To everyone else, the agency says: wear orange out there.
I found this interesting tidbit from the South Carolina DNR about deer-shooting accuracy, which is another way of saying this is not the best time to be out in the woods, even in state parks of which you are a partial owner:
We determined that on this study site, the mean distance of shots taken at deer was 132 yards and that there was a significant difference between shots that resulted in a deer (127 yds.) and those resulting in a miss (150 yds.).
Overall it required 603 shots to harvest 493 deer resulting in 81.7 percent shooting success.So around 20% of those deer-hunting shots missed. How far did they go? These buckets can travel long distances and carry plenty of punch.
Maybe the average distance-to-hit-rate varies in Wisconsin a little from South Carolina, maybe not.
But if you throw in the other 2013 pro-hunter change - - more land opened to deer hunting in relatively more-populated counties - - and it's clear that WI officials are allowing more hunting near more people on more land than in years past.
Risks the DNR is apparently willing to take.
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