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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!zazen!doug.cae.wisc.edu!osnome.che.wisc.edu!hunting
- From: ketchum@cs.montana.edu (Steve White)
- Subject: mule deer hunt in w. Montana
- Organization: Dept. of Computer Science, MSU, Bozeman Mt 59717
- Date: 29 Dec 92 09:30:46 CST
- Approved: hunting@osnome.che.wisc.edu
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.093047.1073@doug.cae.wisc.edu>
- Lines: 155
- Originator: hunting@osnome.che.wisc.edu
- Keywords: friend's first deer hunt a success
-
- [Moderator's note: this was posted on December 1 but a news glitch
- might have cuased some problems so I am resending it. tjr]
-
- This is a hunting report in the area of Harlowton, MT on 31 Oct 92.
- Harlo is northeast of the Crazy Mtns. which are well east of the Grt.
- Divide. The area is rolling hills with wooded draws with a few
- scattered rocky ridges (uplifts?) and buttes.
-
- On this particular hunt three of us stayed in a tack shed on the place
- where my mom-in-law lives on a ranch south of Harlowton, MT. So we had
- a nice place in out of the wind, with electricity, mice, dogs, cats,
- etc. and running water close by in the house. Boy, we were roughing
- it. :-)
-
- We hunted on a ranch close by that consists of about 60 sections that
- is open to the public as long as you obtain written permission. The
- first day we walked a lot in mostly open hilly country looking for
- antelope. (One of us had an either sex pronghorn tag. He was the only
- one shooting.) We made a couple of stalks and Doug missed a nice buck
- at about 70 yds after a good stalk. Apparently he didn't have the
- muzzle of his rilfe up out of the high grass which probably deflected
- the bullet enough that he missed even at that range. (Incidently he
- was using a pre 64 Model 70 Win in a 6mm.)
-
- Even though John and I just had deer tags we all hunted together, even
- when we were after pronghorns. We all enjoyed stalking the antelope.
- All that day we didn't see any deer until I split off from the others
- while hiking back to the pickup. I went through a little area of trees
- on a hillside and ran into 12 head of mulies. Only one was sporting
- any antlers, which were small. I knew that there was a lot of deer in
- the area 'cuz my wife and I had been there about three weeks before
- when I filled my antelope tag, and we had seen bookooz of them. Seeing
- the deer in the brush confirmed my idea of hunting the timber the next
- (our last) day.
-
- Dawn the next morning found us walking up some wooded draws towards
- some distant wooded hills. We were commonly seeing deer. Some of them
- were bucks but I was pretty sure that we could find better. I wasn't
- looking to fill my deer tag since I had a freezer full of elk. I did
- carry my bow along in case I got a chance at a biggun though.
-
- This was John's first ever hunt as a non-observer. In 90 he
- accompanied two professors on two different hunts where they were both
- unsuccessful even though they had both gotten a few shots. John asked
- me how many shells I usually went through on a hunt. He thought that
- it was common to miss a lot. I told him that I usually took two shells
- with me in case I lost one. :-)
-
- On one of those hunts he had shot a gun for the first time. It was a
- .30-06 while leaning across the hood of a pickup. He wasn't coached
- much and got scope cut. So naturally he had a phobia about shooting a
- gun again. So a few weeks prior to the season we had gone out and done
- some shooting. We started out with the .22 magnum. I shot several
- times to show that it was nothing to shoot. He got pretty good with it
- and obtained pretty good form. We practiced in several positions and
- of course we went over safety rules well. Then I pulled out the wife's
- .243 Mossberg and took a few shots with it. He finally assumed that
- it wasn't as bad as it sounded even if we did have ear plugs in. After
- three or so shots he relaxed and started shooting pretty good. We
- adjusted the scope a little and called it good. Then we shot the .22
- some more before it got dark.
-
- Now all we had to do was find a buck. After the previous day John
- thought that he would be lucky to get a doe even though I had told him
- the previous week that I was confident that we could get a decent
- buck. Well we passed up several stalking opportunities during the
- morning. Doug was getting a little bored so when we got on the edge of
- some antelope country I suggested that we take a look. Doug spotted
- some and we worked out a stalking route. During our stalk I was
- keeping a look out for deer since we were sneaking around wooded
- ridges and up draws. I spotted a buck bedded above a creek bank on the
- side of a wooded ridge. We just had our heads peeking over a grassy
- creek bank and the deer was about 250 yds away.
