014 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • Persimmon
  • A Successful Timber Harvest in Morgan County
  • A New Old Tool for Battling Invasive Vegetation?
  • Plan Now, Benefit Later: Invasive Species Best
  • Ask the Steward Winter 2014
Fall Issue 2014 (Volume 23, Number 2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Issue PDF
  • 2014 Indiana Consulting Foresters Price Report
  • Regeneration Cutting on Private Woodlands
  • MyLandPlan
  • Water Bar for Continuous Use Road
  • Forestry Best Management Practices
  • Invasive Species Best Management Practices
  • Ask The Steward Fall 2014
  • Days Gone By Fall 2014
Spring Issue 2014 (Volume 23, Number 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Current Issue PDF
  • Letter from the President 2014
  • Outlook for Ash in Your Forest
  • How To Choose a Forester
  • Armadillos in Indiana?
  • Indiana Wildland Firefighters
  • Using smart Phones to Report Invasive Species
  • Sassafras
  • Protecting Young Trees From Deer Damage
  • Enjoy Our Spring "Symphony"
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2014
Fall Issue 2013 (Volume 22, No.3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Fall 2013 Issue PDF
  • 2013 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • Effect of EAB on Ash Wood Quality
  • Fire and Woodland Management
  • Forest Management at NSWC Crane
  • See the Forest For the Trees
  • Ask the Steward Fall 2013
  • Soil and Water Conservation District
Summer Issue 2013(Volume 22, Number 2) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Current Issue PDF
  • 2013 Indiana Consulting Foresters Stumpage Timber
  • Invasive Vines in Indiana—Be On the Lookout!
  • Bobcats in Indiana
  • Help the Hellbender
  • Pathway to Water Quality
  • Rare Beauty – The Yellowwood Tree
  • Ask the Steward Summer 2013
  • Days Gone By Summer 2013
Spring Issue 2013 (Volume 22, No. 1) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Current Issue PDF
  • Letter from the President 2013
  • Celebrating 100 years Forestry at Purdue
  • Bats in Your Woods
  • Your Maple--Next on the Menu?
  • Conserving Federally Endangered Indiana Bats
  • Conservation Go Point
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2013
  • Days Gone By Spring 2013
Fall Issue 2012 (Volume 21, No. 3) of the Woodland Steward
  • Printable Current Issue PDF
  • 2012 Indiana Forest Products Price Report
  • Getting Stoned
  • Indiana Woodland Steward-Who Reads It
  • Bald Eagles in Indiana
  • The Clean Water Act and Your Woodland
  • Ask The Steward Fall 2012
  • Indiana SWCS's Contribute
  • Days Gone By Fall 2012
Summer 2012 Issue (Volume 21, No. 2) of the Woodland Steward
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  • 2012 Indiana Consulting Foresters Price Report
  • Ask the Steward summer 2012
  • SO YOU WANT TO HAVE YOUR PROPERTY SURVEYED
  • The 3 Ps of Oak Regeneration
  • Implementing the 3Ps of Oak Regeneration
  • New Programs and Changes to Deer Season
  • Days Gone By Summer 2012
Spring Issue 2012 (Volume 21, No. 1) of the Woodland Steward
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  • Message from the President 2012
  • Ask the Steward Spring 2012
  • Indiana's Forest Resource in 2012
  • Hardwood Markets
  • New Indiana Law Limits Liability
  • Edge Feathering
  • Timber Sales 101
  • 2011 Indiana Tree Farm Committee Awards
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New Programs and Changes to Deer Season Geared Toward Helping Landowners Manage Deer

By Chad Stewart

There are some changes to Indiana’s deer hunting season that should provide landowners with added flexibility in helping manage deer and deer hunters on their property. They provide hunters more time, equipment choices, and opportunities to harvest additional deer throughout the season. You could even make the argument that one program is even geared toward helping get non-hunters a deer too!

The archery seasons will now be joined into one continuous season, eliminating the traditional 5-day break between the early and late archery season that previously existed. Crossbows will also be allowed throughout the archery season for the first time without restrictions, which should increase the number of hunters hunting during the early portion of the season. Both changes give landowners and woodland managers greater opportunities to recruit hunters and hunting efforts, which could result in an increased deer harvest in October and early November, a critical period for controlling the browsing of tree seedlings in the agricultural Midwest.

