jwatts
Well-known member
12/29 continued
We went back out to our lease yesterday afternoon, with the promise that we weren't tracking any deer unless it was for family or on the lease. My wife and I went to one stand , and my son went to another to watch a pipeline crossing. About 4:30pm the shots started. Shortly afterwards the texts started coming in. After saying we weren't tracking, we ended up with 2 tracks on the lease and another for a family friend's daughter that we have tracked for several times.
Track 1, 35 Wheln at just over 100yd. The deer immediately ran towards the hunter and into a few year old cutover. They had gone in, found and marked blood, but jumped the deer. When we got there Boone ran into the plot and made a hard right, right onto the marked trail. He made it to their last mark and made a 90 degree right turn. He immediately hooked a left and started rolling. I assumed the deer was still alive. He reached a creek and started to bay. I pushed my way through a wall of briars, and made it to the creek only to find he was after a coyote. I guess it was headed to the same deer he was.
We pulled off, reset, and he went straight to the dead deer, which was right about where he started running earlier. The deer was shot quartering to, and was hit low in front of the onside shoulder, and exited through the offside leg. Imagine a shot that was high enough to get half the bullet diameter into the chest cavity. Regardless, we had the deer and were headed to number 2.
Track 2, 45-70 at about 80yd. The details said this one was a dreaded "back whack". If you look at the anatomy of a whitetail, it is possible to shoot over the spine above the shoulders, but have the appearance of a great shot. The spine dips low just above the center of the shoulder. A deer hit here will immediately hit the ground and appear to be stone dead. Eventually it'll start to move, twitch it's tail, kick it's legs, and slowly regain feeling in it's body. Once it does, it will run until it feels safe. That's typically a long ways. They also don't tend to produce the same pheromones as a wounded deer for as long as normal. It's a tough track.
This deer was shot about 4:30pm. It hit the dirt an laid there. The hunter gathered his gear and started to go look at the deer. He looked up to see the deer floundering around. By the time he got his gun ready, the deer was up and gone. He had blood for about 50yd then it stopped. The blood was dark red and thick, indicating it was starting to clot. We turned out and got the typical "back whack" response. Boone lined out great for about 200yd, then nothing. It's like the deer is plucked off the ground and disappears. We pushed him severa times, always with the same results. Regardless I walked every inch of his track for several different tracks. Sometimes it found me on my hands and knees going through tunnels in briar patches. After a few hours, we called it off. It's always tough to convince a hunter that a "dead deer" isn't dead.
Track 3, 350 Legend, around 50yd. This was another that didn't sound promising once we showed up. Over the phone it did. They originally thought it was a gut shot. I told them I would be a while, so back out nad let it lay. The hunter's dad is training a dog. I told him to put his dog on it based off of the initial assesment over the phone. After a few hours they made it to a pond, and to a dead end. We finally made it to them at roughly 930pm. This track is for my wife's best friend's daughter, so that took the heat off of me for keeping her out so late with me on what was supposed to be a family night of going out to eat and catching a movie.
The puppy had made an attempt at the track. They had found something on the track that they couldn't identify. Turned out it was chunks of fat. The blood would stop, they would keep tracking, find more fat, more blood, trickling to nothing. Also, the girl's grandpa decided to "help" by driving his side by side down the plot and all nearby trails looking for blood, spreading the scent all around.
We turned loose and Boone started towards the pond on the same line that they took earlier. When he got to the pond he bailed off in it, swam it, and lined out on the other side. Sure enough we found more fat and blood where the deer left the pond. Boone took it to another plot where grandpa had driven. It took him quite a while to sort it out. After that he hit a dead end at a very deep ditch. He finally found a crossing, got back on track, and came up empty. He never was able to line it out after the ditch. The deer had obviously been pushed before we got there, and decided to leave the country.
We ended the day 2/4. Not what I wanted, but you can't get them all.
We went back out to our lease yesterday afternoon, with the promise that we weren't tracking any deer unless it was for family or on the lease. My wife and I went to one stand , and my son went to another to watch a pipeline crossing. About 4:30pm the shots started. Shortly afterwards the texts started coming in. After saying we weren't tracking, we ended up with 2 tracks on the lease and another for a family friend's daughter that we have tracked for several times.
Track 1, 35 Wheln at just over 100yd. The deer immediately ran towards the hunter and into a few year old cutover. They had gone in, found and marked blood, but jumped the deer. When we got there Boone ran into the plot and made a hard right, right onto the marked trail. He made it to their last mark and made a 90 degree right turn. He immediately hooked a left and started rolling. I assumed the deer was still alive. He reached a creek and started to bay. I pushed my way through a wall of briars, and made it to the creek only to find he was after a coyote. I guess it was headed to the same deer he was.
We pulled off, reset, and he went straight to the dead deer, which was right about where he started running earlier. The deer was shot quartering to, and was hit low in front of the onside shoulder, and exited through the offside leg. Imagine a shot that was high enough to get half the bullet diameter into the chest cavity. Regardless, we had the deer and were headed to number 2.
Track 2, 45-70 at about 80yd. The details said this one was a dreaded "back whack". If you look at the anatomy of a whitetail, it is possible to shoot over the spine above the shoulders, but have the appearance of a great shot. The spine dips low just above the center of the shoulder. A deer hit here will immediately hit the ground and appear to be stone dead. Eventually it'll start to move, twitch it's tail, kick it's legs, and slowly regain feeling in it's body. Once it does, it will run until it feels safe. That's typically a long ways. They also don't tend to produce the same pheromones as a wounded deer for as long as normal. It's a tough track.
This deer was shot about 4:30pm. It hit the dirt an laid there. The hunter gathered his gear and started to go look at the deer. He looked up to see the deer floundering around. By the time he got his gun ready, the deer was up and gone. He had blood for about 50yd then it stopped. The blood was dark red and thick, indicating it was starting to clot. We turned out and got the typical "back whack" response. Boone lined out great for about 200yd, then nothing. It's like the deer is plucked off the ground and disappears. We pushed him severa times, always with the same results. Regardless I walked every inch of his track for several different tracks. Sometimes it found me on my hands and knees going through tunnels in briar patches. After a few hours, we called it off. It's always tough to convince a hunter that a "dead deer" isn't dead.
Track 3, 350 Legend, around 50yd. This was another that didn't sound promising once we showed up. Over the phone it did. They originally thought it was a gut shot. I told them I would be a while, so back out nad let it lay. The hunter's dad is training a dog. I told him to put his dog on it based off of the initial assesment over the phone. After a few hours they made it to a pond, and to a dead end. We finally made it to them at roughly 930pm. This track is for my wife's best friend's daughter, so that took the heat off of me for keeping her out so late with me on what was supposed to be a family night of going out to eat and catching a movie.
The puppy had made an attempt at the track. They had found something on the track that they couldn't identify. Turned out it was chunks of fat. The blood would stop, they would keep tracking, find more fat, more blood, trickling to nothing. Also, the girl's grandpa decided to "help" by driving his side by side down the plot and all nearby trails looking for blood, spreading the scent all around.
We turned loose and Boone started towards the pond on the same line that they took earlier. When he got to the pond he bailed off in it, swam it, and lined out on the other side. Sure enough we found more fat and blood where the deer left the pond. Boone took it to another plot where grandpa had driven. It took him quite a while to sort it out. After that he hit a dead end at a very deep ditch. He finally found a crossing, got back on track, and came up empty. He never was able to line it out after the ditch. The deer had obviously been pushed before we got there, and decided to leave the country.
We ended the day 2/4. Not what I wanted, but you can't get them all.