Well yesterday was a beautiful day in Ohio but a little warm. Regardless, Kenny (4runr) and I headed to some land a co worker of mine has for a hunt. It was mostly cow pastures, woods, and cornfields. So we found a great strip of woods with an obvious trail that lead to a spot where the deer jumped the cattle fence. There was a big boulder that had our names on it. My buddy decided he loop around to the other end of the woods and try and drive some deer to us. If one jumped and split to Kenny's side of the boulder he'd shoot and if it split to my side I'd shoot. So 15-20 min later Kenny wispers "get ready he's coming" Bouncing through the brush I can see she's headed straight for us. She hops a log and stops, looks back and then makes a decision that will forever effect her life. She split my way! I was excited as could be and couldn't believe my luck. She quickly headed down the trail that would bring her 10 yards broadside from me. As she trotted towards me I quickly came to full draw and let go the first arrow I've ever released on a deer. The whole situation was exhilerating and felt great. Then to my quick realization the arrow flew about 1" in front of her chest.....a clean miss. The deer continued towards the fence and when she tried to jump it went chest first right into it. As that happened I thought maybe I had hit her and my heart jumped again. But I quickly told myself I know what I saw when that arrow flew. The deer quickly regained before I could get another arrow and hopped over the fence, across the cow pasture, and into my dreams forever. Instead of breaking to Kenny's side and probably ending up on Kenny's table she chose to split my way and has forever taught me a lesson. Always try to bleat and stop the deer before you shoot. I've read it, seen it, and been told about it but for some reason in the heat of the moment didn't implement it. While I'm sure Kenny will never let me live it down and neither will my co-worker and it's going to haunt me for the rest of the season, I'm still hopeful. It's one more piece in my puzzle and brings me one more step closer to finally getting that deer. Until next time.....
T.J.
Hello TJ! Sounds like you and Kenny had a good hunt. Keep at it. It'll happen!
Tom Kidwell
Well told my friend.
I won't let you forget it, but not in a teasing way. I've made more than my share of mistakes, and sometimes made the same mistake twice. If you learn from it then it was well worth it. I am greatful to you for letting me be a part of your learning to become a hunter, it teaches me along the way, how to be a better teacher for my son(if that makes any sense).
Don't let the "bull" bother you :bigsmyl:
Hey Tom, long time no see!
You know that sometimes that mouth grunt or whistle sends them bolting as if you stuck em with a hot poker.It usually will stop them but not always.This I know 1st hand.A few tears ago I was watching a 6 point that bedded about 70 yards from me in an open hardwood.After a while a coyote came by and spooked him.He ran right under my tree at a trot and when I grunted him he lit out quick and never slowed down.It did work on the coyote who kept following him til he hit my shooting lane.I still do it somtimes but always half expect it to backfire.From as close as your shot was Id probaly do the same as you did.
Hey Tom! Good to see you. I'm looking forward to sharing another campfire next year. Hopefully next time we'll have less rain and more fire :D
Kenny, you can always fine tune your teaching skills on me. In the long run Adam will be greatful!
i always try to tell myself to not let the deer be in control of the situation but it's hard i've missed just like that myself.
letting the doe pass and get the quarting shot may have been the ticket-who knows? good time fun story!
Hey T.J. don't feel bad. Last night I had a doe walking fast/ trotting past my stand and I gave a soft bleat. It did stop her but it had her so wired that when my arrow arrived at its aiming point she was already gone. I was pretty frustrated because I have had the bleat/ grunt thing work pretty well in the past but this is the second deer to react this way this year. Oh, and by the way, the 1st deer that dodged my arrow after a grunt earlier this year was a 160"+ buck. The point is as Izzy pointed out sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. I am only going to do it as an absolute last resort anymore.
Dan
TJ, sounds like a fine hunt. Your plan came together and you beat the odds. The kill would have been extra. Good Luck!!
A lesson learned on an exciting hunt is what its about. Thanks for the story TJ.
TJ,
You and Kenny will soon see me over the campfire. I'm looking forward to it. Been hunting in Oklahoma for 3 1/2 weeks... still trying to re-adjust to civilization. See you soon!
Tom
If we didn't fail, the success would not be any fun. Glad you are learning like the rest of us.
sounds like a great hunt and learning experience. Dont beat yourself up too bad about not bleating to stop her...it likely wouldnt have worked in that situation.
It seems to work pretty well on deer that are COMPLETELY calm...but if the deer is on edge for ANY reason to begin with(like your buddy driving them to you)..she likely would have just hightailed it ouuta there faster.
They already know its a dangerous situation...they Arent gonna stop and check things out.
Good luck in the future!
Sounds like a great hunt, T.J. Missed ya at the Ohio Trad Deer camp!
Hey Jim! Yeah I would have liked to go but its been way to busy this year. I'll make it a top priority next hunting season. I missed going and had a blast last time I was there.
Thanks everyone for your comments.
Great story....fun though wasn't it!!! I would consider grunting to stop an animal if I was shooting a bow that shot 300+ fps. Since my bow only shoots 165 I'll shoot them at a slow walk but nothing faster. I've found that grunting puts them on high alert!
This is just my choice, the wonderful thing about this sport is that you'll figure out what works for you. Good luck in that process. I bet the next one is in your freezer!
sweet hunt T.J. don't let it bug you I missed a 8 yard shot at a standing still fat doe the first week because I didn't pick a spot and shot right over her back... lesson learned for sure.... i've been doing this for 30 + years and still mess up...
keep after em your time is coming....
That experience is now etched in your memory bank forever TJ. Clean miss, shared with good freinds - it might hurt a little now but you will look back fondly on that day.
And like the others have said, nothing works every time. You could very well have tried the bleat and ended up with the same ending - a healthy deer bounding away.
TJ, a clean miss always is more enjoyable. Just log your lessons and use them wisely. That is part of the fun and challenge. Big Ed
QuoteOriginally posted by Big Ed:
TJ, a clean miss always is more enjoyable. Just log your lessons and use them wisely. That is part of the fun and challenge. Big Ed
Could not agree more!! Keep putting the pieces together and one day they will form a beautiful finished piece. JOe
You're get another chance! I'm not going to tell you how many deer I missed my first season with traditional gear! Good Luck!
Ya know, when I was young and just starting to bow hunt, every hunter with any amount of success always would say a few things in common. Things like, don't draw attention to yourself, don't draw your bow when you can see their eyes and don't shoot when they are looking at you. Nowadays, all those things are standard procedure in the hunting video's. I think you probably did things just about right depending on how fast she was going. Lots of guys prefer to shoot at a walking deer over a standing deer and claim they are less likely to duck the string.
Sounds like you had a blast and I bet you have it on "video" in the old hair covered computer to replay for the rest of your life.
Hey Dave, where do I get one of those hair covered models? Sounds fancy. Mine seems to have very quickly lost that feature :biglaugh:
Dang T.J.,
I've got more hair than I know what to do with. Not only on my head and face, it's starting to come out of my ears! The older I get, the hairier I get.