Increased herbivory on tree seedlings has proven to coincide with crop harvest, which is typically done in early October. During the growing season, agricultural crops provide a nearly unlimited food source for deer, and growing corn and soybeans provide dense cover for fawning, allowing deer to disperse throughout much of the landscape. However, from a deer’s standpoint, cover disappears dramatically within a 2- to 3-week period due to the fall agricultural harvest. The seasonal influx of deer into forested cover following crop harvest concentrates deer, making tree seedlings more susceptible to herbivory.

Herbivory can remove valuable nutrients such as Nitrogen and Phosphorous from the tree prior to leaf senescence, preventing reabsorption of nutrients and negatively impacting plant fitness. Prolonged exposure to herbivory under high deer densities may ultimately limit recruitment by preventing some seedlings from growing to reproductive status. Putting more hunters in the woods during the archery season and emphasizing earlier deer hunting may benefit landowners experiencing intense seedling damage.

In urban deer zones, hunters will now be required to take an antlerless deer prior to taking an urban zone buck, which is commonly referred to as an Earn-A-Buck restriction. The urban deer zone season will also be extended from September 15 through January 31 instead of ending on the first Sunday in January as in the past. This is one of the most intensive methods for reducing deer herds, and is strictly geared toward lowering deer densities. Though this is not a restriction that applies to all hunters (only those who hunt in an urban deer zone with an urban deer zone license), it focuses hunting pressure on removing more does and limits the number of hunters taking a second buck, which does not contribute to population control. If you are a landowner experiencing deer problems, you may want to consider implementing this restriction on your property regardless of whether you reside in an urban deer zone or not.

If you don’t feel enough deer have been removed off your property during the traditional archery, firearms, or muzzleloader seasons this year, landowners will now have an additional chance to have hunters take even more antlerless deer before the end of the hunting season. A special antlerless firearms season, beginning after Christmas (December 26) and continuing through the first Sunday in January, allows hunters an opportunity to go out and try one more time to get an antlerless deer. This season will be available in most, but not all, counties. Only counties with a bonus antlerless designation of 4 or more will be allowed to participate in the special antlerless firearms season.

We are anticipating significant participation with our new bundle license. Indiana deer hunters will have the opportunity to purchase a deer bundle license which allows them to take up to three deer throughout any season under this new bundle license. The bundle license will allow hunters to take up to 2 antlerless deer and 1 antlered deer in any deer season. This is a tremendous advantage to hunters who hunt in multiple seasons, and gives them an easy way to purchase one license that is good for all seasons. We are hoping it provides an impetus for hunters to harvest deer early, as they will now have 3 licenses in their hand from day one, rather than systematically buying licenses throughout the season. If hunters don’t have a need for 3 deer, they can always donate one of their deer using our new game matching program.

GiveIN Game (http://www.in.gov/dnr/fishwild/7240.htm), the DNR’s game matching program, has been set up to help non-hunters, or even unsuccessful deer hunters, an opportunity to get a deer from successful hunters. Previously, most venison donation programs are designed to provide venison to food shelters. Though this is a notable and charitable cause, the act of donation can be inconvenient to many hunters since participating deer processors are scattered throughout the landscape, and in some cases, hunters are required to pay for some or all of the processing costs. In reality, there are people throughout the state who are interested in obtaining and consuming venison, but are otherwise unable to obtain it. GiveIN Game attempts to match up successful deer hunters with people who want a deer by providing individuals a forum to contact each other and meet up in exchange of venison. Hunters and recipients can search each other by county and can make contact by phone or email. Donated deer can be in any form, from a field dressed animal, to processed and packaged meat. This program allows hunters to get back to the meaning of hunting, providing food for fellow members in the community who are interested or dependent upon getting free, nutritious protein.

These changes, if employed on your property, should increase the deer harvest during the early season and relieve the browsing pressure experienced by tree seedlings during the autumn months. Hunters will have the opportunity to participate earlier in the hunting season, have their hunting season extended, and have the opportunity to share the benefits of their successful hunt with a broader audience in Indiana. Promoting hunting on your property and having hunters take advantage of these new rules can directly benefit all woodland owners and their neighbors.

Chad Stewart is a deer research biologist with the Indiana DNR, Division of Fish and Wildlife.

Tag » When Does Deer Season Start In Indiana