Bowhunter – September 2019

(WallPaper) #1

Late in October, I branched out to
cover ground outside of my normal ar-
eas. I spotted a large-bodied mule deer
that demanded a closer look. The buck
was with a small group of does and
acting rut-stricken already. I evaluated
him and snapped a few photos through
my Zeiss spotting scope before his does
got nervous and ran over the hill, act-
ing more like skittish whitetails than
mule deer. His body was huge, which
typically makes the antlers look smaller
than they actually are. Our encounter
was brief, but I knew this buck needed
my attention.
The next morning, I located the deer
immediately. They were in the same vi-
cinity, but the does remained skittish and
ran wild again. I hoped the buck would
leave the does, but I wasn’t optimistic. I
couldn’t believe my luck when he lagged
behind as the does disappeared into a
standing cornfield. The buck headed in
the opposite direction, eventually bed-
ding down in a large CRP field. This
was perfect! After obtaining permission
to enter the field, I devised a plan and
started the stalk, going into stealth mode
as I neared where he was bedded. Crawl-
ing to the top of a terrace, I located him
again and he was already in range. Can it
really be this easy? I thought.
Using the backside of the terrace to
close the gap, I tried to ping a distance
with my rangefinder but it didn’t look
like I could get a read on the buck with-
out exposing myself. So I ranged some
weeds around him and estimated he was
at 40 yards — well within my effective
range. I planned to wait him out rather
than push my luck to get closer. After
about an hour, the buck stood to stretch
but quickly bedded back down. Focused
on getting a shot, I missed an opportu-
nity to range him.
The wind was blowing hard that day,
and I contemplated closing the distance
but held fast. After another hour, the
buck stood again, but this time he was
perfectly quartered-away. I was sur-
prisingly calm as I drew my bow, going
through my shot sequence. I told my-
self to aim back to adjust for the wind
and account for his stance. I settled my
pin, triggered my release, and watched
my arrow impact squarely in the buck ’s
shoulder! He sprinted 100 yards before
stopping, and I swore he stumbled. I
thought I could see blood around my ar-
row, but in hindsight, who knows? The
buck didn’t stand long, and I watched
him trot into a wooded draw hundreds
of yards away.


I sat there cussing and feeling sorry
for myself, yet I still felt confident I’d
get the buck. I thought the buck would
bed down in the draw, allowing a stalk
to put another arrow in him. I held tight,
watching for the buck to emerge, which
he never did. I paced off the shot and it
was 37 to 38 yards, so I was comfortable
with my yardage, yet my arrow had im-
pacted higher than I wanted. I am un-
sure if the wind was crossing more than
I thought, affecting my arrow flight, or if
I’d dropped my bow arm, but I’d hit the
buck considerably farther left than I’d
been aiming.

I left the field and gave the buck lots
of time before sneaking in late that af-
ternoon. I cautiously stalked into the
drainage, relentlessly glassing for the
buck, but he never turned up. I looked
for blood at the shot and along his es-
cape route, but found nothing. I scoured
the draw until dark and never bumped
the deer, nor found my arrow or a single
drop of blood. I couldn’t believe it!
The next day, I spent time looking for
him alive before I grid-searched the large
CRP field with no luck. I spent the next
40-plus days, religiously looking for the
buck. I was sure he was still alive, but I
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