A hunting story

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gspn

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Years ago I hunted nothing but public land around Oxford MS and the University of Mississippi. To say that the area was “pressured” would be an understatement. Over the years I’ve had 4-wheelers, dogs, walkers, hikers, hunters, and even bullets come by me while hunting. As pressured as it was though...it was free.

Back when I was hunting this land the rule was that you couldn’t shoot a doe. There was one day per year scheduled as a “doe day” and as you might imagine...the doe somehow got wind of the schedule every year and they took that day off. So it was bucks only and there was tons of pressure.

I didn’t have much in the way of equipment back then either...I was in college and all the money I earned went to pay the rent and tuition. I frequently hunted to the verge of hypothermia because I simply didn’t have the money to buy warmer gear. I hunted from the ground in makeshift blinds, I stalked, and used the occasional low tree branch to my advantage. I had a good rifle though, and my determination was top notch and with that combination a lot of good things can happen.

One morning I decided to hunt a field we called Praying Mantis due to the fact that we once saw a big mantis stuck in an ant hill getting devoured by thousands of fire ants. This was a long narrow field on top of a hill that had a power line trail cutting across it right where you entered the field. So you climb up a slight slope, and when you step onto the long narrow field you can look straight down the length of it to the other end, or you can look right and left to look down the power line trail.

That morning I had decided to set up on the power line trail and hope that a buck might come creeping across where I had found some sign. I was about 150 yards down the power line and if I looked back up the hill I could just see the edge of it...but couldn’t see onto it.

The power line trail was maybe 40 yards wide and while it was fairly clear in the middle, the edges where it transitions back to the woods were all choked up with thick vegetation. There was no way I could sit on the ground as the visibility would be very restricted.

Looking around for my next best option all I saw were tall limbless trees. Well...they were limbless until you got to about 15 feet up the trunk...then there were limbs...but they offered nothing in the way of limbs you might be able to climb with. I loved the spot and didn’t want to abandon it, but I had seemingly no options. As I stood there with a burning desire to hunt this spot it occurred to me that I might be able to bear-hug the tree and inch my way up the trunk until I could grab a limb at the 12 to 15 foot level. Once I did that I could wrestle my way up into a better spot.

I stood at the base of a likely tree with my hands on my hips and my head cocked like a dog working an algebra problem. I thought my plan could work, but the closer I got to executing it the more ridiculous it seemed. If you doubt me, just walk out back and bear hug a tree...feet off the ground...see if you can climb a few feet up the trunk. My best plan is to throw my arms and legs around this tree trunk, and then try to shimmy up it like a caterpillar. I had nothing else to do, and no better options so I tied a rope to my gun and the other end to my belt...and up I went. The first few feet of the climb were pretty awkward, the next few feet really hurt, the next few feet gave way to a glimmer of hope that this might actually work. Slowly and painfully I was closing in on the lowest branch of the tree. It was about 12 feet off the ground. Now that I was getting close I realized I had to figure out a way to get on the branch. Was I going to ease out onto it in a pull-up position? Would I try to get an elbow over it? I really wasn’t sure and the closer I got the more important the decision seemed. Through the fog of time I really can’t recall how I made the transition but I know that I did because for the next three hours I stood on that branch holding my rifle.

I stood atop a three inch wide branch with one foot in front of the other and my back pressed up against the tree trunk. I had another limb to my left at around elbow height that I used to steady myself so I wouldn’t fall out of the tree. All in all it was a stable, if uncomfortable, perch with a dynamite view of the area I wanted to hunt. From this vantage point I could see a long way down the power line trail in both directions. To my right the trail rose gradually, and then more steeply as it approached the bean field. To my left it just continued to fade away downhill.

This was perfect. I had a good chance of busting any buck that came creeping around this trail. Once I got settled in I realized just how nice a day it was. There were high blue skies, sunshine, and crisp cold air...just what the doctor ordered for a Saturday morning. If I didn’t fall to my death then this could become one hunt to remember.

Sadly a few hours went by with no activity at all. Around 11:00 AM I heard a car door slam, then another, then another. Ugh...public land. Not 5 minutes later I see three hunters up the hill on the field. I can hear that they are talking but I can’t make out the words. Two continue down the bean field and out of sight, but one starts walking straight down the power line trail toward me. Ugh...public land.

