Three deer friends

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  • Kevin Zini snags a photo of three bucks grazing in a field during a late August evening. Deer antlers can grow up to an inch a day, making their tissue among the fastest growing on the planet. Antlers start growing in springtime and continue gaining size through late summer. By fall, antlers are full grown and begin to harden. Males use their antlers to compete for food or a mate as well as protection.

    Kevin Zini snags a photo of three bucks grazing in a field during a late August evening. Deer antlers can grow up to an inch a day, making their tissue among the fastest growing on the planet. Antlers start growing in springtime and continue gaining size through late summer. By fall, antlers are full grown and begin to harden. Males use their antlers to compete for food or a mate as well as protection.

    Kevin Zini snags a photo of three bucks grazing in a field during a late August evening. Deer antlers can grow up to an inch a day, making their tissue among the fastest growing on the planet. Antlers start growing in springtime and continue gaining size through late summer. By fall, antlers are full grown and begin to harden. Males use their antlers to compete for food or a mate as well as protection.
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Kevin Zini snags a photo of three bucks grazing in a field during a late August evening. Deer antlers can grow up to an inch a day, making their tissue among the fastest growing on the planet. Antlers start growing in springtime and continue gaining size through late summer. By fall, antlers are full grown and begin to harden. Males use their antlers to compete for food or a mate as well as protection.