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I was up all day and night than drove up
to Sullivan County Friday morning to hunt on a friends land. Having the
"Opening Day Jitters" it took forever to get to sleep. Waking up the next day
at 3:00am with only three and a half hours of sleep, I soon found myself in the
cold woods freezing my butt off. It was seventeen degrees by 5:30am. By 3:00pm
I hadn‘t seen a deer all day, only a coyote who took off as I swung my cross
hairs upon him. I was shot, freezing, tired, and not really enjoying myself at
this point.
I decided to brake protocol and leave the
woods early. This is something I've never
done. If I don't see deer I stay until I can't see my sights anymore.
As I stood up, picked up my rifle and
knapsack to make an exit several shots rang out. Several more shots went off.
Than more and more shots. I knew there was a bunch of farmers and their boys
across the road about a dozen in all. I watch them making drives as I took my
coffee brake at 10:00am. Hearing so many shots I thought that they must have a
lot of "Doe Permits" or something's running pretty fast and they're all
missing. If they had hit anything there wouldn't be so many shots going off.
Immediately I sat right back down pack on
the ground and readied my 30-06. Sure enough about three minutes later four
does about 50 yards or so came running in front of me. Than he came. About 50
more yards beyond the group of females there he was, the one I had been waiting
for all day. They went clear across the property before they slowed down and
stopped. I couldn't tell if the buck was a spike or had a rack. I took extra
care to scope him out.
Bucks have to have at least three points
on one antler to be legal in the DMU (Deer Management Unit) I was hunting in.
New York State is weird that way.
Just at the edge of the posted line I could see the buck between a couple of
trees as he stood broadside. His antlers stretched forward and curved up! This
must be the eight pointer my friend Nancy's son Leland told me about the day
before. He had been seen running around the area for months leading up to now.
I put my cross hairs on his shoulder and
pulled the trigger. I missed! In disbelief chambering another round as fast as
I could, I shot again and missed! He just stood there starring at me.
I stop and compose myself for thirty to
forty five seconds hoping he wouldn't "split." Leaning against the tree at my
watch again I put the X in of the old Redfield on his shoulder. I took a deep
breath in, exhaled and remembered to simply to decrease the distance between my
thumb and trigger finger.
The rifle went off. Chambering another
round, bringing the scope back down from the recoil lift to where the buck had
stood, he was gone. Looking up over the scope my vision sweeping across the
woods seeing no white flags waving “good bye,” I wondered if I got him?
I peered thought the scope fixed on the
spot at which he stood a minute or so past like eternity, than a movement. His
hoof popped up in to the scope for a brief moment than dropped. It must have
been his last kick holding on to life. I remained frozen finger on the trigger
in case he got up to bolt. After a while, making a mental mark of the spot, I
lit up.
An old friend once said the best thing to
do after a making a kill is not to move. “Have a smoke, relax and than go get
your deer.” Counting the paces reaching my buck at 103 a feeling of pride came
along. As I watch him take his last breaths, I gave thanks, very happy having
another hat rack and another year of venison in the freezer.
And to think, I almost left before the
miracle happened! |