A nice 8 pointer only 15 yds away....

fratri

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SW Ontario
Find the buck, he is only 15 yds away....Only look at the first picture first, the second pictures shows where he is.... A nice 8 pointer....



I was with my shotgun sneaking up on some turkeys and came across this guy...don't look below until you had a chance to look for him in the first pic....








 
That is an East/West distinction... in the east we name bucks by all points displayed... in the west it is usual to count one side of the most typical beam.

Out here they would refer to that buck as a 4x4. If he was a 9 point a 5x4. Personally I could care less. He has 8 points no matter how you count them. Most importantly if harvested he would be called dinner! As my Grandfather used to say when the talk came around to antlers....... "they make thin soup".
 
Was 10 feet from a bear this evening and two steps and no one could see it lol. It was a little late for shooting otherwise I would have had a nice 400 lb bear hanging in the skinning shed!
 
#### I hate the East. My eyes grew up in the open country of the West. Can't handle the Cambodian jungle!


This is something I feel like I can never adequately get across to newbies on here that start "First hunting rifle?" Threads. Ontario guys that have never been hunting have this illusion of frequent 300 yard shots, when in reality, the pics above are much more indicative of the typical shot an Ontario hunter will need to be prepared for.

Western boys ask "Why the hell would anyone choose to hunt with an RFB over a scoped full length rifle!?"

^ that's why.
 
90% of the time it's and ear, the line of the back, a movement, something out of place that alerts you to the animal. I have ran past deer trying to cut them off, only to turn around and see it behind a balsam 30' away but have no shot.

Nothing beats a Win94 or 1x scope model 7, whatever Youre preference in these thick close conditions.


About 20 years ago, I was fairly newlywed, and my now ex's family owns farmland, and I was out there whitetail hunting. From behind the house there was about 10 deer at approx 350-400 yards. I cranks the scope on my M77 MKII 308 to 9x for a shot but decided not to take it at that range. So I snuck up using the round bales as cover to get closer, once I was within 100 yards I started to look for the deer again. Nothing. So I snuck up to the tree line only to discover they were gone. Well, I had my wife in tow, and was about 10-20 yards from the bush, with a pond on my right. Wouldn't ya know, a nice little back jumps out of the thick stuff and tries to run around the pond. I up with my 308, and wow, brown gong blink in! Blink out! Of the scope. One eyed shooter of course. So....next time I saw brown, I pulled the trigger!! Deer dropped, bawling like mad! I blew its rear hips out. Needless to say, wife was not impressed. Never deer hunted with me again.


That's most of northern Ontario! Thick bush, close range shooting.
 
Out here they would refer to that buck as a 4x4. If he was a 9 point a 5x4. Personally I could care less. He has 8 points no matter how you count them. Most importantly if harvested he would be called dinner! As my Grandfather used to say when the talk came around to antlers....... "they make thin soup".

that's "Track soup" lol
Has a muddy flavour:p


Thick stuff there op
 
90% of the time it's and ear, the line of the back, a movement, something out of place that alerts you to the animal. I have ran past deer trying to cut them off, only to turn around and see it behind a balsam 30' away but have no shot.

Nothing beats a Win94 or 1x scope model 7, whatever Youre preference in these thick close conditions.


About 20 years ago, I was fairly newlywed, and my now ex's family owns farmland, and I was out there whitetail hunting. From behind the house there was about 10 deer at approx 350-400 yards. I cranks the scope on my M77 MKII 308 to 9x for a shot but decided not to take it at that range. So I snuck up using the round bales as cover to get closer, once I was within 100 yards I started to look for the deer again. Nothing. So I snuck up to the tree line only to discover they were gone. Well, I had my wife in tow, and was about 10-20 yards from the bush, with a pond on my right. Wouldn't ya know, a nice little back jumps out of the thick stuff and tries to run around the pond. I up with my 308, and wow, brown gong blink in! Blink out! Of the scope. One eyed shooter of course. So....next time I saw brown, I pulled the trigger!! Deer dropped, bawling like mad! I blew its rear hips out. Needless to say, wife was not impressed. Never deer hunted with me again.


That's most of northern Ontario! Thick bush, close range shooting.

As I read this, and looked at the pictures above... I absolutely gained new value for the hunter orange.
 
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