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Bwana
12-02-2020, 02:21 PM
So, last Friday at noon the ND Muzzleloader Season opened and thanks to my dad, I spent the afternoon sitting in the blind with my youngest boy whom I haven't gotten a chance to hunt with for several years due to him attending college on the opposite side of the state. We had a great time watching deer and shooting the breeze talking about big boy stuff. No deer were harmed that afternoon though a couple of bucks came dangerously close to getting arrowed.

The boy didn't want to get up early the next morning so Dad TOLD me that he was going. At shooting time we were greeted by rooster pheasants crowing but very little for deer activity until a bit after sunrise. The first buck of the morning was spotted nearly a half-mile away but for whatever reason something seemed to spook him, a coyote maybe?, and he started heading our way. I considered getting out of the blind to try to intercept him but figured that would likely be futile as once on the ground the cattails would likely cause me to lose sight of him. As luck would have it he came within range before deciding to stop for a bite to eat. When he turned broadside I pulled the trigger on the smoke pole and could see I hit him but a bit further back than I would have liked.

The buck ran just a short distance before stopping which gave me a chance at another shot but I was unable to find the stuff I needed to reload before the buck disappeared into a cattail slough.

Dad and I were trying to figure out a game plan for retrieving the buck when we looked up and saw another buck heading towards us along the same path taken by the muzzleloader buck. We were whispering about how neat it was to see yet another buck when it dawned on me that not only was the buck headed right to us, but my bow was leaning up against the corner of the blind. I quickly grabbed it, put the release on my wrist, and nocked an arrow just in case. Next thing I know I'm watching that buck turning on the afterburners to get away and see my arrow fall out of its offside after about 4 or 5 steps. That deer runs into the other end of the same slough. Two bucks shot within 12 minutes of each other!


We quietly backed out, gave them some time to make sure they were dead, and then came back to look for them with additional help in-tow.

Found the muzzleloader buck first:
12051
12052

One down and one to go, so we headed to the north end of the cattails to see if we could locate the archery buck...my daughter did.
12053
12054

The end result:
12055

Not sure if any of you have ever pheasant hunted but there have been times when a single rooster flushes, you shoot and he drops so you mentally mark the spot so you can find it in the ground cover and then a second rooster flushes so you take your eyes off of where the first fell to shoot the second. As soon as the second bird hits the ground you look back to the first spot only to no longer be so sure where it fell and in the end you sometimes end up finding neither bird. Have to admit this thought ran through my head when both of the bucks were SOMEWHERE in the cattails.

As Dad said, "I can't believe this just happened and I wouldn't have missed it for the world!"

The kicker is just after I shot the second buck, a third buck sized between the two I shot, came waltzing through the same area.

CRAZY morning for sure!

You may now return to your regularly scheduled football discussion. ;)

Chicken Dinner
12-02-2020, 03:17 PM
May, that’s an awesome story.


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DeputyDog
12-02-2020, 03:19 PM
That story was worth the wait!


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Penguin
12-02-2020, 03:31 PM
Hey that was a neat hunt. Those are some good sized deer too.

What kind of diet do they have up in that neck of the woods? The first deer looks to by lying in stubble from (I'm guessing) a wheat field? The second looks to be lying in a shoreline or something? Reason I ask is that you folks get some crazy harsh winters and I was wondering how much it would take to feed a good sized deer up there over a winter.

Will

Big Skyz
12-02-2020, 03:34 PM
Need a like, or rather, an EXTRA LIKE button!

Thumper
12-02-2020, 03:37 PM
Wow! Fantastic! :thumbsup

But you left out the best part. What did Sleepy Head have to say when you and dad came home with that story? Ya' snooze, ya' lose! :sleeping:

Bwana
12-02-2020, 05:04 PM
Penguin, to answer your questions regarding what they eat up here - that depends on the area that they reside as ND has a very diverse geography from glacial lake plain in the east to coteau/pothole region further west, and eventually into badlands in the western part of the state. That being said, agriculture is king in ND so much of a deers feed comes from the crops or their residue after being harvested as well as the typical browse comprised of various plants. Crop fields are used for both security cover or as a food source. Corn, soybeans, edible beans, sunflowers, canola, barley, wheat, flax, sugar beets, and potatoes are all grown in large quantities up here along with a number of other more specialty crops such as sorghum, millet, etc. and alfalfa is found across the state for feeding cattle.

As for how much a deer eats on a daily basis, I don't know the answer to that but I do know that deer are not able to utilize all of the crops mentioned at all times of the year and some they need other sources of nourishment to supplement their diet.

In the pictures above, my muzzleloader buck is actually laying in some grass which is likely a combination of natural slough grass (something that can grow in a wetland-type environment and planted grass as it is laying just outside of a cattail slough in an area that is enrolled in the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) in which unproductive or erosive land is set aside and not cropped. The second deer is also laying just outside of the north end of the same cattail slough but in the area adjacent to the slough that has been cultivated as the field had soybeans in it during the growing season.

Thumper, as for my son sleeping in, other than missing out on the excitement I don't think it bothered him too much as he didn't have a tag to fill and he was pretty wiped out as he works a lot of late nights for his job.

Still having a hard time believing this worked out the way it did.

airbud7
12-02-2020, 05:15 PM
Fun Stuff!....Cool read, Thanks!

LJ3
12-03-2020, 11:12 AM
Those are some big ass deer! Great story Bwana!

Hombre
12-03-2020, 01:06 PM
There's a memory that won't ever fade. Great story!

Bwana
12-03-2020, 02:54 PM
Thanks all! Not big deer, but deer I couldn't pass up with Dad sitting right by my side.

I had other deer hunting adventures planned but now that the only tag I have left is a turkey tag, my focus will have to be on birds and coyotes for the rest of the season. What a terrible problem to have. :-)

Chicken Dinner
12-03-2020, 03:15 PM
Those are some big ass deer! Great story Bwana!

Latina big?


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LJ3
12-03-2020, 03:18 PM
Latina big?


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Let's not get carried away.

Thumper
12-03-2020, 03:29 PM
Kardashian big. :hair

Penguin
12-04-2020, 11:47 AM
Thanks Bwana.

I had wondered at how they managed to survive in, what to me, looks like a pretty hard place for a deer to make a living. Resourceful and will eat almost anything. Hey, I resemble that remark. :)

Will

BarryBobPosthole
12-07-2020, 12:57 PM
Man. Reports like that are what this place is all about. Thanks for sharing John, I’ll bet your Pop was busting his buttons the rest of the week telling that story.
An instant GH Classic right there!

BKb

Bwana
12-07-2020, 02:09 PM
Posthole funny you should say that.

Spoke to him last week and just again expressed what a cool experience that was. He asked if I had been bragging about my accomplishment but when I told him I really wasn't he said not to worry, he was doing enough bragging for both of us!

Big Muddy
12-07-2020, 09:28 PM
Great hunting report, Bwana !!!.....I really enjoy hearing about the adventures of other hunters.

Arty
12-10-2020, 05:56 AM
Great story! And like everyone has said, big bodies on them ND deer!


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