rtraverdavis
Well-known member
- Joined
- Oct 20, 2016
- Messages
- 4,284
I grew up hunting mule deer with my dad, but it never really resonated with me in a real way until my first success a couple years ago. That year, I shot an immature buck, and a fire was set in me. It's been hard to think of anything besides hunting (family is the only thing that fills a larger space in my heart) ever since.
The following year (last year) after becoming a serious and obsessed student of the game I went back to the same area of Oregon I had shot my buck the previous year, and patterned and killed a better buck, but still an immature three point. After that, I felt I was really getting things down. I just might be a badass. Hubris at it's finest.
This year, filled with confidence and wearing a few thousand dollars worth of success-driven gear on my back, I returned to the same area with the goal of finding and killing a mature buck. But my wife and I have a 16 month old and another on the way, (they need me at home) and I can only take so much time off of work, (I'm going to Colorado for 9 days later this month for another hunt) so I had one full day of scouting and three days of hunting to get this done. I know the area pretty well now, and felt I had numerous likely places a big old buck would live. Being so early in the year, I knew the bucks would mostly be nocturnal so I would be trying to locate them in their beds. My plan was to cover lots of different areas and scour likely bedding areas with good binoculars on a tripod.
The morning of scouting day turned up nothing but does. I moved to a different area, and, later that afternoon while crossing a canyon spotted movement up above me. I put the binos up and saw him--a tall four point with eye guards and a spread that cleared his ears. The kind of buck I've been dreaming about. He was out at midday, and was with five does, which I thought was interesting for a buck of his stature in late September. I ranged him at 532 yards and we looked at each other for a long time. I had my game plan for opening morning--be up high across the canyon, locate him, and make a play.
The following year (last year) after becoming a serious and obsessed student of the game I went back to the same area of Oregon I had shot my buck the previous year, and patterned and killed a better buck, but still an immature three point. After that, I felt I was really getting things down. I just might be a badass. Hubris at it's finest.
This year, filled with confidence and wearing a few thousand dollars worth of success-driven gear on my back, I returned to the same area with the goal of finding and killing a mature buck. But my wife and I have a 16 month old and another on the way, (they need me at home) and I can only take so much time off of work, (I'm going to Colorado for 9 days later this month for another hunt) so I had one full day of scouting and three days of hunting to get this done. I know the area pretty well now, and felt I had numerous likely places a big old buck would live. Being so early in the year, I knew the bucks would mostly be nocturnal so I would be trying to locate them in their beds. My plan was to cover lots of different areas and scour likely bedding areas with good binoculars on a tripod.
The morning of scouting day turned up nothing but does. I moved to a different area, and, later that afternoon while crossing a canyon spotted movement up above me. I put the binos up and saw him--a tall four point with eye guards and a spread that cleared his ears. The kind of buck I've been dreaming about. He was out at midday, and was with five does, which I thought was interesting for a buck of his stature in late September. I ranged him at 532 yards and we looked at each other for a long time. I had my game plan for opening morning--be up high across the canyon, locate him, and make a play.

