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Thread: Your most epic hunt!

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by huntnmachine View Post
    My personal hunts have been kind of common place for the most part so nothing like the pervious posts. My favorite hunt was when my dad finally got to go with me to Tobermory back in the early 80's. It was his first deer hunt in many years due to crippling arthritis. There were only 5 in camp and hunting was slow so mid week the camp leader decided to push a small section that lead to a swamp. He placed my dad in a spot across the swamp that he figured they would escape to when pushed.

    He was right. My dad one shot dropped a spike in his tracks with his open sight 30-30, only problem was he dropped in 3' of water. Needless to say I was the one that waded out to pull the spike back to shore. My most fondest hunt by far.
    Great memory Terry. My father has been dead for 40 years and was never into hunting or anything outdoors per say. I am a bit of a family aberration as no one has fished or hunted on either side for many generations and that includes many many cousins. Hence why i am largely a self-taught solo hunter. My kids do partake though but not with the same zeal that i do. I also have a nephew who is perhaps the most hardcore other than me. He and I have gotten to some crazy sh#$ over the last few years - freaks the %$^& out of my sister.
    Last edited by Species8472; September 29th, 2023 at 03:22 PM.
    The wilderness is not a stadium where I satisfy my ambition to achieve, it is the cathedral where I worship.

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  3. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sam Menard View Post
    This is an interesting topic and it’s taken me a while to think of a story that i might want to share. I’ve shot quite a few moose and deer and there’s an exciting story behind each adventure. I recently thought about writing some short stories about some of the most memorable ones, and the following story would be included.

    I started hunting when I was 15 and deer hunted a bit while in high school with an assist on a fawn (there’s a story there too lol). Once I went to college I didn’t deer hunt much and this pattern continued until I was 23. At this point, I was working seasonally for the MNR in Ignace and deer were rare as hens teeth around there. While working there, I learned that some of the guys from the office would go to the Fort Frances area to hunt deer. I was somewhat surprised to hear this as I mistakenly believed that it was in the middle of the boreal forest. I soon learned that to the west of Fort Frances, there is a vibrant farming community there. Eventually, a group of 4 of us started going down for annual week long hunts. The area that we hunted was split between 2 WMU’s… 7B and 10. The first unit is mostly boreal forest with a few small farms at the southern edge of the Unit. To the south, in Unit 10, the ground flattens out and it’s mostly farms interspersed with large and small bush lots and bogs. In those days, there were more deer in Unit 10 due to the farms, however there were very few tags available hence we hunted in Unit 7B. In those days, we stayed with a guy named Chester who was an elderly bachelor and was a relative of a fellow from work.

    During our third year hunting from Chester’s, he informed us that he would be moving to a new house in Pinewood in a couple of months and he would let us stay with him the following year. Pinewood is in the heart of Unit 10 (farm country) which meant the opportunity to hunt more deer. Once Chester gave us the news, one of my buddies and I decided that we would spend the next day scouting out the new area. As luck would have it, my buddie’s neighbour’s brother is a farmer in the Pinewood areas, so we knocked on his door and introduced ourselves and asked him to show us around. He said yes, so we jumped into his truck and we drove a few concession roads while he pointed out where we could and couldn’t hunt.

    Eventually, we came to a couple of miles of fields that was owned by a German landowner. Once of the fields had a large wood lot in the middle of it and there was bush at the back end that flanked the Pinewood River. The farmer mentioned that he had shot a 10-pointer there the week before.

    After the tour, my buddy and I decided to hunt the field where the farmer had shot his buck - see Google image below for layout. As we walked into the field, we decided to split up and walk to around to the back of the 15 acre woodlot and compare notes. Once I got to the back end of the woodlot, I was surprised to see about 20 deer out feeding along the bush that flanked the river. I had never seen so many deer in my life. As I stood there staring at the deer, I could also see a large overturned stump just inside the bush line. Further study of the stump made me realize that it wasn’t a stump at all but a large buck. Up went the rifle, and as i tried to find the buck in my scope I realized that it had lost its nitrogen charge and it was foggy. I could just make out the buck (225 yards away)through the fog so took an offhand shot.

    All of a sudden there was stampede of deer running around. Surprisingly, the buck never moved and I continued to fire at it and empty my clip. As I was firing, my buddy had gotten around to his side of the woodlot and had seen the buck as well and started firing too. Once the smoke cleared, not suprisingly the buck was gone so I started walking towards my buddy and was just about got run over by a doe as is blasted out of the woodlot as it bounded towards the woods along the river. The whole event was incredible. As I met up with my buddy to discuss what just transpired, incredibly the buck ran back out into the field and just stood there. There was no point in me shooting as i could hardly see it through the scope, so my buddy launched a few bullets at it as it ran down the field and back into the woods. We quickly realized that we were in deer heaven and decided to spend the rest of the day in the field. First though, we needed to figure out what to do with my rifle. Luckily, my buddy had a spare .303 in the truck however he only had 5 shells for it. That was concerning since we just went through WW III a few minutes ago. We decided that we would check out the 2 local stores to see if they had any bullets… not! I took the .303 and made a commitment that I wouldn’t shoot unless it was a sure thing. My buddy went back to the corner of the woodlot to where he had shooting earlier. I went to where we last saw the buck leave the field - which was a point of bush that extended into the field.