In short order he was right in front of me and I called out “Good morning.” He came to an abrupt and startled halt. He looked around for a moment trying to figure out where the voice had come from and I again called out “hey...” He looked up and stood there speechless for a few seconds with his head cocked like a dog trying to work an algebra problem. When he finally spoke he asked “How did you get up there?!?”

“I climbed.” Came my reply as if I do this sort of thing every day.

“Well, we’re about to do a drive...you ought to stay right there ‘cause you might get a shot in a few minutes.”

“OK...thanks.” I said. Then he moved on down the trail.

I didn’t see or hear anything for the next forty minutes, at which time I saw the hunter come by again. 

“We’re going to head out, too bad we didn’t see nothing”.

“Yep” I replied. His friends had pulled a truck up onto the field and I watched him climb the hill to meet them. The truck doors slammed a few more times and they all drove away.

I stood in my tree pondering my next move. It had already been a slow morning, then these guys showed up and burned the area all around my stand by stomping through it, then they had actually driven onto the field and slammed their doors a bunch of times. This place was dead...I would be better off by going to down for lunch and trying someplace else this afternoon.

I unloaded my gun, put the scope cover on, and lowered it to the ground. I then bear hugged the tree, and reversed the shimmying process while trying to protect the more delicate parts of my body that were in danger of serving as a friction brake as I slowly slid down to the ground. If I did this wrong I might never have kids. It crossed my mind that bears make this look a LOT easier when they do it.

Finally back on the ground I dusted all of the loose bark off my clothes, quickly admired all of the scrapes on my arms, slung my rifle and started the climb to the field on top of the hill.

I was so hungry that my stomach was gnawing on my backbone. My lunch options were flowing through my mind as I stared at the ground in front of me and put one foot in front of the other. Pizza hut? Nice salad bar. All you can eat too. crunch. McDonalds? Agh...too fat. Wait...what was that “crunch”? I stopped in my tracks trying to determine if I had actually heard something. After about 10 seconds of listening I wrote it off and started marching again. Slowly the lip of the field was approaching. Once I got the edge of this narrow field all I had to do was turn left and it was all downhill to the truck...and to food.

Finally my head was coming onto the same level as the field and I could see further across it. Slowly I was marching and slowly it was all coming into view. Just about the time I was able to see the whole field I saw it. Right there...right...in front...of me. At high noon, in broad daylight, on public ground, on a field that had received all kinds of noise and pressure...was the biggest buck I had ever seen. He had his back to me and he was absolutely thrashing a sapling. I’ll never forget it...it was a “Y” shaped sapling and the widest part of the “Y” was getting wrecked every time he threw his head up. Those antlers were stripping bark from this poor sapling. This tree hadn’t even had much of a start on life...and the only thing that could save it was me.

Time began to move in slow motion. Right about the time I realized what was happening the buck had started to turn to look over his shoulder. It all happened fast but in my mind it was now a slow motion race. I could see his right eye more as he turned his head to the right. His nose was arcing through the air as those powerful neck muscles flexed. His ears, nose, and eyes were all racing to check over his shoulder.

I on the other hand was racing to unsling my rifle. I had it slung over my right shoulder for the march back to the truck. My left foot slid forward into a firing stance as my left hand raced across my body to find the sling. My right shoulder dipped, his right shoulder dipped. I needed the gun to come off my shoulder but gravity could not pull it fast enough. He started to shift his weight, my hand found the strap. Broadside...he sees me. My right hand finds the pistol grip and as I start to raise the gun to my shoulder his hind quarters explode and launch this beast into the safety of the woods just a few feet in front of him. My rifle only made it to the ready position...the butt never reached my shoulder...he was gone.

At this point my brain was still in action/confusion mode. I hadn’t yet had time to process that the deer might be gone...or my brain might have shifted into the fall-down-and-vomit mode. As I stood there on the edge of the field watching the hole in the woods next to the Y-shaped sapling where the deer had disappeared, the thought hit me...he has to go left. That deer wouldn’t go straight because there was a road at the bottom of the hill. He would probably go left and race across the power line trail...he’d have to cross 40 or 50 yards of bare ground! I ran a few more yards up the hill. I could now see the power line trail on the other side of the field. My gun was up but below my line of sight. This way I could watch with the naked eye until I saw him then lift the gun the last few inches, get him in the scope, and drop the hammer on the best public land trophy ever.

