Definition of a raghorn

undercover

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 2, 2019
Messages
229
Location
Michigan
Is a raghorn by definition a young bull with small or thin antlers or is it antlers that just aren’t quite symmetrical, or is it just a bull with antlers that are not appealing to the eye of the beholder? I hear this term in so many hunting episodes. Being a Midwest whitetail guy I am just trying to understand all the lingo of western elk hunting. Hek, Not that long ago I learned what a scree field is, along with knobs benches and saddles. Some might just take all that for granted. Applied for my first western hunt and just trying to learn all I can.

Thanks in advance!
 
Mine from last season. Probably 2 1/2
+1
e.png
 
A guy I used to work with called them “brush heads,” but he’s the only one I’ve heard use that term. I think jvanhoy’s description is spot on
 
Aged this raghorn as 2 at the lab. In my experience 1 year old is a spike, 2 year olds are rag horns 3-4 is going to be a small bull that most guys will be satisfied with (5-6 point 250”-270”).
 

Attachments

  • C923D384-9FE7-4798-8EDC-32548D5A890F.jpeg
    C923D384-9FE7-4798-8EDC-32548D5A890F.jpeg
    1.4 MB · Views: 55
Horns can vary. Over the years I've killed two calves that had 10" spikes. One year I killed a yearling that was a 4x5 and was in velvet the last day of the season.
I have always just lumped those mis- shaped thin boned racks as raghorns.

For age - rough technique look a the ivories. Calf - none. Yearling - hollow ivories. Third year - solid ivories but no color. Between 4 and 5 they start to show a little color. After that you start to see flattening (wear) and good color.
 
Ollin Magnetic Digiscoping Systems

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
111,225
Messages
1,951,672
Members
35,087
Latest member
dotun77
Back
Top