BlackFail
Lessons Learned From Spectacular Failed Blacktail Hunts in These Dang Mountains
I have always been the black sheep of my whitetail hunting Wisconsin family. But I did not bring real shame to them until I came out west and started hunting blacktails in the mountains. Growing up if I shot a 4 pointer (2x2), my brother shot a 6. If I shot a 6 my dad shot a 10. If I got a nice anything it did not measure up to my uncle’s regular wallhangers. As far as shooting I can shoot five-shot quarters (cover the five bullet holes in a target with a quarter) at a hundred yards. But my family can shoot dimes. I’m a reject. They all reload like a religion; a thousand rounds of each caliber in each flavor is standard. I have the equipment but suck at it (forget to put the gun powder in before seating the bullet, pour gun powder into casings that already had their powder poured in to them etc.) so I buy factory. Get the picture? My family does.
Like most in Wisconsin I can hunt whitetails in the whitetail’s environment. Cheeseheads are excellent whitetail hunters, killing 200,000 of them a year. So when I found myself living in California I figured hunting the diminutive blacktails in Zone A would be relatively the same as bagging whitetails back home only less rewarding. I just wouldn’t send any pictures of the little fellas to my family back home to save me some embarrassment. I mean what self-respecting big whitetail would choose to starve himself to death on a coastal hillside when he could get unlimited bellyfuls of corn or oats 100 yards away, right? Blacktail weren’t real deer, they were mini-deer.
Hindsight, sweat, blood, exhaustion, torn clothes, rattlesnakes, frustration and disbelief have taught me this stupid initial evaluation of how I thought things were going to be was terribly wrong. Among many other things, I failed to consider several important factors when hunting blacktail in Central California: the heat, the near total absence of water and THE MOUNTAINS.
The mountains were the hardest schoolmaster. Failure was the only option until I understood its strict and uncompromising conditions. Following are the classrooms used, the curriculum taught and the lessons I learned in humiliating, shameful, don’t-come-home-for-Christmas failure. The hard way.
Shame Hill
When I started hunting in California I had not talked to a soul about where to go, etc. I didn’t know anybody out here who hunted. So my quest was organic. (What? Deer season is in the summer??) It did not take long to figure out that water is as scarce in August on the Central Coast as common sense is between Bernie Sanders’ ears anytime. But by opening day I had found water sources and narrowed things down to hunting a mountainside in Big Sur. And by mountainside I mean park the truck and huck upwards about 1800 vertical feet. (Then I used to walk back down for lunch and climb back up for evening hunt...you’re starting to get it aren’t you? You see why I’m a black sheep, don’t you? You can shut up now.)
So there I was looking down on to this canyon at the top of a series of ridges. The canyon had a small ridge of its own so it really had a finger of woods to its right and to its left. It really was a nice spot. Until a buck showed up. Out pops this very nice deer. He was big; 4x4 with a hefty authoritative body. He was doing what I had hoped he would do and right where I hoped he would do it. He stood at the cliff edge looking down. I aimed right where I should and squeezed the trigger. I looked up to watch him hit the dirt. But he didn’t. He didn’t do anything. Nothing happened. He just stood there and looked around. Well, I thought, perhaps the distance is a little longer than my gun. Let me raise it a little, try again and watch for where the bullet hits if I miss him. So I did. Pow. Again, nothing. No running deer, no bullet impact, no anything. I was stunned. And then the buck started to get fidgety.
I knew my brush gun (35 Rem) had limitations. It was great for shooting pumpkins through thick woods at whitetails but the ballistics got ugly fast past 150 yards. I surmised he must be well past 150 yards. (Dang genius ain’t I? ) The buck started to trot across this canyon’s mini-ridge so I tried one more, this time keeping both eyes open and looking anywhere for a bullet impact. It worked. I saw my bullet impact WAYYYYYYY below the buck on the wall of the cliff he had been standing above. That was shocking.
But at least I had an idea. I adjusted and fired again at a sprinting deer this time. Bullet was much closer. Adjusted again and fired again. This one was closer yet and almost. One more in the chamber and...and my last mortar landed right between his legs just as he went over the far end of his ridge.
I sank to the ground in utter disbelief. I had never missed a deer before. I had never emptied my gun in the process. Two things became crystal clear: 1.) I needed a long range rifle. And 2.) I realized I had NO CONCEPT OF DISTANCES in the mountains.