My pulse was hammering in my jugular veins...I mean it was throbbing so hard I thought my throat would explode...it was pounding so hard that it actually hurt. WHOA! THERE HE IS!!! Right on time that magnificent creature ran out into the clearing. Who knows what thoughts had formulated in his mind during this whole ordeal. I imagine he bounded a few yards into the woods, then stopped and looked back like whitetail usually do. During that pause he might have decided that he didn’t want to cross the road at the bottom of the hill. He might have even decided that crossing the power line was his ticket to freedom. Ultimately though it didn’t matter what he thought. This was my plan, this was my day...and he just ran into the most exposed place he could’ve possibly chosen.

When I saw him burst from cover I instinctively snapped the rifle up the last few inches, moving my barrel to track his movements and get the guns momentum heading the right way. This deer wasn’t bounding like they normally do when fleeing. This deer was burning a straight line like a jet powered Kentucky Derby winner. His hooves were pounding the ground and he was a streaking-blur of tan and white. Smoothly tracking him, my thumb flipped the safety forward and my brain was anticipating the sight of the crosshairs just ahead of the deer, I lowered my head until my cheek contacted the stock like I’ve done a million times before..and...WHAT!?! Where did it go? Everything went black. In the panicked confusion I thought my scope was broken or that I had momentarily gone blind. I remember thinking in that spit second that my pulse was beating so hard that I went blind...in reality it was far, far worse. As that monster southern whitetail was making the biggest mistake of his life I realized that I too was making mine...I had forgotten to remove my scope cover after climbing down from the tree.

Pound, pound, crash, POOF...he was gone. He crossed the opening and left me in his dust. He left me in confusion. He left me stunned, and heart-wrenched, and nauseous. I ran to the edge of the woods and desperately peered in...hoping and praying for a miracle I didn’t deserve. I had committed several unforgivable rookie mistakes, and this animal had made me pay dearly for them. If a deer can laugh...I bet he’s laughing to this day.

Why these lessons can’t be learned on a doe I’ll never know. I like to think that I’d learn the lesson if this happened when I was drawing down on a doe but maybe not. Maybe the bigger the opportunity that’s lost the deeper the lesson is ingrained. Maybe it’s the pain that forges the lesson. At this point I was in some serious pain. For the first time in the last few minutes since this started, the full weight of what happened hit me. I had been presented with the public-land-opportunity of a lifetime...and I had blown it. I alone was responsible for every bad thing that had happened. I had worked really hard to make this hunt work, but in the end I wasn’t disciplined enough to seal the deal. I had failed.

I wanted to lay down and puke my guts out. I felt physically ill. I had blown an opportunity of colossal proportions all because I wasn’t prepared. I had my rifle slung over my shoulder. I ignored the sounds I had heard. I was in the woods with a scope that was covered.

That buck taught me some lessons I’ll carry with me to my grave:

If you think you heard something...you did.

If you think you saw something...you did.

You are hunting from the moment you leave the truck until the moment you return.

My gun is ready until I unload it at the tailgate. I am always hunting.

That buck ran out of my life and into my dreams. The lessons learned would be driven home over the next few years by recurring nightmares of him getting away. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve thought of that deer over the years, but I can tell you that a lot of venison has gone to my freezer because of the lessons he taught me. In the end I guess that’s what counts...that buck that got away made me a much better hunter.
 
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Back about forty years ago, a group of us leased a ranch north of Uvalde, Texas. My father taught me to get ready to hunt when we entered the ranch gate, and to not quit hunting until we were leaving the gate.

So, go through the gate, uncase and load the rifles, and drive the two miles to the camphouse. Reverse at the end of the hunt session.

You never know what Bambi's gonna do--or when, or where.
 
With me it is when I take a trip to sit on a log that the deer or elk decide to come into my view.
 
The main thing is just get out there and be ready.I hunt on the ground.My largest buck was taken in mid afternoon just after I sat behind a log for an evening hunt.I was in the woods less than 20 minutes.
 
And the other rule is that you DON'T glass that deer with bino's when you have a scoped rifle.............ask me how I know that!!


Seriously tho, I have seen and killed some real trophy bucks almost precisely at noon.......when the rest of my party went back to the camp to watch a damned football game or gathered up to BS and grab a sandwich.......That time factor includes both public and heavily pressured private land.