    My chosen spot was next to a scrape under a birch tree at the tip of the point of bush. As I sat on the snow-covered ground at the base of the tree, I felt the wind cut through me. A front was moving through and the winds were picking up and I started to get a chill. I should mention that my buddy had shot a buck himself that morning and I had cut the tarsal glands off and tied them to my boots. As I sat there, I shuffled my feet around, kicking snow into a pile all the while trying to stay warm. Eventually, I felt cold and exposed so I decided to move closer to the base of the point of bush. As luck would have it, I found a large fallen poplar tree which created a natural ground blind for me to hide in out of the wind. My back was to the tip of the point of bush were I had been sitting, and I was facing the bush line that flanked the river.

    Some time afterwards, I glanced to my right into the field and noticed 2 does feeding 10 -15 yards away. They had entered the field from behind and snuck up on me. I had never been that close to a live deer before and needless to say I had a good shake going on. After a couple of minutes a couple of more deer came into view and as I watched them eat, poop, and prance about, I thought to myself that with all these does around, there has to be a buck nearby. So I slowly cranked my head around and looked directly behind me and saw a buck standing rock-still under the same birch tree (30 yards away) that I had been sitting under not long before. It likely could smell the scent that I had laid down and was on full alert. With the does still feeding 20 yards away and the buck on full alert, I was convinced that I would get busted and the deer would take off. I was petrified to move and started thinking of excuses that I would tell the rest of the guys on how I messed up this opportunity. After what seemed like hours, the buck looked away and that gave me an opportunity to take off my mitts. A few minutes later, the buck gave me another opportunity to take off my hat, then my glasses. All of a sudden, I could see the tension leave the buck's body and he decided to walk out into the field and join the does. At this point, I raised my rifle and fired at the buck from my off shoulder. The buck was probably 30 yards away and I had no trouble finding it in my scope. After the shot, the does blasted off din different directions and the buck ran further into the field. He only went 75 yards before he plowing face first into the snow for good. I couldn’t believe it, I got him, my first buck! Once I gathered all my belongings, I ran into the field to my trophy. I met my buddy there and he had seen the does and thought that I couldn’t help myself and had shot one (no doe tag). I lifted the head out the snow and asked him “Does this look like a doe to you?” After a few high-fives we dragged the buck the half mile back to the truck… in fact I think my buddy did most of the pulling.

    Back at Chester’s we met up with the other guys from the group who hadn’t had any luck that afternoon. After taking off all our gear we gave a long and drawn out account of our day with emphasis on seeing deer, shooting at a big bucks, missing the buck, then shooting some more, etc. In fact they felt quite dejected until I got to the part that I had shot the buck and it was in the back of the truck. It took a few moments for this to sink in before they raced out the door to see if they heard me correctly. That was funny! The buck was a 3.5 year old 10-pointer. I can’t say for certain if it was the same buck that we had shot at earlier, but you never know.
    Attachment 44647

    I'm the guy on the left.
    Attachment 44648
    That second pic is awesome Sam. You look like a young Charles Bronson in that pic! Your bud in running shoes and lumber jack attire just adds to the authenticity.
    Last edited by Species8472; September 29th, 2023 at 03:28 PM.
    The wilderness is not a stadium where I satisfy my ambition to achieve, it is the cathedral where I worship.

  4. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by huntnmachine View Post
    My personal hunts have been kind of common place for the most part so nothing like the pervious posts. My favorite hunt was when my dad finally got to go with me to Tobermory back in the early 80's. It was his first deer hunt in many years due to crippling arthritis. There were only 5 in camp and hunting was slow so mid week the camp leader decided to push a small section that lead to a swamp. He placed my dad in a spot across the swamp that he figured they would escape to when pushed.

    He was right. My dad one shot dropped a spike in his tracks with his open sight 30-30, only problem was he dropped in 3' of water. Needless to say I was the one that waded out to pull the spike back to shore. My most fondest hunt by far.
    No doubt a very special hunt since you were with your dad. Thanks for sharing.
    A true sportsman counts his achievements in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport. - S. Pope

  5. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Species8472 View Post
    That second pic is awesome Sam. You look like a young Charles Bronson in that pic! Your bud in running shoes and lumber jack attire just adds to the authenticity.
    That all happened in 1986, those were the days! A funny thing about my buddie’s buck. Earlier that day he had been hunting a small clearing and, while there, he unleashed a full bladder of urine into the snow. Afterwards, he walked to the other side of the clearing and when he turned around, there was the buck with his nose in the snow smelling the freshly deposited urine. The buck never got a chance to lift his head. If you believe that human urine frightens deer, think again!
    Last edited by Sam Menard; September 29th, 2023 at 07:37 PM.
    A true sportsman counts his achievements in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport. - S. Pope

  6. #15
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    Favorite most memorable hunt was 5 years ago the first year my good buddy started deer hunting.

