First archery whitetail buck - long story with pics!

johnsd16

Active Member
Mar 16, 2014
353
4
N Idaho
I have hunted deer since about 15, but initially was never really very serious. I went with friends and shot a lot of does, fawns and a couple of small bucks with a shotgun. I eventually got into archery and have shot a few antlerless deer. Over the last 10 years or so I have several heartbreaker stories about missed opportunities on bucks with a gun, but never had come close archery hunting. For the last couple of years I have tried to get things lined up for my first bow killed buck, but this resulted in little more than a few out of range sightings and not really and good opportunities. Last year was my first drawback, shot and heartbreak with a bow. I had done a lot of planning and hung a stand on a property I had hunted quite a bit, and had a buck do it just perfect on November 5, 2014. In the midst of buck fever I elected not to stop a walking deer and tried to lead him overestimating how much I would need, and the encounter ended with a tallow covered arrow and no blood from a very forward brisket shot. I ended up killing a modest buck with the shotgun a couple days later.

With the advent of 2015 I was determined to fill my archery tag and for the first time ever not have to walk in and buy a firearms tag in early November. This season has been amazing for scouting and big buck pictures. We have had more mature deer with incredible antler growth this year than I could have imagined. By early September I had 8 mature bucks on four properties with half of them being upwards of 140" and two real giants. I had hunted some in September and seen only 1.5 year old bucks and does/fawns. Knowing I missed my chance at summer pattern bucks I feared the October lull that would bring me dangerously close to another firearms season with a buck tag still in hand.

One property that has a very small huntable area held one of the smallest shooters I had on camera. It was a 9pt with a slender body and little mass that would possibly score in the 120s, probably a 3.5 year old, possibly 2.5. I had very regular pictures of him throughout the summer and he was the only legal buck in the woods. The stand is a great stand to see deer in bow range and I had decided that I could not be picky for my first bow buck and that any mature legal buck would be a trophy.


On October 10 I planned to hunt that stand with a perfect wind in my face walking in blowing my scent out into the standing core behind me with a well worn trail that my camera monitored laid 17 yds in front. As I sat in the stand I looked through pictures on my phone of the buck I had gotten pictures of there, and other properties. I also thought about when I checked the card a couple weeks before revealing no mature buck pictures, including the 9 point. They were putting up a power line along the north edge of this small woods and I wondered if the activity had cleared the deer out. I then wondered why I was even there. No pictures, warm weather, October lull, no sleep from working a second job overnight the night prior. I had grabbed the camera card before climbing up and figured it would hold the same.

The time in stand passed slowly, I saw one hen turkey before sunset and the woods began to be flooded by songbirds from the surrounding farms coming in to roost for the night as it always does just before dark. Shooting time ended at 7:05 and I was not optimistic about the last 15 minutes, though when warm is when I see deer here. Around 6:55 I heard crashing in the corn behind me. The stand is set on the east edge of the woods about 10-15 yards in, facing west. The deer bed in the southern 1/4 of the approximately 6 acre woods and move north to feed in the fields to the north, west and east. This spring when I set the camera I thought about deer walking up the east seam between the corn and the woods and how I should cut a shooting lane from my stand to one spot on the seam that there was often a scrape. In April I cut such a lane.

At 7:00 I hear corn smashing and then woods crackling about 20 yards northeast of me, directly down wind. I figured it was a large coon that saw me in the tree but as I turned around I saw a large bodied deer in the woods to my northeast going back to the corn. It didn't appear alarmed but was moving quickly. It was getting very dark at this point and as I looked through the binoculars I could see that it was a legal buck with white G2s and G3s. I put a stop to the horn viewing at that point and decided I would prepare for a shot if I were to be presented one. I began to shake as the buck hit the seam between the corn and woods directly down wind of me. He stopped and began walking south toward my shooting lane to the seam.

