This
past weekend (November 1 and 2) I took Friday off from work and went to hunt
with Chrixus in Hastings. We planned on
leaving for home Friday night after we were done hunting.
Well, up until the Friday night hunt I had been skunked in my attempts
to even see a deer so I decided to strap the climber stand to my back and try a
completely different area of the property.
After
getting in my tree, which was quite the ordeal in its self, I saw nothing up
until about a half hour before dark. The
buck of a life time came strolling in about thirty yards away. It was moving fast and was in some thick brush
that I couldn’t shoot through. Suddenly
it stopped dead in its tracks. It either
spotted me or the cat that had decided to come and take a stroll directly under
my tree stand. Whatever the case, it was in statue mode, as
was I. We had a 15 minute stare off, and
in that time, I was formulating a plan of action. There was a small hole that I could maybe,
possibly shoot through if it took five more steps forward. It was getting dark and I was getting
desperate. I contemplated a shot at its
back hips because it was the only open area in the brush. That thought quickly left my head as the deer
started to progress forward. It entered
the somewhat of an opening that I was planning on, so I took action. Things looked much different through the peep
site so I crouched down as far as I could and in the most uncomfortable
shooting position ever, I decided it was now or never. The arrow flew and I heard a loud whack. Did I hit the shoulder? The questions and concerns flooded my
mind.
Ten
minutes later it was completely dark, and I could see my luminock glowing only
15 yards from the base of my stand.
Confused at the position of the arrow, I got down from my stand to
assess the situation. I found my arrow
like the picture you see below. The end
was shattered and the luminock was jammed two inches down the end of the inside
of the arrow shaft. The arrow had hit a
rock or tree and bounced straight back nearly 15 yards. And the buck of a life time just walked away
like nothing had happened.
I wish I could accurately describe the size of this deer but I can't. Just trust me when I say it was big. One detail I can remember is that the antlers were around 6" past the ears.
Oh and a shout out to Nocturnal nocks again because if the nock had not stayed lit I would have been looking for that arrow 15 yards further from my stand in the dark and I would have probably thought that it was still in the deer. It saved me a lot of time and wasted excitement.
1 comment:
at least the nockturnal worked, ha ha. I finally had a buck in range tonight, an ugly unicorn. It looked like a doe with a chicken bone sticking out of its head. I passed on it, hoping for something else, which may have been a mistake. PS: I think this has to be the quickest response to a post in Krack boy history.
-BK
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