SDHNTR

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I'll guess I'll start the thread since I drew first blood, then the rest of the guys can chime in and hopefully One Track will be home soon to post pics. In all, we seriously scored. We did very well, killed some VERY respectable bucks (actually huge ones for this unit) and had a great trip. We had great hunting weather with highs in the mid 40's. With the wind it was downright cold at times but that just added to the adventure. Of course the day we leave it was 65 degrees, sunny and no wind.

We got there on Friday afternoon. Buck-eye, NWOkla, and I drove up from Denver and One Track drove down from Sheridan where he was bow hunting muleys (another story I'm sure he'll fill us in on later). We met near the area I wanted to look at first. The rifle season opened the next day on Sat but I had an archery license so I could bow hunt right away. My initial plan was to try to take a doe if it was easy enough, and not let it get in the way of scouting up some good bucks for the other guys. Then I could later hold out for a buck after all the other guys got one. I had determined long prior that my main objective for this trip was to kill an antelope, spot and stalk, with my bow. I didn't care if it was a doe or a buck, and since I had both tags I could always fill the other with a rifle if I wanted. I had made up my mind to take the first animal that presented me with a workable shot. I could always hold out for quality later.

As soon as we step out of the car and say hi to OT there are antelope 300 yards away. They already had us pegged. A halfhearted stalk resulted in nothing.

We hop in the vehicles and cruise around looking for some good bucks to hang tags on the next day. As we top a rise there is a good P&Y class buck with 3 does in a slight depression with a perfect ridgeline just above them. We drive on past and I get out to stalk. The set up was perfect with a nice bush right at the lip of the ridge to block my outline. I crawl up there undetected. I lean out and range a doe at 38 yards. I draw and stand at the same time. Trained on the doe and about to release, I look over and there is the buck just a few yards past. He is quartering to me just a bit but still giving me a fine shot. I guess him at 42 yards, but he is downhill and he is also standing in a low spot so all I can see is his body, not legs. I get a good bead and release clean. All looks good until the arrow drops it's last few yards and drills a small sage that was a few yards in front of the buck. Game over. I think he actually ended up being a bit farther than I thought, and since he was standing in a low spot, that sage was right in the arc of my arrow's flight. I was bummed as it was a nice buck.

OT and NWOKla went to go get some fuel and Bucky and I stay out for a bit. We find some more goats, with another nice buck in the herd, and try to set up on him. An easy 20 yard shot turns into a long one. I make a quick guess at 60 and take a shot at the perfectly broadside buck. The arrow arcs up and all looks absolutely perfect until the last few feet when the bottom drops out and the arrow lands at his feet. Game over again.

We meet back up with the other truck and agree to go see some other parts of this huge unit. We weren't seeing any really good bucks in this area. This evening was primarily a scouting mission, not a SDHNTR archery mission, and we needed to find some big bucks.

Driving back to the highway we spot a herd of does in a creek bottom, perfect for a stalk. I sneak in undetected, and take a 40 yrd shot at a doe. Let me digress here, I consider myself to be a fair to good shot with a bow and usually do pretty well at 3d shoots. I usually would consider anything out to 50 a gimme. But I'll admit, I only have a few bow animals under my belt, so I really get rattled once I'm in bow range. Back to that stalk... I choke and blow an easy shot at a broadside doe. The animals take off just a short distance but they aren't too spooked. I move up and get another crack. I range at 45 yards, stop myself, mentally check everything, 40 pin on the back 50 pin on the bottom of the chest as the animal is slightly below me and quartering away just a hair. A smooth release results in a good hit and the animal goes down just 25-30 yards. The shot taking out liver and both lungs.

As I walk up to the critter I was a bit surprised, it wasn't what I thought it was. In my haste, I neglected to look for cheek patches and I ended up killing a small yearling buck. Yes, a mistake on my part, but I had both tags so I was perfectly legal and not too concerned. Just bummed, it really didn't work out the way I thought as I wanted to take a doe early and then worry about taking a buck later. Oh well, I still accomplished my goal of taking an antelope, any antelope, spot and stalk with a bow. I'll admit I was embarrased to take that little guy to the processor but I'm sure that feeling will subside once I take my first bite of that fork tender meat. Mission accomplished, albeit bittersweet.

Opening morning comes and it is eventful. You'll get that part of the story later. Opening evening was equally eventfull. It was great seeing some EXCELLENT shooting and the filling of two first antelope tags. We also captured some great video.

Sunday morning came and we had one more buck tag to fill and two more doe tags. The decision was made to get the does out of the way. I pass an a shot first thing as she never gave me the right angle and since I was meat hunting now (I LOVE antelope meat) I wanted a clean shot that wouldn't waste anything.

