Wednesday, November 27, 2013
2013 Gun Deer Season
If you look closely at the pic below you can see the cut on my nose from the evening's celebration
2013 bow season was pretty rough and I logged a lot of hours in a tree trying to turn it around, by gun season I was feeling it was pretty hopeless. Thankfully I have a lot of unselfish hunting buddy's and Tony is one of them with some outstanding property. This years weather for opening day was around zero degree's when you factor in the windchill, it was bonechilling and the only positive to that was the buck's needed food after rutting. Tony had his farm scouted out well and invited me out to hunt an entire herd that was feeding on his property each evening. It was a cold afternoon sit, but wow, it was worth it. Twenty minutes before dark the floodgates of deer opened up and I was seeing does by the dozens and numerous tall racks piling out into the corn field in front of me, it was a spectacle like no other, it was something from a hunting show; the cold weather was forcing these deer off of the no hunting preserve they called home to pack on some fat for the winter. It didn't take long and I had two nice bucks a couple hundred yards in front of me feeding. I decided to take this beautiful 8pt. The shot wasn't the challenging part, but locating a down deer in a harvested cornfield proved to be a ten minute long agonizing challenge. I knew I knocked the deer down and my buddy's were enjoying watching me frantically try to find my trophy that somehow seemed to dissapear. Once I found him the gratification of a long grueling season and the perserverance it took to finally be successful made this deer extra special, even better my cousin Carl called shortly after to let me know he just shot a great buck too! It was definitely going to be a big celebration that evening, its rare that two of us in the family take nice deer on the same day, very rare. We got back to the farm set our deer out for pictures and rallied all of our buddy's for the First Annual Deer Camp festivities. That night was wild and I don't think there have been many times our group of friends has had more fun than that evening, the drinking and talking stupid was at an all time high, we even inspired my cousin Jeff to get back into Gun hunting after being strictly a Boone and Crocket Bow slayer the last few years. You will notice in one of the pictures you can see a cut across the bridge of my nose, I probably had it coming, but lets just say empty cans flying at your face can be sharp (thanks Jesse)! It was a night for the ages among this hunting group and the pictures are here to prove it. I am already excited for the Second Annual Deer Camp, if your smart and like to have a great time, you will be there.
Sunday, November 3, 2013
Jesse's 2013 bowkill
2013 will go down as the most challenging season of my hunting career. Low deer numbers, due to a pathetic attempt for a management plan for the whitetail deer herd from our out of touch buddy's in the Wisconsin DNR for the last 10-15 years is starting to take its toll. I am pretty sure my two year old nephew could make more intelligent herd control decisions than these boneheads. Let's introduce wolves and not control their numbers, lets allow the brainless, toothless, hillbilly hunters in Wisconsin to shoot an unlimited amount of does with guns and give them extra long seasons to do it; great! I really wish my fellow hunters could have a little more vision for the future than some of them seem to, but I digress. Jesse is attending college 3 hours from home and we knew there would not be much time for him to hunt, we chose the last weekend in October and first weekend in November as the times we would get together and bowhunt hard. The first weekend was a little slow, the weather was not good and we had some newer hunters on the property that were just getting their feet wet in bowhunting that put quite a bit of early season pressure on our stands, causing the deer to stear clear of our past hot spots some. I knew we had to find some fresh stand sites to hunt to have any hope, so the first weekend the only productive thing we did was mainly hang two new stands. We were very excited about the new stands and the first day back up for the second weekend I put Jesse in what I figured would be the hotspot, the morning started out with a little more deer activity, but it slowed around mid morning. At 11:15 am I pulled my phone out to text Jesse and see if he was having better luck than me. 15 minutes and no response from him, then I felt a buzz in my pocket; Jesse's text " I just shot one" I almost jumped out of my stand I was so excited for him. It was my main priority to get him a buck, I had a little more time to hunt than him and I have taken more bucks, I was just hoping the deer would cooperate with him in his short window to hunt. I called Jesse and quickly got the story, apparently about 11am he was stretching his arms and knocked his bow off the hanger 18 feet to the ground, ha! He climbed down picked it up and got back in the stand and within ten minutes had a nice buck cruising down the ridge from him, he let out a grunt and the buck came charging in to 7 yards! Apparently the fall didn't affect his bow's accuracy at all because he stoned this deer, it went maybe 50 yards before crashing, thats getting to be the usual for Jesse, I hope I don't jinx him, but as I have stated before he is really a crackshot during clutch times while bowhunting and thats what makes a great hunter, controlling the buckfever when it matters most. Jesse expressed some frustration this fall while in Nevada, that he doesn't have the size of trophy's on his wall yet that he would prefer, I tried reminding him that he is doing pretty well for a 19 year old and the trophy's will come. I went out that evening in the other new stand we hung the week before and grunted in a beautiful 8pt about the size of Jesse's buck here to within 10 yards. I regret now not taking that deer and doubling up with Jesse, that would have made the day even more special. Also, that was really the last nice deer I saw the rest of the season from my stand as I stated before it got extremely slow and I learned the value of having fresh stand sites once the rut comes around, unfortunately other hunters actions are not something within my control. There is always hope that next season will be even better, but with hunting pressure up and the WI DNR wildlife bioligists intelligence down, my hope is pretty weak. Nonetheless, the time spent in our deer camp in Richland Center away from it all will be just as enjoyable regardless, the companionship of hunting is hard to replace or explain to someone who has never experienced it.