That second realization was the real issue. I had no idea how far away that buck was. In the mountains I could not tell 100 yards from 400 yards. The trees were too unfamiliar, as was the plant life. Is that bush down there twelve inches tall or four feet tall? Or eight feet tall? My mind could not calculate the distances between canyons or to or from anything. Put me at the edge of an alfalfa field, in a corn field or in the woods and I can do the math. But out here in these dang mountains I had no idea how far away anything was.
So this humbled student learned two Mountain Lessons in my initial baptism:
Lesson 1: Gun up. Bring a 300+ yard gun to hunt in the mountains.
Lesson 2: Get a laser rangefinder. It is just as important as the gun.
Those were big lessons. I resolved them which got me in the game. But the Mountains had more harsh lessons to teach and I had more to learn.
San Benito Slide
Hollister, California is about 25 miles inland from the Central Coast. It is in San Benito County which is sparsely populated, hot and dry. I was hunting deer on some nice private property in the mountains south of Hollister. By this time I had already learned the importance of glassing far and wide in the middle of the day for bucks sitting under a shade tree sipping cocktails. On this day I found one.
I was on the edge of the top of a hill when I saw the deer who was laying down. It was across a valley on another hill. There were branches covering its head so I could not tell the gender. I would have to go to the left in order to get an unobstructed look at its head. Instead of going left I went backwards and moved slowly clockwise around the hill. I came around and the deer came into view. It was clearly a buck. He was a nice one.
So now the rangefinder gets pulled out and he is 506 yards away. Wow. That is a ways out there, I thought. There is no way for me to move from me to him without getting busted. I would have to take the shot from here. BUT I do not know the bullet drop of my rifle at 500 yards. I knew it at 200, 300 and 400 but had not thought to know 500 yards.
Another dilemma. So I thought I do not know this but I know someone who does. I pull out my phone on the side of a hill in California to call up my brother in Wisconsin to ask him what the bullet drop of my .270 is at 500 yards. I was willing to take the guaranteed berating from him just as long as he could give me the info. Out of luck. No service.
Well, I kind of know what it might be. Let me see if I can get a bead on him and go from there. But I am on a steep, very steep incline here. How can I do this? I set my backpack down in front of me and laid down to try to rest my rifle on it. As soon as I did my feet slipped and I slid downhill about six inches. Ok, reach up, grab the backpack and pull it down to where I am now. Alright. Got the rifle on the backpack, now look through the scope. Nope. No can do. The hillside is so steep that I cannot get my head far enough over to the right to see through the scope. My head simply runs into the hill. I mean this is an 80 – 85 degree slope I am on. So I jimmy the backpack, contort by body to see if I can see the buck through the scope. My toes are digging in to virtually nothing to keep from more sliding fun. Finally I can just barely see the deer through the scope. That is, I still cannot get my head over to line the crosshairs up with my eye. What a dilemma. I hate these dang mountains.
More adjusting, more contorting. At last! There he is. So I start to line the reclining buck up in the crosshairs with a several-foot over-aim. I think I am in the ballpark. I am just about ready to squeeze...when the toe hold gives out. I slide five feet down hill with no ability to control or stop it. The slide and the rocks create a sound commotion which the buck hears. And sees. He stands up and in two bounds is gone.
There I am incredulous once again on a hillside. I’ve shamed my family once again and they don’t even know it. Yet. How does a man regain his dignity after such a fail? And to think I had turned down a much closer shot at a 300 lb. wild boar a few hours earlier. For what, an inglorious slide down a mountain? I’m sure that buck was laughing to death while bounding away.
What Mountain Lessons did the taskmaster teach me in this session?
Lesson 3: Always know the bullet drop of your rifle out to at least 600 yards.
Lesson 4: If the mountain is too steep to shoot from, find another way instead of spooking the deer.
You might think with the above lessons learned my magnificent fails would be over. This was not the case.
Scope Scar
The northern section of The Los Padres National Forest is a wicked place. Yes it is beautiful but it is mostly inaccessible, dangerous and unforgiving. Much of it is basically vertical; straight up, straight down. I guarantee there are places no human has ever been. Its western slope of the Santa Lucia mountains looks down to the amazing rugged coastline of Big Sur and on into infinite Pacific. Filled with redwoods which are watered by daily coastal fog it is usually a temperate climate. Frankly is it gorgeous. But in a vampire kind of way.
