Can
you identify what's in this photo?
Each Wednesday morning
on Camp Lutherlyn's Facebook page
the Lutherlyn Environmental
Education Program posts a photo.
Readers
have all morning and afternoon
to
make their best guess about what the photo is.
Around
6 pm LEEP provides the answer and a brief explanation.
Each
week's What is it Wednesday post
will
also be posted on the Nature of Lutherlyn blog,
after it is posted on Facebook,
sometimes
with additional bonus information.
In
addition to bringing you current editions of What is it Wednesday
on the
Nature of Lutherlyn blog,
we
will be reposting old editions,
creating
a What is it Wednesday archive.
This photo was posted as a What is it Wednesday on
January 27, 2021.
And
the answer is....
Most buck rubs are made during mating season, roughly October-December. The buck leaves its scent on the tree by rubbing against scent glands that are at the base of the antlers. This tells does and other bucks that a male ready to mate is in the area.
Some buck rubs are created in late summer when bucks are losing their “velvet” (a layer of skin with fine hairs that covers the antlers while they are growing). Bucks may rub their antlers against trees to help remove the velvet when it is ready to come off.
Though
buck rubs are generally created between September and December, they can remain
visible all year long. Here at Lutherlyn we mostly see buck rubs on trees about
the size of the one in the photo – about 4-6 inches in diameter - but bucks will
rub on trees both smaller and larger than that.
Amazingly, antlers are grown and shed every year. This is the time of year bucks begin to shed their antlers. Keep an eye out on the forest floor over the next few months and maybe you’ll find some shed antlers!
Like and follow Camp Lutherlyn on
Facebook, to see What is it Wednesday posts when
they come out and have the opportunity to share your guesses in the comments!