Monday, September 30, 2013
Jeffrey the Giant Slayer
I heard a wise man once say “I believe in luck, I find the
harder I work, the luckier I get” After harvesting two 170 class bucks with
archery equipment in two years some people who did not understand the
preparation that went into those hunts
said my cousin Jeff Karl’s was lucky. This accomplishment might not even
seem worth noting, if you’re a hunting celebrity, spending time on guided hunts
or own your own property to manage intensely, but when you’re a small business
owner regularly working 60 + hours a week and spending your free time knocking
on doors to gain access to small woodlots that just might have what you’re
looking for its something to relish. Jeff
appears as just your average weekend warrior, hunter when you first meet him,
but strike up a conversation with him and maybe get lucky enough to be invited
to tag along with him as he prepares a stand site for the opener and you will
learn the system we have developed over the years and find out it’s not a
complex secret at all it simply involves a little research, some hard work and
most importantly obsessive attention to detail, discipline and perseverance.
The most important and obvious rule when hunting high
pressure bucks is scent control, this is where I feel Jeff really separate’s
himself from the pretty good bow hunters. Every tiny detail is of extreme
importance, the vehicle he drives is never allowed to have an air freshener
hanging in it, and each article of clothing including his pack is washed in
scent free detergent and stored in a scent sealed bag, rubber boots are a must,
dressing in the field in the freezing cold is no more optional than buying a
hunting license, human breath is a huge
red flag to a wise old bucks nose and must be covered, all of this adds up to
Jeff being able to honestly say he has never been winded by any downwind deer
since adopting these methods, he no longer is worried about scent, just making
a perfect shot.
The first Boone and Crocket buck Jeff took in 2012, was shot
using our method of getting as close to the deer sanctuary as possible and
waiting for the big boys to make a mistake and leave their safe haven. Any
hardcore bow hunter knows a place they would give their best trophy on the wall
to hunt, but the landowner for one reason or another does not allow hunting and
the deer know it, you drive by and see the big one’s feeding without a care in
the world, the mature bucks are not nocturnal, it’s almost like they don’t
realize hunting even exists, you dream about the perfect hunts you would have
on this land, but you sadly know it’s never going to happen. This is where a
lot of guys give up, but we are just warming up; we figure out the names of
every adjoining landowner to this sanctuary and begin the process of knocking
on doors and introducing ourselves offering up free labor and making it a point
that we do not care at all about gun hunting and won’t be around during this
time we only care to chase their deer with a stick and string. That gives the
bow hunter an edge over a gun hunter most landowners gun hunt or have family
members and friends that do, bow hunters are smaller in numbers and less
noticeable or invasive; if done correctly we can tread lightly and to a busy
landowner almost be non-existent. Once
access is granted to the second or third best option - type land in the area
that you know holds a crusher or two it becomes important to get the stands
hung in early summer and stay out of that area until the rut, trail cameras to
us are not necessary in these places and scent is left behind installing and
checking them. We always ask each other “do you want a picture of them alive or
do you want a picture of them with your hands wrapped around their horns?” After
all, we already know for a fact the big one’s are there we don’t need more
proof we have faith. Also, entering and exiting before the rut in our
experience only alerts doe’s to your presence and makes the land you hunt a
less appealing place for them to live; since the bucks we are after probably
don’t call this land home outside the rut, we are banking on one of these does
coming into estrous and attracting the buck off the sanctuary right into our
hands, we want those does feeling safe and sound around our tree stands and our
presence not felt until there is love in the air. This tactic played out
perfectly for Jeff on the eve of the first cold snap in late October, I was on
my way home from a South Dakota pheasant hunt when I received a text from him, I
knew immediately something was up since he never sends text messages. It simply
stated “when will you be home to help me track?” We went out the next morning
and found the massive and perfect five by five 75 yards from the stand, no
trail camera pictures of this buck that we ever knew of, never shined him
before, but I still scoff when people say it was luck. At the Wisconsin Deer
& Turkey Classic it officially grossed 174 6/8 and netted 172 1/8, first
“Booner” in the books for him.