He stopped short and began raking a tree vigorously with his rack. I could then hear him tearing out a new scrape. I walk in on this seam with this wind and there was no rubs or scrapes there on the walk in. I used this time to ready my bow, flip up the seat on my stand and turn around fully expecting him to bust as soon as he came back to his senses after making the scrape given the wind. He continued slowly toward the lane and all I could see was his body and neck looked like a full rut buck, big, thick and heavy like a Hereford steer. Recalling the events of last year I drew back and anticipated when to stop him. As I looked through my peep I could see him slowly walking but boy was it dark. As his body entered my tiny shooting lane I bleated. He stopped and looked into the woods but not toward me. It was very dark and I took my time orienting my pin, hoping he would not start moving again. I made sure to see the top of his back, neck, and legs and centered my pin on his huge body silhouetted by the dry standing corn. He was slightly quartering away at about 17 yards and I was only about 12' up in a huge hardwood. I began to squeeze the release and the arrow departed, green lighted nock glowing like a bright star in the early evening darkness. It was on target and it disappeared into his massive body and it looked as though it had been turned off. He mule kicked, then jumped and the lighted nock spilled out the other side about 6' from where he stood initially. He ran along the seam then took an abrupt right turn and crashed into the woods running west parallel to me. He slowed to a trot on a trail to my left (south) and stopped in almost the exact spot I shot my buck last year with a shotgun. I looked at him through the binos as he paused there briefly. I couldn't see anything helpful as it was now 7:03pm. He began to walk off taking short steps headed south into the thick part of the woods that goes for another 80 yards or so before meeting corn on the other side. I could hear him walking then thought I heard grass rustle with the help of an 18 mph wind blowing directly from him to me.

I took a deep breath knowing I had just taken a shot on a large bodied buck, what buck though, I had no idea. He didn't really look like the small 9, but I truthfully had no idea. I packed up my gear and lowered it down quietly. I could see my green nock glowing as it leaned up against a cornstalk. I quietly made my way from the base of the tree to the arrow. It was covered from tip to tip in liquid bright red blood, very different from last year. There was blood thigh high on the corn on the off side where the arrow lay and for about 5' past. Beyond that I saw NO BLOOD, my heart sank but I tried to calm myself and not make quick judgments as the shot site looked encouraging. I knew I wanted to give him at least 30 minutes, maybe more, but it was going to be in the 60s that night and 80s the next day. Unseasonably warm for this time of year. I would walk the half mile back to the truck and unload gear, make a couple calls and decide what to do.


I made a couple calls to my hunting buddies who have taken more archery deer than I and was encouraged by their comments after telling them the story and seeing the picture of the arrow and corn near the shot. My wife and kids were waiting at a friends house for a ride home (dropped them off before heading out), so I decided to tend to that and come back possibly with a friend to take up the trail.

I arrived at our friends house and remembered I had the camera card (sleep deprived mind was a little slow) which may indicate what buck I may have arrowed. I plugged it in to their computed and was shocked at what I saw.
 

johnsd16

Active Member
Mar 16, 2014
353
4
N Idaho
Not only was the 9 point back in the woods, but there were two new bucks that I had never seen. One, a heavy tight framed, long tined 10, and the other a wide short tined 10.

The new heavy 10 and small 9 from summer



New wide 10


My wife asked which one I hit, and I said "I honestly don't know, it could be any of them, or a totally different deer". Now my mind was reeling. I went into the hunt with the idea the best I could do was a 15" wide lightly built 9 point, but now who knows!

I called a good friend that I hunt with a lot and he said he had company but could probably come out in a little bit, to boot he had another friend in town that I had hunted with before and was an accomplished deer hunter as well. My mind raced between the different deer and what I had seen of the buck I shot's rack. I couldn't reconcile anything. I was excited and nervous. Would I be holding my first archery buck tonight, or would the trail go cold as it seemed to right after the initial blood. If I did put my hands on him, which one would it be. I was going to be pumped with any of them.
 
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johnsd16

Active Member
Mar 16, 2014
353
4
N Idaho
I picked up my two friends and as we made the 20 minute drive back to the farm, we discussed the lay of the land and events. I relayed to them that I was using 85 gr slick tricks as I had not been satisfied with accuracy of other broadheads out of this bow. I had also made a trip to the range earlier that day to be sure the new lighted nocks did not change my POI as I had never used them before. Boy was I glad I did with a shot coming with 2 minutes left to shoot.

