Free: Contests & Raffles.
When I was younger a major sporting goods store in Salt Lake sponsored a big buck contest. Top prize was a new jeep and prizes were awarded to top.30 bucks submitted. They always had at least a couple hundred brought by for submission. While the winner was usually a brute, most outside of the top 10 entries would not have scored 180. Utah at that time sold 280,000 deer permits every year. I think that's kind of an indicator of how unusual bucks scoring 180+ are.
Quote from: baldopepper on January 06, 2025, 09:26:41 PMWhen I was younger a major sporting goods store in Salt Lake sponsored a big buck contest. Top prize was a new jeep and prizes were awarded to top.30 bucks submitted. They always had at least a couple hundred brought by for submission. While the winner was usually a brute, most outside of the top 10 entries would not have scored 180. Utah at that time sold 280,000 deer permits every year. I think that's kind of an indicator of how unusual bucks scoring 180+ are. Wolfe's Sporting Goods!I dreamed of winning that Jeep many times.......
Another part of it, to me was leaving technology behind. No trail cams, no baits, no lures, no 600 yard shots. Matching wits with an ole mossback and getting within 20 to 30 yards of him is a thrill.
My goal every year is essentially finding and filming 500 bucks. How that number evolved I don’t really know, a game to get my kids involved, a solid goal, not sure. This is from when I filmed exclusively in Washington and continued even when I went out of state. After 30 plus years of doing this, I wish I kept better stats. I see a couple every year, not very many. 180 is a magical buck. Really 170 is. Ninety percent of the 200 inch bucks seen are likely 180. I kid about the filming part, but hunting is a form of evolution. Learning and understanding mule deer, so that you can basically go anywhere and know you’ll find what there is to find, because you know the animal. You know where he is going to stand, when and why. You make your own luck, but a little luck is always good. Hard work and patience does pay off. Another part of it, to me was leaving technology behind. No trail cams, no baits, no lures, no 600 yard shots. Matching wits with an ole mossback and getting within 20 to 30 yards of him is a thrill. There are fewer and fewer 180 bucks out there. That being said, I saw three this weekend and was successful on filming two. It’s a lofty goal, but we all dream about the next one. 180 is also just a number. Every once in awhile I see a buck that won’t score didly, but is a trophy of a lifetime. I got one this fall that was like that. I’ll try to post it up later.
At some point you stop killing them and start photographing them. You know it’s a lot harder to get a good photo of a buck than it is to kill it.
Does anyone else look back and realize just how good the 20-teens were across the West for mule deer as compared to the last 4-5 years?I wonder if the 20-teens will end up being the heyday of my hunting career…?