-
- That was kind of a funny situation. I was telling Doug where to look
- for the buck when he finally said that he saw it. He made a few
- comments on it and it finally dawned on me that his description of the
- critter wasn't what I was seeing. Finally I stuck my head up a little
- higher & looked over to the right a little and there was the deer he
- was looking at. The second buck wasn't any bigger but he had a few
- more points. He looked to be a 5x4 while the other was a big 2x2. Both
- had about a 16 inch spread and looked to be 2.5 yr old bucks.
-
- The only one we had much of a chance at was the big forked horn buck.
- So we crawled up the creek bed towards him. By staying flat against
- the bank we could barely stay concealed. That made it more exciting.
- We finally got up to within about 80 yds. Then the buck was almost
- totally concealed by some limbs. So I crawled up a little to see if
- maybe we could get a shot at the other one since the 2x2 wouldn't see
- us if we did. I crawled a few feet and geeez there he was standing up
- looking our way. So I told John to slither up beside me real slow
- like. I took off my fanny pack and laid it beside me so John could use
- it for a solid rest and get the muzzle up out of the grass. The buck
- finally started looking on the ground for something to munch on. There
- was just too many dead twigs and limbs in the way for a shot. So we
- laid there waiting for him to move and present a shot. In order for
- him to do that he would have had to come down hill about five yds and
- I didn't see any reason for him to do that. Then all of a sudden
- another buck stepped into view in the little opening that I was
- wanting the other one to walk into. He lowered his head a little and
- looked right at us. We must have been a little too visible. I told
- John, who was ready by then, where to aim and reminded him to pick a
- spot, take a breath and let it out slowly and squeeze the trigger. He
- did and I saw that he made a good hit. Well the buck turned a 180 and
- had no use of a front leg. Since he didn't go right down John was
- afraid that he had just broken his leg. About that time the other
- standing buck saw his vulnerability I guess and locked antlers with
- him. They tussled a few seconds and the three of them dropped over
- into a little draw out of sight.
-
- John and I trotted over there. When we were just about to look over
- into the draw where I expected to see them I told him that if he saw
- one standing with a broken leg to shoot it. We surprised them at 30
- yds (my bow was back where John shot from). After a few seconds the
- two we saw took off. John's was laying dead on the ground. I looked
- back at Doug, who had never seen the third one, and he was standing up
- pointing at them as they ran across a open hill 70 yds from him. I
- pointed down at the dead one. He scoped them to see if he could see
- any blood. He didn't understand why we weren't shooting since he
- couldn't see the dead one.
-
- So John got his first deer, a 3x4, and with one shot. (Later Fish &
- Game confirmed that it was indeed a 2.5 year old buck.) One of the
- others was a 5x4 but he wasn't much larger, he just had a few more
- points. It was a good stalk and he hit it real close to where I told
- him to. We guessed it to be about a 90 yd shot. It was a good
- experience for him. I wish that the buck had dropped a little quicker
- but it didn't take too long. The buck was quartering to us so I had
- him shoot where the neck attaches to the body so that the bullet would
- come out behind the offside front shoulder. He shot about 2 inches to
- the right and hit the distal end (socket end) of the scapula. That is
- why he couldn't use his front leg. The bullet continued onward
- breaking a rib and ending up in the heart lung area.
-
- John asked all kinds of questions during the gutting, so I finally
- asked him if he ever took any biology courses. He answered, "Yes, but
- that was back in high school and this is a lot bigger than a frog."
-
- Then the work began.
- We had about a 2.5 mile drag to the truck over numerous little hills
- and gullies into a strong, cold head wind that had a little rain/snow
- in it for the last 20 minutes. Great time. Doug went looking to stalk
- the antelope while we did the dragging. The prongs had bedded down
- amongst some cattle so he gave up on the stalk.
-
- It was a good hunt. The season closed yesterday. I've got a new recipe
- to try on my deer tag..... if I run out of elk.
-
- There is always next year.
-
- Steve W.
-
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-