Always enjoy small game hunting. Any adventure that you would like to share or techniques you find successful?
:campfire:
I bow hunted for deer and elk throughout New Mexico with my brother in law during the 90's. Our method was spot and stalk on public land, which New Mexico is full of. Usually, my brother in law would drive his truck into a promising area not far from our camp before daylight, and he would head off in one direction while I would head off in a different direction.
One nice thing about bow hunting is that if there don't seem to be any deer or elk in the immediate vicinity, you can take pot shots at cottontails or grouse without scaring off whatever deer or elk might be around into the next county. I remember many days when we would meet back at my brother in law's truck at noon with whatever small game we had bagged during the morning, clean them and cut them up into pieces, coat the pieces with flour, salt and pepper them, and fry them up in a pan for lunch. I remember other days when we arrived back at the truck with nothing and ate tortillas smeared with peanut butter and jelly. And a few great days when one or the other of us would arrive with a big smile on our face to announce that we had bagged a deer or elk and needed some help cutting it up and hauling it out.
Quote from: McDave on Today at 06:07:07 PMI bow hunted for deer and elk throughout New Mexico with my brother in law during the 90's. Our method was spot and stalk on public land, which New Mexico is full of. Usually, my brother in law would drive his truck into a promising area not far from our camp before daylight, and he would head off in one direction while I would head off in a different direction.
One nice thing about bow hunting is that if there don't seem to be any deer or elk in the immediate vicinity, you can take pot shots at cottontails or grouse without scaring off whatever deer or elk might be around into the next county. I remember many days when we would meet back at my brother in law's truck at noon with whatever small game we had bagged during the morning, clean them and cut them up into pieces, coat the pieces with flour, salt and pepper them, and fry them up in a pan for lunch. I remember other days when we arrived back at the truck with nothing and ate tortillas smeared with peanut butter and jelly. And a few great days when one or the other of us would arrive with a big smile on our face to announce that we had bagged a deer or elk and needed some help cutting it up and hauling it out.
That sounds like a great time. Did you use your regular arrows for the big game to harvest them or did you carry specific arrows for them?
I usually have 1 blunt with me