Tales of the hunt

Discussions on hunting guns, gear, field craft, and all topics related to hunting.
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Freezer
Posts: 900
Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2023 9:51 am

Tales of the hunt

Post by Freezer »

After reading about the "direction hunting is going" I thought it would be nice to share some tales on how we hunt, where we hunt, and our experiences. I have so many good experiences, hunts with friends lost, great experiences and bad that taught me important life lessons. Being surrounded by a herd of doe while laying on the ground in the dark, to feeling the wind from a bat's wing on my face as it flew by. I hunted waterfowl in the refuges in nasty weather and listened to stories of past hunts with an old man on a blue bird sky day, hoping no duck would show up to interrupt the mood,

My dream hunt would be Caribou or Antelope, and that would have to be a guided hunt, as I never had either in the states I lived in. The idea of open terrain spot and stock is a real turn on for a woods hunter. I hunted the Cascade mountains of Northern California for blacktail deer, squirrel and turkey. I used the refuge system for waterfowl. I had an old Toyota mini motor home that made a comfortable lodge where ever I went. I hunted at least 30–40 days a year, not including time for scouting or just walking through the woods for S&Gs. My typical day started at 4am and seldom ended before dark. The hills at Lake Shasta are all 33 degrees and there are no flat places. I entered the woods very early and moved slowly to prevent sweating and exertion. I usually hunted alone, left a map in the motor home with a walkie-talkie and a key hidden outside just in case. My wife knew if I didn't call her two hours after dark, there was a problem, but I was prepared

Entering the woods well before sunrise, full camo, practicing scent control, moving slowly and being part of the natural world, not an intruder, that's a hunt! On one hunt, I was high on the hill on a late October morning. It was about two hours before sun rise, cool, and I had laid on the ground for a nap. Before the sky turned gray, I was awakened by rustling all around me. There wasn't a moon and I couldn't see a thing. My heart began to pound as I know how many cougar and bear there are in this area. I slowly removed my knife from its chest strap and revolver from its holster. I laid there another half hour, waiting in curiosity for the first signs of dawn. As the sky began to lighten, forms began to take shape, I was surrounded by a herd of at least twenty doe. Not a one had found me! I laid motionless as they browsed their way along the hill, not a shootable buck among them. Other experiences weren't as nice. It was a cool October afternoon, I had eaten my lunch and moved slowly to a grassy area on the hill. The sun was warm and felt so good, I decided it was time for a nap. I was in a very nice deep sleep when I was rudely awakened by the very loud growl of a cougar. Cougar don't have any manners or consideration!

Today I hunt in Pa in heated blinds with coffee, warm food and comfortable office chairs. I really don't consider this hunting, but with two steel knees, bad hips and a bum shoulder, I'll take it. If I get bored, I can leave the blind and enter the woods to reminisce on hunts of the past. Before I want to move as slowly as possible, now I have to :lol:
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shotgunshooter3
Posts: 652
Joined: Wed Jun 21, 2023 4:07 pm

Re: Tales of the hunt

Post by shotgunshooter3 »

Between experiences hunting antelope (you do NOT need to do this guided, don't waste your money) and elk (guided or not depends on a lot of variables), I am ruined for hunting and will always gravitate towards "western style." I'll always cherish the times in the TX blinds with family, but the mountains are calling...

I did a write up on the old Guns and Ammo Forum G&A Forum (for the google machines) about my last elk hunt. Fortunately, I also posted it elsewhere so I will dig it up later and resurrect it here.
"Speed is the economy of motion" - Scott Jedlinski
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GrapeApe
Posts: 2231
Joined: Wed Jun 21, 2023 2:26 am

Re: Tales of the hunt

Post by GrapeApe »

I bush hog, till and plant roughly 1-1.5 acres of greenfields this time of year. Then sit in shooting houses and shoot the deer when they come out to eat during the season.

Tractor's loaded on the trailer and hooked to the truck outside presently, Just waiting until gameday traffic clears tomorrow, since I live south of town and hunt on the north side. (As a plus to traffic, ESPN is in town for Gane Day)

Normal population is ~100k, The stadium holds ~102k and they're expecting an influx of 150k for the game today. It's a good day to keep my big butt at the house (especially when dragging that 22' trailer)

edited to add SS3 has hunted one of the greenfields I plant every year, though it has a new and better "stand/ shooting house on it now.
"Sometimes I wonder whether the world is being run by smart people who are putting us on or by imbeciles who really mean it." - Samuel Clemens (aka Mark Twain)
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shotgunshooter3
Posts: 652
Joined: Wed Jun 21, 2023 4:07 pm

Re: Tales of the hunt

Post by shotgunshooter3 »

GrapeApe wrote: Sat Sep 09, 2023 1:21 pm edited to add SS3 has hunted one of the greenfields I plant every year, though it has a new and better "stand/ shooting house on it now.
Can confirm that Paul maintains a quality hunting area, great little spot to threaten Alabama's whitetail population.
"Speed is the economy of motion" - Scott Jedlinski
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