We arrived at the property and started at the site of the shot, after admiring the huge rub and scrape he made on October 10th of all days just up the seam of where our job started. The arrow looked good and smelled like blood, a few bubbles, not sour, but there were a couple of seeds stuck to it. Were these from a stomach hit, or did they land on the arrow after it exited? The blood in the first 5' was very good on the off side, but almost immediately thereafter we struggled to find where he cut into the woods. No blood, then a pindrop on a leaf, then another, then a q-tip sized spot, then nothing. We slowly moved into the woods with one guy staying on the last blood and leapfrogging as more spots were found. He settled onto a decently worn trail and we could see deep hoofprints and the occasional speck of blood. I was not encouraged by the small volume of bleeding. The trees and weeds up off the ground were devoid of blood.

The trail moved through some short swampgrass where we found a few more drops every couple feet. This led to few feet of trees before giving way to the standing corn on the south edge of the woods. We were 80 yards into the trail and we found only drips and a couple of quarter sized spots. We had decided before starting that if we found a bed that he was not in, we would back out and come back in the light of morning. My heart was sinking. We exited the woods into the seam between the woods and corn. Then on the last tree on the off side we noticed a good bit of blood knee high and splattered. My two partners looked forward toward the standing corn and I glanced left, then right down the seam. To the right THERE HE LAY! Big white belly was looking at me.

As I approached I had no idea which rack I would see in the light of my head lamp. I was pumped to say the least.


He was the big bodied wide 10. I had not gotten any pictures of him until 6 days prior, after which he was a very regular sighting on that camera.


I can't think these guys enough for helping me look for this buck.


It ended up being a short tracking job, only about 80 yds in a line, 100yds by the route he took. We found him at 9:50 and he was very stiff. I think I could have gone in after 30-45 minutes.

With all the standing corn, we couldn't get the truck any closer and we had to drag him the 100yds back through the woods. He was HEAVY, and it took all three of us taking turns to get him out of there.
 

johnsd16

Active Member
Mar 16, 2014
353
4
N Idaho
It ended up being a really good hit. Entrance was right about where I thought and unknown to me I really came through on the old "aim for the off shoulder" thing.

Entrance


Exit


On gutting I got both lungs and the right atrium. There was a TON of blood in the chest cavity and many giant clots, so we were all really puzzled by the poor blood trail despite the low exit wound. The slick trick heads are not very big, and I'm very happy with the job they did, as the trail was follow-able and I'd take accuracy and penetration over a blood trail Stevie Wonder could follow as long as the internal damage is huge (which it was, I was shocked).

I got to work skinning given the temperature and went with skinning/caping the whole works then taking off the legs below the knees, then back quarters, and gutting. No good posed shots since I dropped my bow and hunting clothes at home before picking up my friends and didn't bring the DSLR camera as that is bad luck if you're going looking for something or checking traps.

 

johnsd16

Active Member
Mar 16, 2014
353
4
N Idaho
As I got to thinking, this buck reminded me of one I'd gotten pictures of last year and the year before. I was never very impressed with any aspect of his rack and never thought much of it. I went back into 2014 pictures and there he was. In this woods I have almost never gotten pictures of buck from year to year.

2014


At least two of us are a bit sore after dragging him and looking at some other pictures from this year it is evident he put his effort into growing his body and not his rack.


I got ice on him and took out the loins and backstraps that night before cutting the rest the following morning. I quickly put the tape on him before dropping the head/cape with my friend that does my taxi work yesterday and was shocked that he rough gross scored just shy of 137" with between 3-4" of deductions. I have never had a deer officially measured and probably never will but he didn't look that. He is 19 3/8 inside and has mainbeams of 22 4/8 and 23 3/8. Both brow tines are flattened like a knife blade.

All in all the whole saga ended up being pretty cool for me with the low expectations going into the stand that night, the uncertainty of the buck, and the final outcome. I couldn't be happier.

On top of it, I have my first mule deer hunt coming up in mid November in MT!
 
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Matthoek21

Veteran member
Mar 18, 2011
1,904
0
Peachtree City, GA.
Awesome job! That is a hell of a starter buck. Looks like you've got plenty left to hunt to. Nice bucks on those trail cameras. Good luck the rest of the year and in MT.
 

packmule

Veteran member
Jun 21, 2011
2,433
0
TX
Congrats! That's one hunt that'll replay in your mind forever. It doesn't get any better than that.