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First contact. Arrowed first trad deer.

Started by LittleBen, November 16, 2013, 08:14:00 AM

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LittleBen

Just arrowed my first trad deer. Small spike buck. **** was quartering away, 10 yds. Looked a little low and steeply quartering. Not sure how much penetration I got. Didn't seem like alot. Waiting till noon to track.
Wish me luck. More later.

JMG


LittleBen

QuoteOriginally posted by LittleBen:
Just arrowed my first trad deer. Small spike buck. shot was quartering away, 10 yds. Looked a little low and steeply quartering. Not sure how much penetration I got. Didn't seem like alot. Waiting till noon to track.
Wish me luck. More later.

John146

Todd Trahan
All of Creation Gives God Glory!

DEATHMASTER


VictoryHunter

Awesome! Take it slow and when in doubt air on the side of caution.
There is a place for all God's creatures....right next to the potatoes and gravy.
>>>----------------->

OBXarcher

4-6 hours is my gut rule. Go very slow and look hard. A follow shot may be needed.

This luck, keep us posted.


Mudd

I'll be watching your thread for some hero shots.

Keep us posted please!!

I hope everything ends up with your deer in hand.

I wish you the best of luck to you!

God bless,Mudd
Trying to make a difference
Psalm 37:4
Roy L "Mudd" Williams
TGMM- Family Of The Bow
Archery isn't something I do, it's who I am!
The road to "Sherwood" makes for an awesome journey.

far rider

Good luck! Hopefully we'll see some pics later.
Noli rogare pro onia pauciora, rogate pro scapulas latiores.

I go afield with bent wood, stick and string in search of serenity  through my primal quest.

Venatôr

cahaba

Good luck. Can't wait to hear the outcome. I think its going to be good!
cahaba: A Choctaw word that means
"River from above"

joe ashton

Joe Ashton,D.C.
pronghorn long bow  54#
black widow long bow 55#
21 century long bow 55#
big horn recurve  58#

Gen273

Jesus Saves (ROM 10:13)

Jerry Jeffer

Hands and knees if you have to. The tiniest speck may be the one that leads you to it.
I will give thanks to the LORD because of his righteousness and will sing praise to the name of the LORD Most High.


LittleBen

WOW! It was a long day!

Anyway, I sat in my blind running through every scenario, trying to imagine that arrow as the deer trotted off. Had bright yellow feathers and a blaze orange cap dip on the arrow so I saw pretty clearly that the arrow was sticking out of the deer a solid 12-18" ... that's generally not awesome.

I finally came to the conclusion that based on the angle and my shot placement, I'd have either a gut shot (if I got little penetration), or if I got 10" + of penetration I'd get at least on lung, and  maybe the heart.

So, a little more back story ..... After the shot the deer had trotted off, not ran, and just like alot of gut shot deer, stopped for nearly a full minute at about 30yards, behind a thicket ... I could see the yellow fletching, not the deer.

I decicided to wait until 10am, 2 hours after the shot, and look for blood at the first spot the deer stopped, and also see if the arrow was there. I figureed any signs of a gut shot and I'd back out till evening.

LittleBen

So I stepped out of the blind and CREPT in the direction the deer had headed, everyone's words echoing in my mind. Literally one step at a time I made my way to where I thought the buck had stopped. At first nothing (this area is so full of deer theres no hope in tracking prints, there are just too many. So I following the most apparent trail, on foot at a time eventually coming up onto this:


There wasn't much blood, but it was bright red, so  I kept on tracking very very slowly, taking two steps then looking around for a few minutes. Basically like still hunting.

Another 8 yards and I found where he had actually stopped, it turned out the first spot was just where first blood hit the ground. This is what he left when he stopped for 30-60seconds:


LittleBen

Now I knew I was in business. Everything about this scene said lung/major artery/ and maybe heart.

I kept following the blood which out of no where peters out, just as the buck heads into a well established bedding area ...



LittleBen

At this point the roller coaster of emotions was starting to get to me. One minute I'm sure it's a great shot, the next I'm down to my last drops of blood.

As I creep into the bedding area, the buck, which had been following a pretty straight course, all of a sudden stops and turns to the left, heading down a shallow hill.


Now I KNEW I had him! He was taking the very easy downhill route, and was winding side to side like he was unsteady.

I was excited! Then all of a sudden I pick my head up and notice something at the foot of the tree ahead ...


a little closer ....


There he was!!!!! I could hardly believe it! He'd gone less than 100 yards with solid blood on a shot I thought was marginal at best ... maybe not even a fatal shot.

LittleBen

So I throw my fist up into the air to proclaim my success, walk up to the deer ... and to be honest, my first thought was "it's a f****** kangaroo? .... no it's a kangalope"


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