Free: Contests & Raffles.
Nice job. Any deer harvested with a bow is a major accomplishment. I enjoyed the read, and your honesty regarding the mistakes you made. The key is you made adjustments, kept at it, and found a way to get it done. Like you; I made several mistakes last season (first year archery hunting for me). I made adjustments, kept at it, and found a way to kill a 5 point on the last day of the early archery season. I missed a lot of deer, made some poor shots, etc. It was the best thing that could of happened too me. I learned a ton. I look forward to more of your posts and getting out there myself to try and make it happen. New baby is keeping in in doors this year. Hopefully I can get out there this weekend...
Quote from: Boss .300 winmag on September 21, 2015, 10:24:10 PMThe most tender part of any animal. Hence the name lol. Im watching this like hour long video on how to process all the cuts, Looks do-able.
The most tender part of any animal.
I've had this discussion with many people who are new to hunting. Here is my advice. You have to kill animals, in order to get good at killing animals. That means that in your first few years, you really should be killing any legal animal that presents a shot. I bet I killed half a dozen deer before I got to the point here I wasn't an absolute mess behind the trigger. It takes time and experience, none of which you can get by passing on legal animals looking for "the one".Your story is a prime example or why that advice works. You learned so much about judging game, distance, and shots in that one experience. You also learned a ton about tracking, perseverance, and unfortunately, people. Don't let them get to you, you got the last laugh when you started eating those backstraps. Good work, keep it up.