Saturday morning found me nestled amongst some deadfall
brambles and leaning back against a pair of maple tree trunks. The
wind was swirling and biting through my layers of wool as I cooled from the
hike up the mountain. A beautiful sunrise emerged from behind me as the
reds of an unsettled morning illuminated the trees and landscape to my
front.
As I was taking it all in, the silence was shattered by the
crunch, crunch, crunch of a deer approaching me from behind. I rose from
my stool and turned to greet the sounds as they approached. Then I saw a
flash, and a large doe bounded up the hill toward the refuge of the mountain
laurel snorting belligerently over and over as she went. I thought she
must have caught my movement or my scent from the shifty winds. Well, it
turns out I found later Brent was hunting not too far away and the deer
walked between us. As Brent turned to face the doe his upper recurve limb
shook the deadfall branches of the large clump of brambles he was sitting
inside and alerted the doe. She never knew I was there.
As the morning wore on and I settled back in. I again
heard the same crunching footfall behind my tree. Slower and more
cautious this time. I decided to remain standing with my back to the tree
and wait for the animal to emerge before trying to move (I still did not know
Brent was the cause of the other deer’s flight). I stood frozen and
waiting. Then in my peripheral vision, I caught sight of a LARGE bodied
buck approaching from the peak. Then, behind following at about 20 yards
was another twin….two large 8 pointers were coming on a line straight toward
me. I stood as a wooden indian and completely forgot about the footfalls
that were behind me. As all of my attention was focused on the twins
coming down the hill I was completely surprised when a 6 point walked from
behind my tree and was suddenly close enough broadside to spit on.
Instinctively our eyes met and I am sure he saw mine grow large as I do not
remember moving. The buck immediately wheeled and jumped back behind my
tree. The animal was close enough I could have touched it with my longbow
if I was reaching out with it by the lower limb.
I never moved, especially with the two twins watching.
The 6 point then calmed down seeing the other two bucks and after a few minutes
cautiously walked up the hill toward the twins. I could have easily taken
a shot at the smaller 6 at this point, as he was quartering away and walking
uphill. I was suddenly a little greedy though and wanted one of the two
larger bucks that were approaching. The lead was walking down toward me
still, and the rear guard was thrashing a tree and making a scrape. The
two stranger bucks mingled and exchanged some posturing before the smaller went
off on a tangent up the hill and away. The lead twin cautiously came
closer but was still suspicious of the wooden indian and the way the smaller
buck reacted there. Finally he was standing facing me at 20 yards and we
remained frozen for what seemed like 15 minutes, but was probably only about
3. Finally the buck caught a wiff of something he did not like (I am
guessing since I never moved) and snorted quick and jumped back. He trotted
to a position quartering away at about 30 yards and paused. I knew it was
time to shoot or watch it leave. I had a small hole to shoot through but
it was doable. I drew and released and a loud “CRACK” followed as by
broadhead smashed into a half hollow standing dead tree about 15 yards to my
front. That buck hightailed it for the laurel. The rear buck actually
hung around for a while and I attempted to grunt it in, but he acted like he
did not even hear me and meandered toward where the first buck exited, melting
back into the laurels.
Oh well, A great and memorable morning with a small lesson
in decision making. The way my season has been I should have just taken
the small buck when I had the chance.
What an exciting story!
ReplyDeleteI bet you'll be telling that a few times around a campfire.
You are correct Ron! Cool being that close....too close!
ReplyDelete