As you would move east however things change. The vertical element of the mountains remains treacherous but the height of the range has blocked the coastal climate. The cooler air cannot make it over the mountains. Things therefore become fiendishly hot quickly. The mountains descend into hell. There is no better way to describe it. Sufferable. Unrelenting. Unforgiving. Punishing. Uncaring. With no escape from the brutality.
So hell is the setting of my next, um, situation.
I am two miles down an old dirt access road [now gated; thanks Federal Government, you self-serving jerks]. But I am lucky to be on a road. There are only like 5 roads in the entire Los Padres (north section.) There has not been a vehicle on this road for a decade or two. Way up on a steep hillside I spot a very nice blacktail buck snoozing under a shade tree. He is clearly a very legal buck. He is beautiful.
What happened next was that a spontaneous episode of the Three Stooges began. The parts of each stooge were played by me. The incline between the deer and I was steep. If I laid down on the ground (which Larry did) I could not see the deer. The deer is 500 yards away, I am not going to offhand shoot a deer at 500 yards. So maybe if I walked away from this incline I could get to some flat ground. So Moe walks away from the deer, down-slope seeking somewhere flat where I could lay down and see the deer at the same time. Moe walks in circles, wasting precious time, looking for the right spot, hoping the deer is not enjoying the show.
A ‘suitable’ spot was finally found. The backpack was dropped to rest the rifle on. So Curly drops down to start acquiring the deer in the scope. BUT, it was just too steep. That is, the barrel of the rifle was at such an incline that Curly could not lay down and look up in to the scope. The near end of the scope pointed down toward Curly’s shoulder; that’s how high up the barrel was pointed. So Curly had to kind of bend over like he was touching his chin to his shoulder and then tilt his head to the left to see down[uphill]range though the scope. It was a horrible precarious shooting position. [Author’s’s note, it was not a shooting position. It was a disaster position. Do not try this at home. Or some fool will write about you too on a hunting website.]
So there I am almost ready to take a shot. I had ranged the deer at 500 or so yards. Now what exactly was that bullet drop? Um, it was, um, well, I just read it. I knew it a few hours ago. What was it again?
I know, I will do my best guess then watch where the bullet hits and adjust. (Seeing any patterns here yet? Any themes?). With the plan all set Curly pulls the trigger. The high powered rifle recoils. The scope slams into Curly’s eyebrow, shoves his head violently backward and instantly fills Curly’s shooting eye with blood.
You enjoyed that, didn’t you? You can see me sitting there stunned with blood pouring in to my eye, can’t you? You’re laughing. At my expense. You just called me an idiot in your head, right? You know I have no idea where that bullet hit or where that deer went, don’t you? Like if you could watch a deer if I came over and punched you in the eye? Would you do better than me, tough guy?
Sorry about that; Curly suffers PTSD episodes from all those punches to his head.
I sat there in hell, in my familiar position: on the ground defeated and in total disbelief. A sane hunter would have done some deep self-evaluation and probably stopped hunting about then. Not me. Instead I got the bleeding stopped and went up to look for blood where that buck had been laying. There was no deer blood. The only blood was on my handkerchief and my shirt.
But it wasn’t over. I dejectedly trudged myself back toward my truck feeling like an idiot. For some reason I cut through this dry river bed to check things out. I was not necessarily watching my feet. It is then I heard the rattle. I froze. I was very close to a hidden rattlesnake. Rather I was VERY CLOSE to a HIDDEN RATTLESNAKE!!! I ******* HATE snakes! I HATE them. Have I said yet that I HATE SNAKES?!! I see one, it dies. That’s the rule. And now a ******* RATTLE snake was shaking its rattle at me.
As a pig hunter I always carry a .44 magnum sidearm. You have to when you hunt boar. I also do it out of habit, over-achieving mountain lions and general hunting continuity when I hunt deer. It did not take me long to pull the .44 out and start looking for that rattler. Soon enough I spotted him. I let him have it. He was mortally wounded but still alive. I let him deal with his condition and I started walking the other way. I went about five steps and then I heard it AGAIN. ANOTHER RATTLESNAKE!!! Oh my goodness. Another rattlesnake is shaking his warning at me. If doom has a sound, a rattlesnake is the one who makes it. Did I mention that I HATE SNAKES? Wow. OK, he is coming from over there. So that means I am going to go this way over here. I took three steps in a safe direction and A THIRD RATTLESNAKE started rattling at me!!!