Largest typical WT I've ever shot was at exactly noon....the football game group had left....one fella stopped by to BS with me on a long sandy straightaway road.....general bullmoose came out of a canal and with his head not a foot off the ground was looking right and left. My buddy grabbed his bino's....I grabbed the Browning. Funny thing about that kill was that we had dogged the devil out of that area just after dawn.........very small patch of woods around a cattle pen & pushed only doe's yearlings and a small spike out....That fella had to have just curled up under a palmetto clump throughout all that commotion. Pure bad luck on his part to decide to move when he did. That buck, incidentally, had to cross over three hundred yards of clear cut freshly timbered land to hit the canal but the view was obscured from us due our position.
 
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Several years ago, late in an unproductive season I was walking along a firebreak when a doe jumped from a brushpile not 10' to my left and ran about 30-40 yards just inside some thick planted pines and stopped. I was fairly certain it was a doe, but wanted desperately to put horns on her head.

When she stopped I cranked up my scope from 2X to 7X to get a good look at her just to be certain it might not be a small, but legal spike. Just as I put the scope on her a very nice buck jumped from the same brushpile not 10' from me. With the scope on 7X and at that close range I couldn't find him in the glass. Had I left it on 2X it would have been a fairly easy shot.

Stuff happens. That is why it is hunting, not shooting.
 
Seriously tho, I have seen and killed some real trophy bucks almost precisely at noon.......when the rest of my party went back to the camp to watch a damned football game or gathered up to BS and grab a sandwich.......That time factor includes both public and heavily pressured private land.

Yep...I need to make a bigger effort to hunt from 10 to 2. I don't know if those deer start moving more because of all the commotion of hunters leaving the woods...or if they start moving because the woods get quiet immediately after...or maybe those bucks got big simply because they like moving mid-day when fewer hunters are there to see them. I dunno...but I guess that finding answers to all of those questions just gives me more reasons to go hunt.
 
gspn,
These stories are so true. Anyone who hasn't experienced similar misfortune (I know I have) hasn't spent enough time in the woods. The one you posted awhile back about cottonmouths was hilarious. Shared it with many family members and friends.
 
Bigbore -

Thanks so much! Like you said...hunters have all been there. One of the interesting things to come of these stories is that the non-hunters who read them tell me they learn a lot from them. The stories let them peer into a world that they've never seen...and in many cases it changes the opinion they had on hunting.

I've got more stories like these on my blog...there's a link to it in my signature line below. If you like the last few stories you might hit the blog to see the others. Most of them are about hunting or fishing or lessons learned while in the field.

Here's one you might like about kids and hunting:



http://southernoutdoorsman.blogspot.com/2013/01/if-you-listen-you-can-hear-them-growing.html
 
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OP that was a very good story, but I didn't see where you said that you loaded the rifle after you climbed down from the tree...so the scope caps wouldn't have mattered.
 
OP that was a very good story, but I didn't see where you said that you loaded the rifle after you climbed down from the tree...so the scope caps wouldn't have mattered.

Good catch…you're the second person to catch that. I did indeed reload it, just omitted that from the write up. i just kind of skipped the unload/reload part.

I make a point to unload prior to pulling the gun up the tree. One day after pulling the rifle up through a thick cedar tree where I had to yo-yo the gun a few times to weave through the maze of branches I was shocked to see that the safety had been flipped off. My mind immediately flashed back to an incident I read about where a guy was pulling his 7 mag up loaded and shot himself. Among the list of injuries one stood out…he blew a testicle off. :what:

I never have to hear anything else about unloading prior to pulling it up…that story alone will last me a lifetime!
 
Good story. That is what makes it interesting. I have blown 3 different opportunities at trophy bucks at least. One thing to remember is that deer cannot count. They feel safe after a drive and sometimes will show themselves after everyone else leaves.
 
gspn,
Yes that story about your son was great. And congrats to Tyler for a great shot on that doe. it looked perfect.