    He had a really good spot and I had a really good spot about 30minutes away so we didn't hunt together. I lent him my shotgun barrel and we lined his gun up 2 weeks before the hunt.

    We scouted his spot the day before the shotgun season started and the swamp was tore up with buck sign. I didn't want to get his hopes up or get him too excited but I told him it looked really good.

    Next morning he texts me at 6:30am saying good luck he was walking in.

    7:05 he texts me saying he's just got a monster buck.

    7:07 I look up from my stand and there's a big 11 point standing in front of me. Put phone down and shoot the buck and texted him back that I shot a big buck too.

    It was 10:30am before I got to him after getting my deer hung up and drove over to him.

    He shot a 14 pointer that is still the biggest buck I've ever laid my hands on. His first time deer hunting. His buck was biggest at the taxidermist for 2017 and mine was #4.
    "If guns cause crime, all of mine are defective."

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  7. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Species8472 View Post
    Great memory Terry. My father has been dead for 40 years and was never into hunting or anything outdoors per say. I am a bit of a family aberration as no one has fished or hunted on either side for many generations and that includes many many cousins. Hence why i am largely a self-taught solo hunter. My kids do partake though but not with the same zeal that i do. I also have a nephew who is perhaps the most hardcore other than me. He and I have gotten to some crazy sh#$ over the last few years - freaks the %$^& out of my sister.
    Thanks Joe
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    OFAH and CCFR member

  8. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sam Menard View Post
    No doubt a very special hunt since you were with your dad. Thanks for sharing.
    Thanks Sam
    Guns have two enemies................rust and government

    OFAH and CCFR member

  9. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by SongDog View Post
    Favorite most memorable hunt was 5 years ago the first year my good buddy started deer hunting.

    He had a really good spot and I had a really good spot about 30minutes away so we didn't hunt together. I lent him my shotgun barrel and we lined his gun up 2 weeks before the hunt.

    We scouted his spot the day before the shotgun season started and the swamp was tore up with buck sign. I didn't want to get his hopes up or get him too excited but I told him it looked really good.

    Next morning he texts me at 6:30am saying good luck he was walking in.

    7:05 he texts me saying he's just got a monster buck.

    7:07 I look up from my stand and there's a big 11 point standing in front of me. Put phone down and shoot the buck and texted him back that I shot a big buck too.

    It was 10:30am before I got to him after getting my deer hung up and drove over to him.

    He shot a 14 pointer that is still the biggest buck I've ever laid my hands on. His first time deer hunting. His buck was biggest at the taxidermist for 2017 and mine was #4.
    That’s a very memorable hunt indeed, the stars lined up for you and your Bud that day. Thanks for sharing.
    A true sportsman counts his achievements in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport. - S. Pope

  10. #19
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    I’m disappointed that there hasn’t been more post in this thread, imo every hunt is epic.
    A true sportsman counts his achievements in proportion to the effort involved and the fairness of the sport. - S. Pope

  11. #20
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    I've been enjoying this thread too so thanks to all who have contributed!

    I've had lots of great hunts over my time that I've been fortunate enough to share with my brother and father plus some good friends.

    I think the most epic was my rifle hunt from last season. A friend and I have been hunting this hard to access piece of crown with archery gear for a few years and just never made it in for the gun hunt. We planned out the last 4 days of the 2 week hunt to head in and give it a shot. We hiked about 2 miles to hunt the morning sit- I had a decent buck come through a few minutes before shooting light on a mission. Didn't see another deer so we made our way to our stashed canoe and paddle the rest of the way to our camp site for the next few days.

    We quickly got camp setup and made a game plan to do so 2 man pushes. The area we were hunting has a lot of lakes and ponds so breaking down these areas was relatively simple for 2 guys.
    The first spot we did was only a few hundred yards behind our campsite. I headed to the south on a big bald rock while the other guy looped around to the north to walk through a small gut. I had only been standing for a few minutes when I saw a large bodied deer trotting through the gut a few hundred yards from me. I quickly closed the distance using terrain and made a great shot. He wasn't a smasher but a nice 8 pointer for sure. We quickly quartered him up and got the meat hanging in a tree then hunted the rest of the day.

    The next morning we both saw a bunch of does, but wanted to hold out for another buck. We didn't end up seeing another buck so I shot a doe on our last afternoon. We hauled the meat out the following morning in the canoe then loaded up the frame packs for the hike back to the truck. Fresh snow and breaking ice on the lake made for an interesting journey haha but it was a blast.

    I've shot a lot of deer but I've never worked so hard to get a deer back to the truck lol! Can't wait to do it again this year. I'd add some pics but I don't know how!

    Andy

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