In all my life I have never wanted to run as fast as I could as I did in that moment. I was in a dang RATTLESNAKE PIT! But I COULDN’T run. If I ran fast I would be sure to inadvertently get too close to one and get myself bit. My skin was CRAWLING. I prayed Captain Kirk or Scotty would beam me up instantly. I was in hell and surrounded by hell’s rattlers.
I spit the difference between the two active rattlers and started moving slowly but absolutely deliberately to get the heck out of Dodge, watching to the right and to the left very, very closely. Oh feet do not fail me now. Every moment I wanted to sprint but instead I had to slowly ease my way out. My flight instincts had never screamed louder but I had to suppress the urges and go by the book...nothing there, nothing there, nothing there, nothing there, etc. About 100 yards on and I started to relax. I got back to the road and began my walk of misery and shame back to the truck.
So what did the mountains teach me this time? The first lesson is a corollary of a previous lesson
Lesson 5: Always know the bullet drop of your rifle out to at least 600 yards. Memorize it. AND WRITE IT DOWN AND BRING IT WITH YOU
Lesson 6: Don’t shoot with your darn eye too close to the scope
For the record, I now memorize the bullet drops all the way out to 650 yards. I hunted with a 30.06 last year during the opener. I can tell you the drops are 7 in, 14 in, 23 in, 32 in, 43 in, 5 feet, 6 feet, 8 feet. That is the 50 yard drops from 300 to 650 yards. (Fun fact: the rest of the numbers are 10 feet, 12.5 feet, 15 feet, 18 feet, 21.5 feet, 25 feet, 29 feet. Those are from 700 to 1000 yards offered simply for perspective, not for shooting advice.) AND I write them down and bring it. I also brought a .308 and had those figures on my cheat sheet as well.
If you thought the above disasters were enough for one guy, you are a poor judge of character and have underestimated particular people. However, you will have to wait to read the next two BlackFails, or blacktail failures: Scope Butt and The Abyss. They and a few more will be presented here ...eventually.
I hope the lessons from my failures are in some way helpful to a young hunter or two. If anyone else cares to share lessons learned from their own failures I am sure young hunters and all of us could learn from those stories too.
Lessons Learned From Spectacular Failed Blacktail Hunts in These Dang Mountains
I have always been the black sheep of my whitetail hunting Wisconsin family. But I did not bring real shame to them until I came out west and started hunting blacktails in the mountains. Growing up if I shot a 4 pointer (2x2), my brother shot a 6. If I shot a 6 my dad shot a 10. If I got a nice anything it did not measure up to my uncle’s regular wallhangers. As far as shooting I can shoot five-shot quarters (cover the five bullet holes in a target with a quarter) at a hundred yards. But my family can shoot dimes. I’m a reject. They all reload like a religion; a thousand rounds of each caliber in each flavor is standard. I have the equipment but suck at it (forget to put the gun powder in before seating the bullet, pour gun powder into casings that already had their powder poured in to them etc.) so I buy factory. Get the picture? My family does.
Like most in Wisconsin I can hunt whitetails in the whitetail’s environment. Cheeseheads are excellent whitetail hunters, killing 200,000 of them a year. So when I found myself living in California I figured hunting the diminutive blacktails in Zone A would be relatively the same as bagging whitetails back home only less rewarding. I just wouldn’t send any pictures of the little fellas to my family back home to save me some embarrassment. I mean what self-respecting big whitetail would choose to starve himself to death on a coastal hillside when he could get unlimited bellyfuls of corn or oats 100 yards away, right? Blacktail weren’t real deer, they were mini-deer.
Hindsight, sweat, blood, exhaustion, torn clothes, rattlesnakes, frustration and disbelief have taught me this stupid initial evaluation of how I thought things were going to be was terribly wrong. Among many other things, I failed to consider several important factors when hunting blacktail in Central California: the heat, the near total absence of water and THE MOUNTAINS.
The mountains were the hardest schoolmaster. Failure was the only option until I understood its strict and uncompromising conditions. Following are the classrooms used, the curriculum taught and the lessons I learned in humiliating, shameful, don’t-come-home-for-Christmas failure. The hard way.