I'm using my .243 now as I have never taken anything with it and I wanted to de-virginize it. I'm still a little salty about my bow performance anyway.

We later get on a herd and they are out there a ways, but the guys talk me into taking a poke and making it interesting. I pick out a mature animal, make sure there are no cheeck patches and get set into the shooting sticks. NWOkla ranges her at 274. In retrospect I should have properly set up on a backpack and shot prone at that range, but I took the poke off the sticks. I hit her in the brisket, in front of the shoulders. The herd took off with her at the back and moving slower than the rest. I took another shot and missed and another that just clipped hair. We could see blood pouring out so I knew she wouldnt go far. The herd went down into a creek bottom and when they came out the other side I glassed them hard. None were hit. She must of gone down out of sight in the creek bottom. We hike down and there she is. Two more shots to the neck (yes two, this old broad was tough!) and she's in the truck. A nice, big, fat, mature doe. Turns out the first shot did clip lung, there was massive blood loss, and she was about done when we found her.

I'll let the other fellers continue on from here.
 

Zbearclaw

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Cool, two lopes, that is a pretty good hunt.

We all have killed critters we didn't intend on, at least I have, I have twice killed little bucks with my bow, and once with a rifle inside twenty yards, that I thought was a doe, it happens.

cool, look forward to One Track getting here and filling in the pics.
 

Coues

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COOL!

I'll be expecting Mesquite grilled 'lope steaks in January!
 

Buck-eye

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Okay, guess it is my turn, even though it is not exactly the order in which things went down. Being a group of 4 in 1 truck meant we had to settle out who gets the first shot. We drew straws and I was shooting from the 2 hole. The first leg of the story (the kill preceding mine) was incredible. I had as much fun watching and being a part of that one as I did my own. Once I stepped in the batter's box, the weather took a turn for the worse. Mid 30's and rain. Windows stayed foggy and spotting goats became more challenging. We still saw several groups and I was able to be a bit selective. As the day grew longer, the goats had bedded and became harder to spot. We saw several heavy bucks, but a lot of them were parked on private land. Funny how even the goats know where the lines are drawn. We were reaching the end of the first full day and close to the tip of our region. Since I was piloting, I hung a louie down a yet untraveled road. With hills on the left, we all pinned the glass up to our eyes. Immediately, a group of goats becomes visible halfway up the rise. 10 does or so and 3 bucks. I made the call, and within seconds all four of us were out the door and on the stalk. As we ascended the herd had moved one hill over and in to a bottom area. Our foreheads had not yet cleared hill #1 and they were locked on us. With a little topographical help, we were able to back out and come in at a different angle for a shot. All the goats slowly start heading up the ridgeline, with the three bucks in tow. I pick out the biggest of the group. Here's where it gets comical.
I am not a fan of shooting sticks. My only experience with them was my first trip to Tejon. Missed 2 nice pigs off of them. Gimme my Crooked Horn as a base, and I am dead nuts. I lay down for a shot and cannot clear the sage in front of me. NWOkla throws over his sticks to me. The sense of urgency is unbelievably thick. I fumble putting them together as the buck looks at me for an eternity. I fall to my knees to set up for the shot and both go straight in to cactus. Ow. I reset, nod to the hunting god's and squeeze off a round from 259 yds. Missed. I was ready to concede when the guys say "RELOAD!" The buck had stopped at 309. I put it right on his back, and had what I thought was great control. The shot squeezes off. Miss. Im done. One Track said, " Joey, he still hasnt made the top of the ridge, he is at 405." I line him up in the Leupold. His body is peaking on the ridge line. I hold on my spot and shoot. Recoil sent me off the shot. All I see are goats bounding away. With cactus still in my kness I get up and shoulder my weapon. Just as I do, "SD" says - "He's hit!" I put the glass on him and watch him go down. Just as soon as he was down, he pops back up, does a death circle or two, and bows out. What seemed to have taken 15 minutes was over in 30 seconds. The moment was hard to absorb due to the obstacles that were presented. But that quickly went away when I saw three outstretched hands awaiting my high-five. We all headed up, snapped off some great photos, and my boys helped me lug him back to the truck. These pics are from my crappy throw away. My digital broke somewhere between Orlando and Denver. This trip was filled with a ton of excitement. But there is something to be said about the comfortability one can get from their hunting partners. Great place, great friends, great hunt, awesome memories. Brent or Brent...you are up.
 

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Arrowslinger

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Good job boys
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Great shooting and congrats on the goats.
 

Zbearclaw

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Pert good shooting at quite a poke there Bucky, congrats.
 

