geiset Report post Posted August 5, 2010 While at work today my boss was hikin a line over from me and found this three point shed with grown into the tree. It must have been very old because it had leikin growing on it and it supposed to take many years for it to start growing on stuff! Just thought I'd post this awesome find today. And the other picture is of a little snake we found eating a horny toad! work_pics.zip Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
GameHauler Report post Posted August 5, 2010 Thats COOL Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
bowhuntaz1 Report post Posted August 5, 2010 I liked the pic of the snake at dinner time... thanks for sharing Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TAM Report post Posted August 5, 2010 Makes me wonder if the deer lost it in the tree or if someone picked it up and stuck it there? The snake kind of reminds me of Rosie O'donnel and a box of Krispy Kreams! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wackycouesaddict Report post Posted August 5, 2010 Very cool pics thanks for sharing Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
geiset Report post Posted August 5, 2010 I think it was shed like that because it was still touching the ground and you could see where a branch caught it and it has grown that way for years. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CouesWhitetail Report post Posted August 5, 2010 Wow, very cool!! And I would guess the shed fell that way. That's a great find! Thanks so much for sharing it with us. And very cool snake/horned lizard pic. Just saw a horned lizard like that yesterday...only it was my dog trying to eat it not a snake Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jackal Report post Posted August 5, 2010 Thanks for sharing the pics. We seen some horny toads when we went hiking around Show Low. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
oz31p Report post Posted August 5, 2010 cool shed but i think that snake is going to choke. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
.270 Report post Posted August 5, 2010 i've seen several like that over the years. found a nice 4x4 muley set in an ocotillo once. they were grown into it pretty good. in unit 27 there is a place called saunder's cabin. there is a big 6 point shed that someone nailed to the tree by the first eyeguard by hammering a couple horseshoes around it. it has been there long enough that the entire base and first eyeguard are grown into the tree. at least 45 years that i know of. i think that the one in the photo is there naturally. unless it was a midget, a guy woulda put it up higher. those young trees grow pretty fast. it was probably quite small when the antler was shed. nature is pretty cool. anything that can happen, will. Lark. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Santana Outdoors Report post Posted August 5, 2010 Thanks cool, We had a tree in front of our home here is Payson that I used as my "Antler Tree" for over 20 years, when we moved I had to leave a handful of them there because the tree grew around them. One I was very fond of, a 120" coues I found in 1984. But would of had to break it to get it out. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
SO I HUNT Report post Posted August 5, 2010 That is very cool! I've never seen one like that Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
billrquimby Report post Posted August 6, 2010 i've seen several like that over the years. found a nice 4x4 muley set in an ocotillo once. they were grown into it pretty good. in unit 27 there is a place called saunder's cabin. there is a big 6 point shed that someone nailed to the tree by the first eyeguard by hammering a couple horseshoes around it. it has been there long enough that the entire base and first eyeguard are grown into the tree. at least 45 years that i know of. i think that the one in the photo is there naturally. unless it was a midget, a guy woulda put it up higher. those young trees grow pretty fast. it was probably quite small when the antler was shed. nature is pretty cool. anything that can happen, will. Lark. Lark: Saunders Cabin rang my chimes. In the late 1960s there was a major winterkill of deer in that portion of Unit 27. I hunted elk from horseback in the Strayhorse, Chitty Creek/Baldy Bill,/Rose Peak area that next fall and there were skeletens of whitetails and mule deer literally every 200-300 yards down every canyon. My friends and I climbed off and grabbed the best heads and carried them until we found better ones. We then hung the discards in trees all over that unit, and I came home with three or four whopper heads. One of the mule deer I found is listed in the AWF record book as a pickup. Bill Quimby Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
AZelkhunter Report post Posted August 6, 2010 I always throw dink sheds in a tree or cactus just to bug the next person that finds them. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites