Two hours later I was picked up in Nashville by my friend Cornell, and after taking care of a few of his family obligations, we headed west to Zeigler, Illinois. The drive to camp was full of deer talk and speculations. We didn't have a great weather forecast for the first half of the week, but what we did have was options. Two guys, two farms, over twenty stand locations, and six days to fill two tags. I felt like I would miss out on the camaraderie that goes along with a large hunting party, but having only two guys gave me confidence that I could really focus in on harvesting a mature whitetail.
Johnson County Sunset |
With all the pressure on me now, I hunted the same farm for the next two days pretty hard. After only a small fork horn buck and a spike to show for it, I decided to make a move. I changed farms for Wednesday night and immediately had an up tick in activity. In three hours I saw five deer, including my first does of the trip. There was a small cold front in the forecast over night, so I figured I'd give the stand another sit in the morning.
When I woke up Thursday I was greeted with the coldest temps of the trip. I loaded my pack with snacks and hand warmers in preparation for an all day sit, and walked along the crunchy frost covered grass to my stand. As dawn crept through the timber, I saw the same two doe approach me from the night before. The doe was down wind of me and tried her best to pick me out. She knew something was wrong, but could not see me. After a brief stand off, she and the other doe continued to make their way to the adjacent field. The next thirty minutes were eerily quiet. I kept a vigilant watch for a trailing buck, but one never followed the script. I began to settle in for what I thought was going to be a long sit.
Before the sun had broken past the horizon the two doe came racing back towards my stand. I hastily grabbed by bow and focused past them. A young five pointer had chased them from the field directly under me. As I took a quick head count I noticed the true reason why the does were running for their lives. A tall tined, grizzled buck was thirty yards behind the five pointer and closing fast. He was coming out of the reeds and I was staring directly into the sun. I could tell by his face he was a mature buck, but had no idea how big his rack was. I wasted no time in preparing for the shot. He was far and away the largest buck I had seen in four days, and I knew if he presented me with a shot, I had to act on it. As he focused all his attention on the smaller buck, the two doe blew and took off running. I came to full draw and waited for him to step into a shooting lane. The larger buck took another glance at the five pointer and lowered his head to charge him. There was my window, 25 yards broadside, and I let the Easton Axis fly. I watched the arrow connect with the buck perfectly, as he ran about sixty yards and crashed into a sapling. Not fully knowing what I had just shot, I said a brief prayer and calmly sat back down.
The next thirty minutes were equally as surreal as the previous thirty. I figured it was a good buck, and I was almost positive he had expired a half football field away. It was that time of the morning when the woods comes alive, squirrels chasing each other, a few ducks landed in the creek, and then there was me, sitting twenty feet up in a tree trying to piece together what had just transpired. By now I had felt enough time had passed. I made a few calls to my friends, it was time to see my deer.
When Cornell and Mike showed up we first inspected the arrow. I explained the shot, and we all agreed we were going to find a dead buck at the end of the blood trail. As my friends tracked the blood, I lagged a few yards behind. This was all matter of fact to me, I didn't have to anticipate finding the deer, I just wanted to enjoy the moment and hoped it would last for days. I'll never forget Cornell's reaction when he first walked up on the buck. "Yo Cuz, you shot a monster!" Cornell never exaggerates size on a deer. if he thinks it's big, It must be big. I slowly approached the group, it was time to finally see what I shot.
Love at first sight |
Mike and Myself |
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