SDHNTR

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Hot diggity Jo-Jo, thats a dern fine photo right thar.
 

Zbearclaw

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THough now that I looked at it again I noticed one of the buck's throat patches ended up on Bucky's lower lip, Joe you didn't always have that lip caterpiller did you?

Again congrats guys, wish I could have been there, that way people don't think hunting is easy since at least one guy didn't connect.
 

Buck-eye

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I always had the full goat Zeke. Trimmed it down a year or two ago.
 

antlrcolectr

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Atta boy, those cactus suck don't they? Congratulations on what sounds like a memorable hunt..

AC
 

NWOkla

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These pics aren't too great as they were shot from my video camera but we will get some good ones up here shortly. The video is nice however and does include some impact shots so if any of you are sensitive types - you've been forewarned. Unfortunately, things happened too fast a couple of times and I didn't get all the kill shots (sorry Buckeye and OneTrack).

Short story: We killed them.

Photo/Video story:

I drew the longest straw the morning we started rifle hunting which meant I was up first. If I passed on a buck, the next guy (Joey) could go if he wanted. Brent Hill got shortest straw but it really wouldn't matter in the end. So many animals.

Nate and I stalked one at first light that ended up being a non-shooter (tough to see them good from 1000 yards in a 30 mph wind). There would be no refusing the second buck of the morning that we put the sneak on. This buck was with 2 does down in a little depression. We snuck up a small hill and belly crawled to about 230 yards. I glassed the buck and thought he was a good one. Nate confirmed my thinking when he simply said "SHOOT". We were in no hurry as it was the first morning of 3.5 days of hunting and Nate knew we were all looking for quality bucks so when he said shoot, I knew this was the one. The buck knew we were there and was facing us but he wasn't quite sure what we were. He stood facing us for about a minute and got nervous and did a 10 yard circle and stopped again facing us. I laid down my backpack and used it as a rest. The wind was blowing around 20-25 mph that morning with some gusts up to 35 mph or so but luckily it had let up a bit for my shot. I was shooting my Weatherby Mark V in .25-06 (which Nate sold me a couple years back) with Federal 115 grain Nosler Partitions topped with a Burris 3x9. He wouldn't turn broadside so at 230 yards, I shot him pretty much straight on although he was quartering left just a tad. I put the cross hairs on the intersection of his neck/right front shoulder and drilled him. Shooting at 200 yards at the range before the trip paid off. You could hear the bullet hit and he took about 15 steps to the left and stopped. The two does bolted by him and were gone. He stood there broadside for about 15 seconds probably trying to figure out why his organs were mush. I anchored him with #2 right behind the right shoulder and he dropped. After watching the video, his front legs were starting to buckle just as I shot the second time (check out the video). No need for the second shot as the first one was perfect and destroyed the boiler room and traveled the entire length of animal but I wanted him down.

My first antelope and its going on the wall (not sure how to tell the wife that one)

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My Buck Kill Video:

http://www.bloodydecks.com/gallery/misc.ph...ile&i=25337

That evening, we spotted some does and a couple of bucks bedded down on a hillside. After some detailed map reading to make sure we were on legal land, we put the sneak on them. Joey was up next. We got about 250 yards out and the does spooked and the bucks followed. Joey hit his buck at 400 yards with a 7mm Mag. This was his first buck as well.

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Joey's Buck Video:

http://www.bloodydecks.com/gallery/misc.ph...ile&i=25334

The next day, Nate and I filled our doe tags. Nate's was at around 275 yards and mine was right at 130 yards. No problem, meat is in the freezer.

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Nate's Doe Kill Video:

http://www.bloodydecks.com/gallery/misc.ph...ile&i=25336


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Brent's Doe Kill Video (careful, there is an F-bomb in this one - SDHNTR had his panties in a wad that morning
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):

http://www.bloodydecks.com/gallery/misc.ph...ile&i=25330

We looked hard all day 2 and tried to locate a smoker for Brent Hill who was finally up. Now Brent Hill is a patient hunter who will hold out for a big one or go home empty handed if he can't find one. He was holding out for a big one and we had plenty of time. After glassing all day and spotting several bucks (only a couple were borderline shooters), we finally saw the one about 20 minutes before dark. We all glassed him and thought he looked real thick. His prongs were way up high and his horns came forward quite a bit making him look very unique. Brent Hill decided to take him. The buck was at around 250 yards but he was chasing some does and he ran right towards us and stopped at about 150 yards. Brent Hill did the rest with 150 grains shot out of his trusty Remington 700 BDL .30-06. Bang, flop. We will get a better picture posted as this one was taken from my video camera which has no flash.