Shame Hill
When I started hunting in California I had not talked to a soul about where to go, etc. I didn’t know anybody out here who hunted. So my quest was organic. (What? Deer season is in the summer??) It did not take long to figure out that water is as scarce in August on the Central Coast as common sense is between Bernie Sanders’ ears anytime. But by opening day I had found water sources and narrowed things down to hunting a mountainside in Big Sur. And by mountainside I mean park the truck and huck upwards about 1800 vertical feet. (Then I used to walk back down for lunch and climb back up for evening hunt...you’re starting to get it aren’t you? You see why I’m a black sheep, don’t you? You can shut up now.)
So there I was looking down on to this canyon at the top of a series of ridges. The canyon had a small ridge of its own so it really had a finger of woods to its right and to its left. It really was a nice spot. Until a buck showed up. Out pops this very nice deer. He was big; 4x4 with a hefty authoritative body. He was doing what I had hoped he would do and right where I hoped he would do it. He stood at the cliff edge looking down. I aimed right where I should and squeezed the trigger. I looked up to watch him hit the dirt. But he didn’t. He didn’t do anything. Nothing happened. He just stood there and looked around. Well, I thought, perhaps the distance is a little longer than my gun. Let me raise it a little, try again and watch for where the bullet hits if I miss him. So I did. Pow. Again, nothing. No running deer, no bullet impact, no anything. I was stunned. And then the buck started to get fidgety.
I knew my brush gun (35 Rem) had limitations. It was great for shooting pumpkins through thick woods at whitetails but the ballistics got ugly fast past 150 yards. I surmised he must be well past 150 yards. (Dang genius ain’t I? ) The buck started to trot across this canyon’s mini-ridge so I tried one more, this time keeping both eyes open and looking anywhere for a bullet impact. It worked. I saw my bullet impact WAYYYYYYY below the buck on the wall of the cliff he had been standing above. That was shocking.
But at least I had an idea. I adjusted and fired again at a sprinting deer this time. Bullet was much closer. Adjusted again and fired again. This one was closer yet and almost. One more in the chamber and...and my last mortar landed right between his legs just as he went over the far end of his ridge.
I sank to the ground in utter disbelief. I had never missed a deer before. I had never emptied my gun in the process. Two things became crystal clear: 1.) I needed a long range rifle. And 2.) I realized I had NO CONCEPT OF DISTANCES in the mountains.
That second realization was the real issue. I had no idea how far away that buck was. In the mountains I could not tell 100 yards from 400 yards. The trees were too unfamiliar, as was the plant life. Is that bush down there twelve inches tall or four feet tall? Or eight feet tall? My mind could not calculate the distances between canyons or to or from anything. Put me at the edge of an alfalfa field, in a corn field or in the woods and I can do the math. But out here in these dang mountains I had no idea how far away anything was.
So this humbled student learned two Mountain Lessons in my initial baptism:
Lesson 1: Gun up. Bring a 300+ yard gun to hunt in the mountains.
Lesson 2: Get a laser rangefinder. It is just as important as the gun.
Those were big lessons. I resolved them which got me in the game. But the Mountains had more harsh lessons to teach and I had more to learn.
San Benito Slide
Hollister, California is about 25 miles inland from the Central Coast. It is in San Benito County which is sparsely populated, hot and dry. I was hunting deer on some nice private property in the mountains south of Hollister. By this time I had already learned the importance of glassing far and wide in the middle of the day for bucks sitting under a shade tree sipping cocktails. On this day I found one.
I was on the edge of the top of a hill when I saw the deer who was laying down. It was across a valley on another hill. There were branches covering its head so I could not tell the gender. I would have to go to the left in order to get an unobstructed look at its head. Instead of going left I went backwards and moved slowly clockwise around the hill. I came around and the deer came into view. It was clearly a buck. He was a nice one.
So now the rangefinder gets pulled out and he is 506 yards away. Wow. That is a ways out there, I thought. There is no way for me to move from me to him without getting busted. I would have to take the shot from here. BUT I do not know the bullet drop of my rifle at 500 yards. I knew it at 200, 300 and 400 but had not thought to know 500 yards.
Another dilemma. So I thought I do not know this but I know someone who does. I pull out my phone on the side of a hill in California to call up my brother in Wisconsin to ask him what the bullet drop of my .270 is at 500 yards. I was willing to take the guaranteed berating from him just as long as he could give me the info. Out of luck. No service.
