Night 2
After flinging the arrow, he took off and took off pretty far. Based on how far he ran, I wasn’t too sure if he was hit. I didn’t see blood so I wasn’t sure if I made a bad placed shot. I glassed him and ended up losing sight because he ran into a bachelor herd. Panic set in and I feared that I made a bad shot. I scoured the area for blood or the arrow and could not find either.
My wife was back at the truck. I made a call to her and explained the situation. I asked that she goes towards that group and look to see if an arrow is sticking out on one of them.
I spent two hours scouting the area for any sign and didn’t find a thing. I was upset with myself, because I became “that guy”. While I didn’t notch my tag, I left the area and packed the bow in the truck. It got too hot to look, well over 100 degrees. The goal was to wait it out and find the arrow. My eye was also bothering me because of my contact ripping so it was just not a good morning.
5 PM hit and we drive to the far end of the ranch. I bring my bow and start to glass. Not very many pronghorn but there was a particular white spot that made me wonder. I get closer to realize it was a rock but also found a small group in front of me. I hid behind the cattle to see what would happen and they eventually ran off. No wounded pronghorn in that group.
I go back to the area and retrace my steps. I realized that my shot had to have gone farther if I missed since I can’t find evidence of a hit. I decided to walk 200 yards from the shot and zig zag back. Fortunately, the arrow was recovered and was buried in the dirt. Clean miss. A sigh of relief.
On the way back, the sun was setting over the mountain. We drove the fence line to stay on the road. On the way back, we found two bucks on the other side of the fence and just watched. My wife screamed “buck to your right”! It was my buck jolting through the pasture. I slam the truck into park and grab my bow from the back, thinking I can intercept him. I run 100 yards to a berm and wait, but he turned his path.
She screams again “they’re crossing the fence”! The younger buck that was on the other side slid under the fence and jetted towards the pasture while the older one waited. They knew where I was and kept running but I got them to stop on a snort. I hit them with the range finder: 65 yards. I can hit that. I adjust my bow, pull back, aim, breath in breath out, pull the trigger.
Waaaay right, the bucks took off after the cloud of dust hit. Clean miss. We recovered the arrow, no blood but a broken arrowhead.
Which made me realize; the first arrow was far right from what I thought and this arrow I saw report right. My flipping bow is off somehow!