Archive for the tag 'hunter'

Dumb Deer Hunting Moves

daverichey October 27th, 2009

There are few people who can tell me they’ve never made a mistake while going head-to-head with a mature whitetail buck. I’ve made some really colossal and stupid mistakes over 55 years of hunt deer with bow, muzzleloader, rifle and shotgun.

Making a small mistake that means little is not bad, but when the mishap costs you a shot at a good buck at spitting distance, that is something a person will have to live with forever.

Everyone makes stupid mistakes

Preaching to the choir is easy because you’ve made some mistakes, as have I, and we well know the feeling of anger and frustration at ourselves when we mess up.

One year a nice buck came past me every night from where he bedded in some tall grass. My stand was in a cedar tree atop a 10-foot knoll. My stand was eight feet up the tree, and when I sat in the stand I was about 22 feet above the trail the buck had followed night after night.

The buck was upwind of me, and never looked up at that cedar tree. One day I could hear the buck grunting as he followed his scrape line. He stopped, broadside to me, and as I made my draw, the arrow fell off the rest and rattled through the branches to the ground.

The buck looked up, and then went back to pawing his scrape. I nocked another arrow, began my draw and again the arrow fell off the rest. That buck never hung around long enough to see what made that second tinkling sound.

Don’t shoot other animals while deer hunting

The question often arises about shooting other critters while deer hunting. I no longer do so, but once while sitting in the same tree stand as noted above, twigs and needles kept falling down on me. I looked up, saw nothing, and five minutes later down came more bark and needles.

I looked up again, and this time saw a big porcupine scratching around on the tree. Not thinking, I drew back, aimed and shot the porkie. It wobbled around, and suddenly I realized what could happen. The animal could fall on my head.

I stepped to the extreme back edge of the stand, got two hand-holds and one toe-hold, and down he came onto my stand. A foot nudge sent him toppling over the edge where fell to the ground with an audible thump. I no longer do such dumb things.

The porkie waddled off, walked down by the scrape below me and died. No deer came to visit me that night.

Another time I was in a different stand near an open road that was bordered by a small field, and I was watching a buck 100 yards away. A late arriving hunter came down the two-track trail, knew I was in that stand, and waved at me as he drove past. It’s a normal reaction, and I waved back. The car disappeared, and so did the buck. The buck had seen my friendly wave and skedaddled for heavy cover.

Haybale blinds are great to hunt from

Once I was bow hunting in late December, and was sitting in a hay bale blind near a corn field. I have asthma and hay fever so I downed a Benadryl pill to keep from sneezing, crawled inside and soon there were deer in the corn and eating away at my blind, unaware of my presence.

One deer was a nice buck, and I’m inside the hay bales, trying to get a shot at the deer. I needed just another inch or two for a clean shot, and darkness was coming. I tried to force the issue without making any noise, and damned if the two rectangular hay bales didn’t move a bit. The small bales moved several inches, and there I went, falling out of the blind and almost on top of the buck.

It’s questionable who was more surprised: me or the buck.

All the deer ran off, and at Show and Tell after hunting ended, everyone had a good laugh at my expense. I laughed too as I replayed my smooth move for the other hunters.

Don’t forget the little details

One of my dumbest moves came several years ago. We decided to take a different car than the one we normally drove to our hunting land. I’d taken my bow out of the car to shoot a few arrows, and put it back in the car.

The dumb thing was I had transferred everything, including Kay’s bow, into the other car. Habit, being what it is, made me put my bow in the car we normally used. I dropped Kay off at her stand, and drove to where I would hunt.

I got my hunting clothes out, got dressed, grabbed my back pack, and started looking for my bow case. It was forehead slapping time as I remembered putting it in the other car.

I spent that afternoon and evening watching deer through my binoculars and spotting scope. It almost seemed as if all of the deer were laughing at me, but that was probably just a figment of my imagination.

Posted via email from Dave Richey Outdoors

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Horned Death by John Burger

daverichey November 30th, 2008

TITLE: Horned Death

AUTHOR: John Burger

PUBLISHER: Safari Press
DISTRIBUTOR: Safari Press, 15621 Chemical Lane, Building B, Huntington Beach, CA 92649-1506

Horned Death by John Burger

CONTACT: Safari Press, 15621 Chemical Lane, Building B, Huntington Beach, CA 92649-1506

WEBSITE: Safari Press (contact or detailed information on this or and other Safari Press books)
eMAIL: info@safaripress.com
PHONE: 1 (714) 894-9080
ISBN #
COST $35 + S/H These books are not sold through other stores but must be order directly from the publisher.

The name John Burger has always been linked with the African buffalo because the author shot more than 1,000 of these animals during his many years in Africa, and he had more experience with these cantankerous critters than any man who ever hunted them.

The Cape buffalo has a nasty disposition, and it doesn’t take much to tip them over the ragged edge and into a rage. They tend to take their anger out on the closest thing, and if it is a hunter the buff sees, he plans to ambush you or charge from a distance. In any case, if the buffalo catches the hunter, the animal will hook the victim, bounce it into the ground, throw the person into the air, and otherwise rearrange that poor soul’s anatomy in such a way that few attack victim can survive.

Burger, after all the buffalo he had shot, considered this animal one of the most dangerous animals on earth. This book has everything needed to make it a fun but frightening read.

Burger seemed to have a wonderful sense of humor, and in one chapter describes how he and a friend lassoed a Cape buffalo although both men were injured in the fracas. In another account he described spending some time with a murderer and robber, who was eventually hauled off to jail.

This isn’t all about hunting Cape buffalo. It also deals with elephants and other game, but make no mistake about it: after reading Horned Death, and how dangerous this animal can be, a person will develop a new brand of respect for them.

Twenty-eight chapters, and 348 pages with numerous black-and-white photos, and Burger covers hunting this animal in grand fashion. His respect for the dangers of guiding hunters on a Cape buffalo hunt shows through.

The dust jacket cover, with its bold and haunting cover, sets the stage for what is inside. The cover features a red-eyed buffalo, and if that doesn’t grab you attention about this animal, nothing short of a buffalo attack will do the trick.

This is a book for the hardcore African hunter, a person who is willing to stand his ground, aim for the brain and hope the bull dies farther away than one buff the author shot. It died five steps away from him.

This is a book as pertinent to current buffalo hunters and hunting as it was after the turn of the 20th Century when Burger began killing Cape buffalo to feed the natives working to build railroad tracks across much of the African continent. Hunters may never experience all of the scenes that Burger describes, but if they experience just one charge during a hunt, they will be happy to have read this book before heading for Africa.

It is a very good read, and this is a legendary hunting title.

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