The second 170 class buck of Jeff’s career involved a
slightly different tactic, but more of the same basic attention to detail; the
land the hunt took place on was only a three acre woodlot surrounded by CRP
grass, corn and soybean fields in a heavily pressured area, Jeff’s edge was a
man made waterhole as close to the thickest part of the woods as possible,
these deer now had food, water and security all in very close proximity;
something Marc Anthony (the master of all whitetail bow hunters) calls the 200
hundred yard rule. Jeff bought a special black flash camera he rarely monitored
and when he did check the camera, it was in full scent free camo, since as I
stated before he feels infared and normal flash cameras alert the big bucks to
your presence and intentions for them. For three years he watched this buck
grow and drink from his waterhole almost exclusively at night, but as the years
went by he seemed to get a little more comfortable coming in closer and closer
to dusk, until Friday September 27th, 2013 I glassed the soybean
field 40 yards from his waterhole and from 800 yards could see the giant body
and rack, I quickly called Jeff to let him know it was game-on this weekend.
Perserverance
For the three years Jeff hunted this spot less than 10% of
his sits involved even seeing a deer. Saturday was terrible weather, but Sunday
was a bluebird day, too hot I thought, but Jeff went hunting it took him 40
minutes of stalking slowly just to make it the 200 hundred yards through the
bean field to his stand and was finally rewarded for his perseverance, I
received that rare text again “I just shot him!” I read that and could not
help, but crack a giant smile; Jeff and I spoke all summer long about how if he
could take this buck and make it two 170 class bucks in less than a years’ time
it would be very special. We tracked this buck into the standing corn and the trail he made
running the life out of himself looked like someone drove a pickup through the
field knocking down all the corn, at the end of the trail was a massive horned and
bodied buck that weighed 258lbs field dressed later that day! The 5 ½ year old
tanker was well fed, his brow tines were unbelievably long and the entire rack
was just heavy. I was sore for days after another cousin of ours and I helped
him drag it out and load it in the truck, it was a rare and special moment to
share as a family that won’t soon be forgotten. As ecstatic as we were about
the size of the horns on these bucks that’s not what gives us the most
gratification anymore, rather we think the size of the trophy equals the amount
of effort put into the hunt any serious DIY bow hunter will probably agree with
us.
I think people will call a successful hunter like Jeff lucky
sometimes possibly due to jealousy, I don’t think seeing a successful person is
something to be jealous of, but to be motivated by; If Jeff can harvest giant
bucks anyone can do it (sorry buddy, haha). Most importantly it just takes
discipline. “Remember when you see a man at the top of the mountain, he didn’t
just fall there” – Anonymous.
