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Legacy

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  1. A couple of weeks ago I had hung a set specifically for the opening morning of the regular season. It was a spot I had found late in last years muzzleloader season and it served as the backdoor entrance to a huge bedding area that is situated between 2 huge ravines. During the 6 hour sit, I was visited by over 30 deer at my stand with only 2 being antlered (a tiny spike and a 4 pt chasing does). The end result for the morning would be a success... big doe down! I changed locations for the afternoon sit. This stand is on the transition between hardwoods and a thicket that overlooks a ditch line that funnels into a corn field. To my surprise the action started before I could even make it up the ladder as a small, unaware 8pt passed by at 45 Yards. Over the next couple of hours i would see another 7 deer including some chasing. About 4:00 or so, Im startled by a doe fawn that sneaks out from the thicket and behind a tree about 30 yards away. It takes me a minute or two, to notice that behind her is a buck. I quickly realize that he has made me out in the tree as we lock into a staring match. With all of the obstructions, Im unable to tell the size of the buck but in my head I make the terrible assumtion that "hes probably a small buck because hes with a doe fawn". Before I can confirm with my binoculars, the buck turns and I realize hes a shooter. With my gun in my lap, my small window of opportunity (between 2 trees) is quickly over as he disappears back into the thicket with the doe. With the gun shouldered now and expecting a some kind of a shot, Im in awe as the buck truly becomes a ghost. I am left with my eyes staring into that spot in the woods just hoping that the hot doe will give me another chance at him. With the sound of a broken stick and with 30 minutes burned off the clock both deer appear directly in front of me. The buck, still aware of my presence, locks eyes on me but in presence of a hot doe, his decision making ability is skewed. With the first opportunity, a single 30 yard broadside shot, he is dropped in his tracks.
  2. Happy birthday Bob!!!
  3. Congrats! Sent from my C771 using Lake Ontario United mobile app
  4. Welcome to LOU!
  5. Im using 100 grain 4 blade Slick Trick
  6. Brand new. Out of the package.
  7. wyoming county
  8. Lets see if i can make a long story even longer... A couple of weeks ago I hung a new stand in a great deer funnel. Deer trails from all directions leading to this one intersection. And at the time that I hung this stand there was 7 fresh scrapes within 20 yards of it. On monday, I hunted that new stand and was visited by a small 8 pt around 9am. The deer (of course) approached from behind my right shoulder which also happens to be directly down wind but only was focused on visiting and freshening up one of the scrapes. With his attention on the scape, he gave me plenty of opportunity to reposition myself in the stand and prepare for a shot. As he left the scape, I stopped him with a quick mouth grunt, and he gave me a picture perfect broadside 12 yard shot. I could see the entry hole and knew that i made a great shot and with my arrow stuck in the ground i also knew i had a pass through. The buck didnt know what hit him. He trotted for about ten yards then began to walk. He makes it about 40 yards. Stops. Then looks back to see what had happened. My thoughts were that the deer would fall over right there. As im watching him a doe and fawn walk up behind me and bust me in the tree and alert the entire deer woods of my prescence. When i look back my buck is gone but i convince myself that he is on the ground, dead. With everything happening so quickly, I look at the time and note time of shot 9:06am. At 10:00 i pack up, get out of the tree, and head over to collect my arrow. NOTE LOOK HOW CLEAN THIS ARROW IS I walk slowly over to collect my deer from behind the deadfall that i believe he is behind and... hes not there??? I see blood and take a few more steps and i see the deer get up about 50 yards away and boogy out of there. I begin questioning shot placement in my head. Did i hit him too far back? Liver? The blood trail that ive seen so far sucks. I make the decision to pull out and give him time. I get breakfast, run home, change clothes, get the 4 wheeler, fuel up the truck, pick up my father in law. Anything to eat up time. We return to the woods, find the bloody bed that i had jumped him from, and pick up the blood trail. Its about 1:00- 1:30 at this point. Not a great blood trail (borderline terrible) but still a blood trail. We eventually find lung. and more lung. and more lung. Great news... I now know that i have a confirmed lung shot. For about 20 yards or so, we have a great blood trail but its short lived. That once great blood trail eventually trickles to an occasional drop and then stops entirely. The trail leads us to a deer trail that goes in 3 directions. Zero blood. After spending an hour in search of a single drop of blood to determine direction of travel, Zero. Nothing. No blood. There is no worse feeling in the deer woods then not recovering your deer. As an act of desperation, I begin to do a blind body search in the hardwoods. First the left trail = nothing. Then the middle trail = nothing. Then 100-150 yards down the right trail im face to face with the buck, and to my surprise still alive, staring at me from 15 yards away. TOUGH TO SEE... At this point it had been almost 6 hours and somehow hes still alive. He eventually jumped from his bed and once again took off. We made the decision at that point with out a blood trail, we need to see him bedded and let him sit overnight. Eventually making our way through the woods, my father inlaw sees the buck near the top of ravine @ 4:15. So we back out. After a great night of sleep, the plan is to pick up the trail at sunrise from the last place he was seen. Hopefully hes dead in his bed on the ravine or he died in the creek bottom looking for water. Either way is fine, im just hoping for a dead deer. After 5 min into our search, im yelling "dead buck"! He was dead in his bed. After emotional roller coaster over the past 22 hours, I was eager to see the autopsy report. From the outside, i could see that the exit hole was in the chest cavity almost a mirror image of the entry hole. It looked to be a great shot. On the inside, I found everything to be intact including the diaphram. When i got to the chest cavity, i found the back third of the right lung (exit side) to be bloodied and jellied. The heart was untouched. and after inpection the left lung (entry side) was also shot. Perfect hole (on the back third) but with very little trauma. Confirmed double lung. RIGHT LUNG LEFT LUNG The point of this long post is im amazed at the resilience of whitetails. Im amazed that this deer survived a double lung shot for at least 7 hours and 9 mins and managed to travel over 500-550 yards. BUCK DOWN!
  9. congrats!
  10. i have 2 plates... 703-0969
  11. Awsome stuff!
  12. Welcome to the site!
  13. Welcome to the site!
  14. good shooting Scott!
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