Well, I kind of know what it might be. Let me see if I can get a bead on him and go from there. But I am on a steep, very steep incline here. How can I do this? I set my backpack down in front of me and laid down to try to rest my rifle on it. As soon as I did my feet slipped and I slid downhill about six inches. Ok, reach up, grab the backpack and pull it down to where I am now. Alright. Got the rifle on the backpack, now look through the scope. Nope. No can do. The hillside is so steep that I cannot get my head far enough over to the right to see through the scope. My head simply runs into the hill. I mean this is an 80 – 85 degree slope I am on. So I jimmy the backpack, contort by body to see if I can see the buck through the scope. My toes are digging in to virtually nothing to keep from more sliding fun. Finally I can just barely see the deer through the scope. That is, I still cannot get my head over to line the crosshairs up with my eye. What a dilemma. I hate these dang mountains.
More adjusting, more contorting. At last! There he is. So I start to line the reclining buck up in the crosshairs with a several-foot over-aim. I think I am in the ballpark. I am just about ready to squeeze...when the toe hold gives out. I slide five feet down hill with no ability to control or stop it. The slide and the rocks create a sound commotion which the buck hears. And sees. He stands up and in two bounds is gone.
There I am incredulous once again on a hillside. I’ve shamed my family once again and they don’t even know it. Yet. How does a man regain his dignity after such a fail? And to think I had turned down a much closer shot at a 300 lb. wild boar a few hours earlier. For what, an inglorious slide down a mountain? I’m sure that buck was laughing to death while bounding away.
What Mountain Lessons did the taskmaster teach me in this session?
Lesson 3: Always know the bullet drop of your rifle out to at least 600 yards.
Lesson 4: If the mountain is too steep to shoot from, find another way instead of spooking the deer.
You might think with the above lessons learned my magnificent fails would be over. This was not the case.
Scope Scar
The northern section of The Los Padres National Forest is a wicked place. Yes it is beautiful but it is mostly inaccessible, dangerous and unforgiving. Much of it is basically vertical; straight up, straight down. I guarantee there are places no human has ever been. Its western slope of the Santa Lucia mountains looks down to the amazing rugged coastline of Big Sur and on into infinite Pacific. Filled with redwoods which are watered by daily coastal fog it is usually a temperate climate. Frankly is it gorgeous. But in a vampire kind of way.
As you would move east however things change. The vertical element of the mountains remains treacherous but the height of the range has blocked the coastal climate. The cooler air cannot make it over the mountains. Things therefore become fiendishly hot quickly. The mountains descend into hell. There is no better way to describe it. Sufferable. Unrelenting. Unforgiving. Punishing. Uncaring. With no escape from the brutality.
So hell is the setting of my next, um, situation.
I am two miles down an old dirt access road [now gated; thanks Federal Government, you self-serving jerks]. But I am lucky to be on a road. There are only like 5 roads in the entire Los Padres (north section.) There has not been a vehicle on this road for a decade or two. Way up on a steep hillside I spot a very nice blacktail buck snoozing under a shade tree. He is clearly a very legal buck. He is beautiful.
What happened next was that a spontaneous episode of the Three Stooges began. The parts of each stooge were played by me. The incline between the deer and I was steep. If I laid down on the ground (which Larry did) I could not see the deer. The deer is 500 yards away, I am not going to offhand shoot a deer at 500 yards. So maybe if I walked away from this incline I could get to some flat ground. So Moe walks away from the deer, down-slope seeking somewhere flat where I could lay down and see the deer at the same time. Moe walks in circles, wasting precious time, looking for the right spot, hoping the deer is not enjoying the show.
A ‘suitable’ spot was finally found. The backpack was dropped to rest the rifle on. So Curly drops down to start acquiring the deer in the scope. BUT, it was just too steep. That is, the barrel of the rifle was at such an incline that Curly could not lay down and look up in to the scope. The near end of the scope pointed down toward Curly’s shoulder; that’s how high up the barrel was pointed. So Curly had to kind of bend over like he was touching his chin to his shoulder and then tilt his head to the left to see down[uphill]range though the scope. It was a horrible precarious shooting position. [Author’s’s note, it was not a shooting position. It was a disaster position. Do not try this at home. Or some fool will write about you too on a hunting website.]
So there I am almost ready to take a shot. I had ranged the deer at 500 or so yards. Now what exactly was that bullet drop? Um, it was, um, well, I just read it. I knew it a few hours ago. What was it again?
