Crossbowguy
Well-known member
Awesome quality time with your young hunter!
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On the road. Hit up Little America for an ice cream pit stop.
That's a trophy right there. What's the Boone & Crockett score on a beast like that?
That room looks as bad as mine.Been pulling together all of my gear and food for the next two weeks of hunting. I am packing in a week’s worth for the first half of the hunt. There is definite potential to be taking trips out with meat and then going back in since I have my deer tag and two cow tags to try to fill. Nice to have a spare room downstairs where I can spread everything out and try to get it organized.
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Looks like Knife handles to me! Very nice muley bucks!!!!!Saturday
Up at 6, packed into the two trucks, and off. We drive out to the piece where antelope were spotted the evening before. Sure enough, we spotted some moving east over a small rise in a spot where I had killed two does two years before. We knew how to approach and the stalk was on. Again, no road access to where these antelope were. We crossed a deep draw and worked up a finger on the other side. Near the top we spotted two does peri scoping down on us and we hit the dirt. We were 250 yards away and just saw necks, heads, and ears. They weren’t spooked and didn’t get a good look at us. They dropped out of sight and we started moving forward. We were hoping to get a sub 200 yard shot for my nephew. As we inched toward the top, we hit the dirt again when my buddy spotted antelope beginning to filter out down below us in the valley bottom. We were pinned down. Eventually two of us crawled out to where we might have a chance. The antelope were drifting toward the private boundary. They were strung out and there was one spot where they all passed through that offered decent visibility. I scooted to a high point and set up the bipod and rear rest. I looked at the two antelope on the high point, ranged them, and got my gun ready. Those two moved off and I was set for the next antelope….which never came. Those were the last two. The antelope drifted on the private and bedded in one of their favorite spots. We waited them out for about 30 minutes before we all got up and moved over the ridge and out of sight, bumping that band away to our west.
This was my view for 30 minutes hoping the antelope would come back onto the public. They are in that grassy patch past the telephone poles. They love that spot.
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We had a fun time with that encounter and were simply happy to have seen some antelope on some public ground. My brother took some time to give my nephew some firearm instruction and practice shots. He is great at working with young people. We chatted a bit and decided to go check on the piece we had covered the day before. There are only a few options in this unit for accessible public and the antelope move around a lot, so it was worth a shot.
Driving the short spur road back to the county road wouldn’t you know there were two fawns right off the side of the road. We stopped the truck and the antelope went down into another big draw. We wanted my nephew to get a shot, but the antelope had other ideas. They dropped into the bottom of the draw over 500 yards away in no time. True to antelope hunting, I jogged down the hill and onto a small rise that was within 400 yards of the other side where I expected the antelope to come out. They did, I flopped down prone, tried to get my bipods settled, and got one of the antelope in my crosshairs. I rushed the shot, knew I missed right, and confirmed with my brother who was watching the shot. The goats then crossed onto private and over the ridge. I was upset for rushing the shot, missing, feeling like I blew the only opportunity we had, looking stupid, all the things. Oh well.
We headed down to the larger section of public, hiked up to the glassing point, spotted no antelope, ate something, felt better, back to the truck, and to the next piece where we had come close to antelope on Friday.
We spotted that same band drifting toward that same slice of public, dropped four of us off, and started making a stalk. It took some work, but we caught up to the band, confirmed they were on public, and crept up to a ridgetop to potentially get a shot. It was me, my buddy, my brother-in-law, and nephew. We ended up about 450 yards from the band of antelope, prone on the ridge, and the antelope didn’t know we were there. There were at least 30 antelope in the group and they were feeding downhill on the other side of the draw. My buddy deferred to me shooting at that distance. I was prone, bipods out and had my rear rest. I was rock solid. I ranged, held in the appropriate place on my bdc and put a doe down. The herd swapped ends and moved back onto private (seeing the theme here?). We hiked over. I should have held more for wind. I held just off the front of her but the shot still drifted back and hit her in the back end. Not awesome, but I was happy to have an antelope. I was also happy to be shooting monolithic bullets as I didn't have a ton of bullet fragmenting. The bullet smashed both hips and I had some bone damage to the meat, but nothing like I have seen with my previous SST bullets. We broke her down, and headed back.
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Everyone’s spirits were lifted. We found some cool things on the hike out, small snake, cool petrified wood, a tiny 2pt set. Good times.
Does this mean we were "in the bone zone?"
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We split into two groups again that evening. My brother, brother-in-law, nephew and I decided to go for a hail mary and go to a 2 square mile chunk of public several miles away and see if we could maybe get into anything. We saw tons of critters on the way there including a nice 170 mulie. Getting to the public piece, there was a young family just hiking out. They had been hunting deer, but reported seeing some antelope back a ways and over a big ridge. We figured we might as well give it a shot. We hiked in, spotted a big band but on private. I worked over to look into a big beautiful valley and was surprised to see a small band. I somehow ended up missing another doe offhand. Oh well. We hiked out in the dark, had a great dinner of mule deer barbacoa, and finished another good trip.
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True to all trips like this, we are already thinking about next year. The plan is to be there for the opener, have a few deer tags in camp, stay at a house/cabin again, and give ourselves a little more time. This is one of our favorite trips of the year. This year was by far the most challenging hunting, but it was still a great time.