Blacktail Deer (Columbian) in Oregon
hunting regulations.
Hunting regulations change. The information on this page reflects what we know about species presence and hunt availability based on state agency listings. For current season dates, bag limits, weapon restrictions, tag requirements, and reporting obligations, verify directly with Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. You are responsible for confirming current regulations before hunting.
Blacktail Deer (Columbian) is general season in Oregon. The agency above sets season dates, bag limits, and zone boundaries — those change yearly. Verify before you hunt.
About the species
Columbian blacktail deer occupy the wet Pacific coastal forests from the Cascades west to the ocean, from Northern California through Oregon and into Washington. They are a subspecies of mule deer, smaller-bodied, and adapted to dense Douglas fir and coastal brush. Hunters who know whitetail patterns find blacktails frustratingly different — they live in cover so thick that visibility is measured in feet, and they move on patterns shaped by clearcut age, elevation, and rainfall.
Most blacktail hunting is general-season with archery and modern firearm windows. The rut runs mid-November and produces the year's best opportunity to catch a mature buck moving in daylight. Coastal ranges typically don't migrate; transition zones near the Cascade crest see seasonal elevation shifts. Habitat work — clearcut age, browse availability, and access — drives most regional buck quality.
Other deer in Oregon
Want the picture for this species across every state? See Blacktail Deer (Columbian) regulations by state. Or browse every huntable species in Oregon.