I have been lucky enough on 3 occasions to watch close friends (grown men) turn into giddy school kids after having their first successful deer hunt. While I know that excitement cannot be matched as a father, I was still very proud. Because I was the one who started them on their journey of being bow hunters. Hours and hours and hours of question/answer sessions. Countless arrows flung. Many "unsuccessful" trips to the deer woods. Frustration of having been spotted or winded. The most god awful swarms of mosquitoes I've ever seen before. The doubt. The pep talks. All culminating into one phone call where they were barely understandable they were shaking so badly. "I got one". "Stay there. I'm on my way. Mark the spot where you shot it. Don't get down." Then watching guys that can squat 500+ lbs (no kidding) barely be able climb down a ladder their knees are shaking so badly. Making them follow the blood trail as I guide them (I have great eyes for spotting blood). Helping them get back on it when they lose the trail. And then, moment they lay eyes on the downed deer and start jumping and whooping and hollering like they just won the Super Bowl. Then helping field dress the deer. And finally driving them around to show their parents and siblings their trophies and hearing the story retold over and over. Those are real "MasterCard Moments".

As I said, I can only imagine what that feels like as a father.
 
While having similiar things happen while hunting, your story reminds ME of the first "braggin sized" smallmouth bass I ever hooked. I knew I was fishing water that held good smallies, but was having trouble hooking up. Suddenly, I felt that familiar tug, and set the hook into what was, at that point, probably the biggest smallmouth bass I'd ever seen, and certainly the biggest I'd ever hooked myself. Its football shaped body erupted from the water as I feverishly tried to keep the line tight and get him to shore. The particular shoreline I was fishing consisted of rip-rap. I worked him into shore and was just getting ready to scoop up my trophy to admire....and he spit the hook, never to seen again. Since then, I've count many fish, many of which were bigger than this one, but that incredible feeling of heartbreak after "KNOWING" you had it made is something no true sportsman will ever forget. I'd have released the fish regardless, but at that point, I wanted nothing more than to hold it and admire it for a moment before returning it to the water....
 
gspn,
I have been lucky enough on 3 occasions to watch close friends (grown men) turn into giddy school kids after having their first successful deer hunt.

Yep...that's a very good feeling. I've taught a lot of folks to shoot, hunt, and fish...and they always come back and tell me how much that appreciate it. I don't know who enjoys it more...me or them.
 
gspn, Haha, I bet the safety wouldn't come off on a Mosin. xD

Seriously though, thank you for your story. Even though I've only hunted 2 seasons and am basically building my experience from the ground up, (though my dad did give me 1 or 2 pointers) I always (or at least since my first hunt) load my gun as soon as I get out of the vehicle, practice keeping my rifle cradled in my arms, if I shoot I re-chamber immediately, and I don't unload until we step in the vehicle to leave.

I know that practice allowed my friend to get one on opening day last season, and also made another friend lose one.

Also something else I've decided is that I won't be afraid to shoot twice. A buddy and I missed a great opportunity at a nice 10 pointer (the biggest buck we'd ever seen in our 2 years) because we didn't put down a doe which we hit with a second shot. He had been trailing her, and if we had put her down he would have probably walked right over to her and not moved an inch. As it was, she ran off and we never found a spec of blood.
 
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good insurance

Great story, well told.

I agree with the 2nd shot idea, based on very limited personal experience.

In 2012 I missed 2 deer due to a whole set of circumstances that can be boiled down to inexperience.

In 2013 the little buck I shot at 70yds turned and took three big strides. I'm thinking 'oh no, I can't believe he's getting away...the crosshairs were right on when the gun went bang'. So I worked the action, rifle still shouldered, and reacquired him just as the buck dropped like a 100# bag of potatoes. Now it's laying on its side facing me, without a twitch.

Fearing that he might take off I immediately put a second shot in its chest. From the geometry of the 2 entry and 2 exit wounds, the 1st shot took both lungs and the heart. The second transected the same devastated area from a different angle. The first had killed it yet he took those three bounds - the flight and survival instincts are amazing.

The second shot wasn't really needed, but given what I went through the previous season, it seemed like good insurance. None of the meat was wasted.
 
The first had killed it yet he took those three bounds - the flight and survival instincts are amazing.
I've seen deer hit and run 50 yards....upon field dressing, the heart was basically destroyed and both lungs hit....Its AMAZING what a "dead" deer can do!
 
Cliff? Heh. My father heart-shot a buck which fell and then got up and ran--off a 15-foot or so cliff. So, naturally, after finding a way down, he looked for tracks. Circled around and puzzled around for a good while. No tracks whatsoever.

So, he finally looked back up toward where the buck had jumped from. Just under the little cliff was a clump of central Texas cedar brush. Sure enough, Bucky was there, suspended about halfway up, having either died in mid-air or when he landed.

Shame he didn't have a camera along, to show his tree-climbing buck. :D
 
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