CouesKelly
Well-known member
My 2023 OTC archery deer season started off in January. I had a OTC deer tag and an archery javelina tag in my pocket. @Wallydeuce was planning on coming out for a week to chase coues with a bow as well. We had scouted out some great water holes to sit prior to the season and of course it had been dumping rain leading up to the hunt. After coming out of a pretty heavy drought the prior year, rain played a big role in my season. I promise that this is a deer story. It just begins with a javelina detour 
New years day opening day of season. I headed out solo to an area I had scouted in December for Javelina. I had reliably located a squadron of pigs a few times in this area so I figured it would be my best bet. Rain in the forecast, but it was overcast and dry as the sun came up. I hiked in about a 1/4 mile to glass a hillside I had seen them on a week ago. Sat a glass for a while with no sign of any piggies. The hillside goes up to a flat mesa top so I hiked up it and still hunted through the mesa. After about 30 min I heard flipping rocks and pigs huffing and grunting. I followed the noises and spotted across a drainage to the south. There were about 5-6 javelina feeding on the south facing slope of the drainage almost on top where it flattens out again into another mesa. Checking the wind I was able to plan a stalk down through the drainage and up the slope they were on upswing of them. As I slowly climbed up the slope (it was very loose and I was rolling rocks down the slope as I went
) They crested the hill and worked their way up onto the mesa and out of sight. I kept working toward where they disappeared. As I crept along the ridge I heard them feeding before I saw them. I got to about 20 yards and spotted one in the brush ahead. Still feeding, the wind in my favor, I decided to stay still and allow them to feed until one cleared the brush for a shot.
As I stood still, eventually 3 pigs fed out toward me. One presented a quartering shot, I slowly drew my bow, settled my pin mid body behind the collar and released my arrow for a 15 yard shot. The arrow found its mark with the telltale thud. The javelina bounded off to my right and out of sight. The rest of the group fled as well.
I found my arrow with good blood on it and started looking around for a blood trail.




I found some small drops about 15-20 yards away. Drop.. drop....puddle.... dead pig. He hadn't ran far and had expired quickly. The clouds were coming in a lightning and thunder were threatening a pretty serious deluge. I snapped a quick photo and went to work.

I hung the javelina in a tree and was able to skin and quarter off the ground. 4 quarters, backstraps and tenderloins all fit nicely in 1 deer sized quarter game bag. I was sweating now from working quickly to break him down and it started to rain. Straped everything into my load shelf on my pack and got moving. It was about a mile back to the jeep but one trip. As I hiked it started coming down in big fat drops. I was pretty soaked once I made it back to the Jeep. Got it all in the cooler and headed home. I was pretty glad to have filled the Javelina tag on the first morning. It rained pretty good for the next few days and I heard reports that most hunters were having trouble locating pigs due to them hunkering down from the rain. Javelina was checked off the list and now I could concentrate on deer only once Wally arrived the following week.
New years day opening day of season. I headed out solo to an area I had scouted in December for Javelina. I had reliably located a squadron of pigs a few times in this area so I figured it would be my best bet. Rain in the forecast, but it was overcast and dry as the sun came up. I hiked in about a 1/4 mile to glass a hillside I had seen them on a week ago. Sat a glass for a while with no sign of any piggies. The hillside goes up to a flat mesa top so I hiked up it and still hunted through the mesa. After about 30 min I heard flipping rocks and pigs huffing and grunting. I followed the noises and spotted across a drainage to the south. There were about 5-6 javelina feeding on the south facing slope of the drainage almost on top where it flattens out again into another mesa. Checking the wind I was able to plan a stalk down through the drainage and up the slope they were on upswing of them. As I slowly climbed up the slope (it was very loose and I was rolling rocks down the slope as I went

As I stood still, eventually 3 pigs fed out toward me. One presented a quartering shot, I slowly drew my bow, settled my pin mid body behind the collar and released my arrow for a 15 yard shot. The arrow found its mark with the telltale thud. The javelina bounded off to my right and out of sight. The rest of the group fled as well.
I found my arrow with good blood on it and started looking around for a blood trail.




I found some small drops about 15-20 yards away. Drop.. drop....puddle.... dead pig. He hadn't ran far and had expired quickly. The clouds were coming in a lightning and thunder were threatening a pretty serious deluge. I snapped a quick photo and went to work.

I hung the javelina in a tree and was able to skin and quarter off the ground. 4 quarters, backstraps and tenderloins all fit nicely in 1 deer sized quarter game bag. I was sweating now from working quickly to break him down and it started to rain. Straped everything into my load shelf on my pack and got moving. It was about a mile back to the jeep but one trip. As I hiked it started coming down in big fat drops. I was pretty soaked once I made it back to the Jeep. Got it all in the cooler and headed home. I was pretty glad to have filled the Javelina tag on the first morning. It rained pretty good for the next few days and I heard reports that most hunters were having trouble locating pigs due to them hunkering down from the rain. Javelina was checked off the list and now I could concentrate on deer only once Wally arrived the following week.