I know, I will do my best guess then watch where the bullet hits and adjust. (Seeing any patterns here yet? Any themes?). With the plan all set Curly pulls the trigger. The high powered rifle recoils. The scope slams into Curly’s eyebrow, shoves his head violently backward and instantly fills Curly’s shooting eye with blood.
You enjoyed that, didn’t you? You can see me sitting there stunned with blood pouring in to my eye, can’t you? You’re laughing. At my expense. You just called me an idiot in your head, right? You know I have no idea where that bullet hit or where that deer went, don’t you? Like if you could watch a deer if I came over and punched you in the eye? Would you do better than me, tough guy?
Sorry about that; Curly suffers PTSD episodes from all those punches to his head.
I sat there in hell, in my familiar position: on the ground defeated and in total disbelief. A sane hunter would have done some deep self-evaluation and probably stopped hunting about then. Not me. Instead I got the bleeding stopped and went up to look for blood where that buck had been laying. There was no deer blood. The only blood was on my handkerchief and my shirt.
But it wasn’t over. I dejectedly trudged myself back toward my truck feeling like an idiot. For some reason I cut through this dry river bed to check things out. I was not necessarily watching my feet. It is then I heard the rattle. I froze. I was very close to a hidden rattlesnake. Rather I was VERY CLOSE to a HIDDEN RATTLESNAKE!!! I ******* HATE snakes! I HATE them. Have I said yet that I HATE SNAKES?!! I see one, it dies. That’s the rule. And now a ******* RATTLE snake was shaking its rattle at me.
As a pig hunter I always carry a .44 magnum sidearm. You have to when you hunt boar. I also do it out of habit, over-achieving mountain lions and general hunting continuity when I hunt deer. It did not take me long to pull the .44 out and start looking for that rattler. Soon enough I spotted him. I let him have it. He was mortally wounded but still alive. I let him deal with his condition and I started walking the other way. I went about five steps and then I heard it AGAIN. ANOTHER RATTLESNAKE!!! Oh my goodness. Another rattlesnake is shaking his warning at me. If doom has a sound, a rattlesnake is the one who makes it. Did I mention that I HATE SNAKES? Wow. OK, he is coming from over there. So that means I am going to go this way over here. I took three steps in a safe direction and A THIRD RATTLESNAKE started rattling at me!!!
In all my life I have never wanted to run as fast as I could as I did in that moment. I was in a dang RATTLESNAKE PIT! But I COULDN’T run. If I ran fast I would be sure to inadvertently get too close to one and get myself bit. My skin was CRAWLING. I prayed Captain Kirk or Scotty would beam me up instantly. I was in hell and surrounded by hell’s rattlers.
I spit the difference between the two active rattlers and started moving slowly but absolutely deliberately to get the heck out of Dodge, watching to the right and to the left very, very closely. Oh feet do not fail me now. Every moment I wanted to sprint but instead I had to slowly ease my way out. My flight instincts had never screamed louder but I had to suppress the urges and go by the book...nothing there, nothing there, nothing there, nothing there, etc. About 100 yards on and I started to relax. I got back to the road and began my walk of misery and shame back to the truck.
So what did the mountains teach me this time? The first lesson is a corollary of a previous lesson
Lesson 5: Always know the bullet drop of your rifle out to at least 600 yards. Memorize it. AND WRITE IT DOWN AND BRING IT WITH YOU
Lesson 6: Don’t shoot with your darn eye too close to the scope
For the record, I now memorize the bullet drops all the way out to 650 yards. I hunted with a 30.06 last year during the opener. I can tell you the drops are 7 in, 14 in, 23 in, 32 in, 43 in, 5 feet, 6 feet, 8 feet. That is the 50 yard drops from 300 to 650 yards. (Fun fact: the rest of the numbers are 10 feet, 12.5 feet, 15 feet, 18 feet, 21.5 feet, 25 feet, 29 feet. Those are from 700 to 1000 yards offered simply for perspective, not for shooting advice.) AND I write them down and bring it. I also brought a .308 and had those figures on my cheat sheet as well.
If you thought the above disasters were enough for one guy, you are a poor judge of character and have underestimated particular people. However, you will have to wait to read the next two BlackFails, or blacktail failures: Scope Butt and The Abyss. They and a few more will be presented here ...eventually.
I hope the lessons from my failures are in some way helpful to a young hunter or two. If anyone else cares to share lessons learned from their own failures I am sure young hunters and all of us could learn from those stories too.