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Brent Hills's Buck Video:

http://www.bloodydecks.com/gallery/misc.ph...ile&i=25335

Some scenery. It was beautiful up there. Lots of flat sage country but there were some surrounding mountains that were beautiful. We saw lots of mule deer, zillions of antelope, sage grouse, eagles, millions of bunnies, prairie dogs, and an elk herd (that contained a very nice bull).

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After sleeping in some the third day, we went to shoot some prairie dogs. We finally found the town we were looking for and tested our marksmanship. Let's just say there weren't many misses. We tried to call in a coyote the last evening but ran out of time. We saw several during the trip and shot at a few but never got one. They don't call him Wiley Coyote for nothing. When they see you, they are at a full run.

Great trip, saw lots of quality animals (including 3 that are getting mounted) and had some good solid guy time. Can't wait to do it again.

Thanks Nate for organizing the trip.

Brent
 

BDB

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Awesome thread guys, great photo's AND great video, congrats the hunt
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SDHNTR

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Sorry about the F bomb in your doe kill vid bro. I had a super hard time getting the lope in the viewfinder because of the glare behind me, but I did, and it blew me away your blind ass could not pick it up in your riflescope. I got a little heated as it seemed so obvious. Sorry about that. It's actually kinda funny now.


There are more good photos, actually better quality ones, coming. One Track just needs to get caught up and post them.
 

One Track

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All I can say is that this hunt was much more fun than I had anticipated. SDHNTR had to sell me on this one. I can't wait for the next. SD had a bow kill in the first few hours of the trip. That was incredible. After that, it was glassing for a keeper. I'd estimate that we saw 100 bucks during the trip, on public land. I believe that we killed the three best bucks in that area. I drew the short straw and was third in the line up. Watching NWOkla stalk and kill his big buck was great fun. That afternoon, seeing Bucky make a 400+ yard shot on his awesome buck was a blast.

That all meant that I had two full days to find a smoker. You can't kill a smoker, if you keep killing jokers. That was my motto for the day. So, I held out. I made those boys drive me all over the unit. About five minutes before dark, SD spotted a buck chasin' some does. I got out of the truck. Grabbed a backpack for a rest and started my stalk. Or, should I say, I got off the road. He was chasin' does out at about 250 yards. I didn't want to kill a dink, so I checked him out pretty good. I thought about sleeping in the next day. About shootin' prairie dogs the next day, etc. Then, I noticed his cutters were about three inches above his ears, and he had good mass. I decided to end the hunt. He chased a doe up to about 150 and stopped. That's when I pulled the trigger. He went down. It was dark by the time we got the cameras out.

Thanks to SD for putting together a great trip. Thanks to Bucky for flying from FL. And, thanks to NWOk for singin' all that ghetto rap to pass the time. I'll post a bunch of pics. But, not sure how to multi-post images. We'll see.

Two more notes: Motel 6 in Casper sucks big time!!! Orbitz.com is a piece of poo!!!
 

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One Track

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Above are my buck and Bucky's buck.

Below are

Okie's buck, SD's archery buck, and the Fo' Shizzle Crew.
 

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SDHNTR

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Hands down, the best comment of the trip...

Let me preface by saying that Buck-eye is a quick witted sunnofagun. Notice One Track said that we were all tagged out except for him and that it took all day for him to kill his? I must of heard "nah, he's a dink" 100 times. By mid day I was sleepy. With nowhere to sleep I figured the next best alternative was to tear into the 18 pack in the cooler. So after about 8 or 9 Coors Lights I was well lubed and annoying everyone else in the truck. So was NWOkla. At some point I made Joe stop the truck (after making him stop every 7 minutes so I could pee) so I could look at something way out across a flat that looked like antelope. Joey reluctantly obliged and stopped. Everyone else looked too and decided that those were not antelope. I was still convinced. When Joe told me that I was only seeing antelope because I was looking through my "Coors Leicas" the entire car busted up. I conceded and we continued on. 10 minutes later Brent killed his whopper (the pics don't do that hog justice), after I spotted the buck with my Coors Leicas. Maybe it was one of those had to be there things.
 

One Track

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That was classic. His other one was "Deer Goggles."

Here's a pic representing our thoughts after staying at Motel 6, Casper. Rooms were never cleaned. Beds weren't changed. And, upon arriving to check in the receptionists had the following comment. "Oh, are you hunters? We don't support hunters!" Yah, exactly like that.

Then, another pic of my goat spotters.
 

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Kentuck

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Congrats all. I've got to do that trip sometime. Got in CA in 1999 and sure did enjoy eating it. Would love some more.
 
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