Sunday, August 18, 2013
Nevada Jackpot
Antelope cruising past our set-ups at 30 yards
Jesse and I after a straight up the mountain drag
Jesse with his first bow kill muley
Uncle Kelly, Jesse and Tony (war paint)
Cliff in the background my buck fell off of
Beautiful sunrise and sunsets
Jesse locating my buck and plotting my stalk
This summer was not a typical one, spent waiting for fall to come to dust off the bow and arrows; we booked an early August hunt last spring for the Nevada High country Mule deer and with the anticipation of a challenging hunt in rough country, I set out to get my body in shape and stretch my affective range with the bow. Jogging was out of the question with my ankle and I really cannot say I am sad about that haha. I was fortunate to have a buddy back from college to wrestle with I think that helped my legs a lot, soon I knew conditioning wouldn't be a factor and I shot my bow until I was tired of it day in and day out for months on end, trying to make the correct form for a consistent shot as natural as breathing. Its always good going into a hunt with complete confidence in your abilities, its far from guaranteeing success, but it definitely tips the odds in your favor. Our guide on this hunt was outstanding from having all of the camp materials ready for us to plenty of deer located he made things easy, his positive attitude was motivating and most importantly he helped me give Jesse a hard time all day, everyday; I really cannot say enough good things about Kelly, just a neat, good Christian guy that became like family to us in 5 days, hence the moniker "Uncle Kelly" I believe he got an education on how three young guys talk and he was not spared the constant ribbing everyone in the group took in good fun. Thanks to his pre scouting for us we were glassing bucks from the first glimpse of daylight, but for these flatlanders learning how to stalk them and hunt affectively was foreign territory to us. The First afternoon we hiked into the roughest country this area had to offer at 10,000 feet of elevation with no deer to really focus on and just wandered about exhausting ourselves with nothing to show for the effort, except rattle snake sightings. I think it was mostly for our ego's to prove no terrain or mountain could break our spirit. "When I was young, I observed nine out of ten things I did were failures. So I did ten times more work." This has always been my favorite quote and it definitely was our mantra on this hunt. Each day we learned a little more, adapted and innovated a little more, closing the gap between the embarrassment to all mountain bow hunters we started out as, towards the skilled and successful hunters we are still striving to be. It was not by coincidence or chance that each day we got a little closer on our stalks to the game we were hunting and possibly even some that were hunting us. Tony, had a Mountain Lion sneak within 15 yards of him before they locked eye's and he almost had to kill it in self defense. Jesse took a buck on the second to last day of the hunt and the last morning of our stay he located a nice buck for me to ambush, he did a great job putting a strategy together for me to belly crawl within range, the stalk was made interesting as every sage bush I crawled past was checked for Rattlers, once I arrived at the spot Jesse chose for my shooting vantage point only the smaller buck would stand up and cooperate for a shot, I could have waited for the better buck to stand and most likely had a chance to take him, but I chose not to be greedy since it was the last day. My first shot at 56 yards was not where I wanted it, the buck bounded down the hill and stopped, giving me one last shot at roughly 80 yards, I would like to say all my practice paid off and it was all skill that my arrow found its mark, but I'm sure I proved again luck trumps skill, either way it was a shot to remember and the best part is Jesse got to witness the stalk, shot and my deer expiring; As any extreme bow hunter can attest the elation of hearing your arrow hit the target and knowing you have been successful after all the hard work and dedication you put in really leaves you speechless, but I told Jesse when he got to me for the retrieval job, there was no one else in the world I would rather have with with me at that time; I think us three on this trip are perfect hunting companion's in the sense that we want success for each other more than we want it for ourselves', Tony told us he was so nervous watching through the bino's as Jesse and I tried to ambush some buck's it was worse than if he had been hunting them himself, we had more laugh's on this hunt and great memories than any other I can ever remember. That's what hunting is all about to me spending time with the people your closest with, that you don't get to see enough because of how busy our lives get, its about the memories whether or not you come home with horns and that's why I write this blog, so someday when I am to old to walk or wheel myself into the outdoors to hunt I can read through these blogs and reminisce about how blessed I was to have hunted in the beautiful places, with the people that meant so much to me. At the end of the week we came away with two bucks, (Zeman passed on the nicest one we had in bow range on the second day,) and Tony had a 15 yard heart stopping encounter with a Mountain Lion, we made a new friend and have a great new place to return to. Life is good.
