drop t It was 5:49 p.m. on Aug. 21 when Mike Streich's trail camera snapped the now-famous photo - a monster drop-tine buck in velvet, walking along a trail in the Allegheny National Forest in Elk County. It wouldn't be the last of the about 65 images Streich's camera would capture of the buck over six occasions, twice at night. And Streich, of Ridgway, wouldn't be the only one to get the buck on camera. But as Streich's photo - submitted in the first of three rounds of the Game Commission's inaugural Big Buck Trail Cam Contest - spread across the Internet, it grabbed its rightful share of attention. 2 Doubters speculated the photo came from another state, or maybe even from behind a chain-link fence. Of course, that wouldn't explain how multiple people could have it on camera. Or the slew of other photos of impressive bucks that were snapped in the same area. And with the crack of a rifle on the opening morning of the firearms deer season, the legend of Drop Tine was cemented as fact. Camera Crosser Streich's Aug. 21 photo wasn't the first to be taken of Drop Tine Lawrence County Wildlife Conserva-