Jesse and I after a straight up the mountain drag
Jesse with his first bow kill muley
Uncle Kelly, Jesse and Tony (war paint)
Cliff in the background my buck fell off of
Beautiful sunrise and sunsets
Jesse locating my buck and plotting my stalk
This summer was not a typical one, spent waiting for fall to come to dust off the bow and arrows; we booked an early August hunt last spring for the Nevada High country Mule deer and with the anticipation of a challenging hunt in rough country, I set out to get my body in shape and stretch my affective range with the bow. Jogging was out of the question with my ankle and I really cannot say I am sad about that haha. I was fortunate to have a buddy back from college to wrestle with I think that helped my legs a lot, soon I knew conditioning wouldn't be a factor and I shot my bow until I was tired of it day in and day out for months on end, trying to make the correct form for a consistent shot as natural as breathing. Its always good going into a hunt with complete confidence in your abilities, its far from guaranteeing success, but it definitely tips the odds in your favor. Our guide on this hunt was outstanding from having all of the camp materials ready for us to plenty of deer located he made things easy, his positive attitude was motivating and most importantly he helped me give Jesse a hard time all day, everyday; I really cannot say enough good things about Kelly, just a neat, good Christian guy that became like family to us in 5 days, hence the moniker "Uncle Kelly" I believe he got an education on how three young guys talk and he was not spared the constant ribbing everyone in the group took in good fun. Thanks to his pre scouting for us we were glassing bucks from the first glimpse of daylight, but for these flatlanders learning how to stalk them and hunt affectively was foreign territory to us. The First afternoon we hiked into the roughest country this area had to offer at 10,000 feet of elevation with no deer to really focus on and just wandered about exhausting ourselves with nothing to show for the effort, except rattle snake sightings. I think it was mostly for our ego's to prove no terrain or mountain could break our spirit. "When I was young, I observed nine out of ten things I did were failures. So I did ten times more work." This has always been my favorite quote and it definitely was our mantra on this hunt. Each day we learned a little more, adapted and innovated a little more, closing the gap between the embarrassment to all mountain bow hunters we started out as, towards the skilled and successful hunters we are still striving to be. It was not by coincidence or chance that each day we got a little closer on our stalks to the game we were hunting and possibly even some that were hunting us. Tony, had a Mountain Lion sneak within 15 yards of him before they locked eye's and he almost had to kill it in self defense. Jesse took a buck on the second to last day of the hunt and the last morning of our stay he located a nice buck for me to ambush, he did a great job putting a strategy together for me to belly crawl within range, the stalk was made interesting as every sage bush I crawled past was checked for Rattlers, once I arrived at the spot Jesse chose for my shooting vantage point only the smaller buck would stand up and cooperate for a shot, I could have waited for the better buck to stand and most likely had a chance to take him, but I chose not to be greedy since it was the last day. My first shot at 56 yards was not where I wanted it, the buck bounded down the hill and stopped, giving me one last shot at roughly 80 yards, I would like to say all my practice paid off and it was all skill that my arrow found its mark, but I'm sure I proved again luck trumps skill, either way it was a shot to remember and the best part is Jesse got to witness the stalk, shot and my deer expiring; As any extreme bow hunter can attest the elation of hearing your arrow hit the target and knowing you have been successful after all the hard work and dedication you put in really leaves you speechless, but I told Jesse when he got to me for the retrieval job, there was no one else in the world I would rather have with with me at that time; I think us three on this trip are perfect hunting companion's in the sense that we want success for each other more than we want it for ourselves', Tony told us he was so nervous watching through the bino's as Jesse and I tried to ambush some buck's it was worse than if he had been hunting them himself, we had more laugh's on this hunt and great memories than any other I can ever remember. That's what hunting is all about to me spending time with the people your closest with, that you don't get to see enough because of how busy our lives get, its about the memories whether or not you come home with horns and that's why I write this blog, so someday when I am to old to walk or wheel myself into the outdoors to hunt I can read through these blogs and reminisce about how blessed I was to have hunted in the beautiful places, with the people that meant so much to me. At the end of the week we came away with two bucks, (Zeman passed on the nicest one we had in bow range on the second day,) and Tony had a 15 yard heart stopping encounter with a Mountain Lion, we made a new friend and have a great new place to return to. Life is good.
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