I got my first buck!

jory

CGN frequent flyer
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Location
Mannville, AB
I'm still flying high from the weekend and wanted to share my story.

Let's preface all of this by saying that I am 100% an amateur hunter. I have hunted grouse, rabbits, and a little bit of geese in the past, but big game hunting is very new to me. I'm a firearms instructor for pistol/shotgun/carbine as a side hustle, so i feel like I have a good handle on shooting in general, but shooting at big game at longer ranges is foreign to me. I also want to start by saying I have little to no interest in hunting for trophy, and that my motivation for hunting is to fill my freezer.

I am lucky enough to have a friend let me hunt on his property, and I have been taking full advantage of that. Thanksgiving day I did a quick stalk on a deer near a cutline and dropped a doe at less than 100 yards to fill one tag, so for this weekend just past it was my mission to get a buck. I knew that saturday was going to be rainy and miserable, and had no idea how that would impact my likelihood to see any deer out and about, but I gathered up my gear and headed out before first light.

My usual sit and wait spot is the corner of a rather large alfalfa field that the local deer congregated at in the morning, making it a great spot (apparently) to hang out. I parked my butt and waited for an hour or so with no luck, so I grabbed my rifle and walked a trail that split a couple other fields farther into the property, but I had no luck there either, so back I went.

After sitting and walking a few times I was getting discouraged, and since I was getting cold and cranky I decided to take a longer walk. On this walk, waaaay on the far side of one field I spotted a lonely 2 point (1.25 point?) buck. He wasn't a trophy buck by any means, but he was young and made of food, so I wanted him regardless.

I pushed the treeline and got as close as I could before I would be walking right out into the open, and was uncomfortably far away still. I am terrible with ranging accurately with just my eyes, so I always keep a range finder on me. My heart rate was jacked up and I was breathing heavily so I had a hell of a time steadying my rangefinder, but I finally got him ranged at 340 yards. Now, with being an amateur hunter and generally inexperienced with longer range shots, this was troubling to me. I know enough about ballistics to know that the 150gr federal power shok softpoints out of my 16.5" barreled Ruger Gunsite Scout in .308 with a 3-9x40 Vortex viper w/ dead hold BDC reticle was not ideal for this, and that my experience with shooting at living things past 100~ish yards was next to zero. However, I also know good shooting fundamentals and that I have a good mechanical zero on my rifle with a properly calibrated scope.

I did a little math and knew that I had lots of wiggle room with it being such an open field, so I decided to make the shot work. I used a tree and some barbed wire to support my rifle from my kneeling position, dialed my scope up to 9x, and got my reticle centered on him just between the 300 and 400 hash marks. He wasn't facing me, nor was he broadside; he was a mixture of both, but 2/3 of the way facing me I'd say, so I knew I had a good opening at plenty of effective spots to hit depending on how he was standing.

I waited for him to move his head in just the right way, kept taking deep breaths to calm down, and I squeezed off my shot. I lost the sight picture as the rifle recoiled, but picked it up again in time to see him stumble a step or two, and his entire back end sink down almost to the ground. I looked up from my scope to see him run about 20 yards, then he went down. As I crossed over the fence and started walking toward him, I could see his head was still up and looking at me, and my heart sank. My biggest fear is having an animal needlessly suffer, and I was heartbroken to see that this was now happening. I started jogging to close the distance and he spotted this, got up and tried running again, and this time he went down for good.

Once I got about 80 yards or so from him, I could see his head was down and that he wasn't breathing, but still was not 100% sure if he was dead or not. A mixture of not wanting to have him suffer and also not wanting to get kicked by a deer made me choose to put a round high on the neck, just behind his ear to be sure he was dead, which I know believe he was.

As I approached him felt an overwhelming sense of relief that I had connected my first shot, and that whether he was alive or dead by the time I hit that last shot, he was definitely dead now, and I had claimed my first buck. It took a while to find the entry wound, and there wasn't an exit wound. I found out while field dressing him that the round entered high up between his neck and left shoulder, dropped in a bit, and exited between two of his ribs on the opposite side, with the bullet finally stopping in a thick cap of fat just on the inside of his fur.

I spent some time yesterday getting him butchered and vacuum sealed, and between the venison stew we had last night and all the rest of the meat we got off him, i'm looking forward to enjoying him throughout the winter, and the memory of the day long past that.

After this incident I have realized that I'm too dependent on the pre set hash marks on my BDC scope, and will be changing that for something in mil/mil so I can have more confidence and control of my longer shots.

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Congrats! Even though it was 1977 or so, I do still remember getting my first whitetail buck with a rifle - I had shot at many perviously, but that one was the first that I got. Good on you! And time will pass on many learnings. The last 20 years that I hunted deers was with a single shot rifle - you do not really need that magazine, if you are a hunter. Rangefinders - I wear one all the time - is a built in feature to the 8x binoculars around my neck. I used a 308 Win for my first 20 or so years - 165 grain bullets was my choice - is quite literally a "live and learn" deal - I am glad you have got a start!!!!

P.S. - the ONLY reason I ventured away from 165 grain 308 Win for deer was because our son took that rifle with him when he left home - he still has it, as his only "big" rifle - gave me a chance to switch to 150 grain 7x57 - no regrets for deer, whatsoever...
 
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Awesome man congrats! I’m hoping to get my first this season. We just bought 13 acres in a remote area. Surrounded by crown land also. There’s lots of oaks on my land as well as a stream running through. Well while we were in town 2 days ago my daughter got a video of a family cutting through the backyard following the stream. Including a pretty big buck. I’m absolutely stoked I can’t wait!

Anyways congrats man!
 
Well done! The good news is no two hunts are ever the same. Each one is a new adventure, so you have plenty to look forward to.
 
Good job, just wait till you get you’re first big WT buck. It’s even more exciting, I got my biggest one last season. I always said I was a meat hunter over a big rack but I gotta say the big rack usually means more meat, wild meat in the freezer is my main priority still but I’m getting more picky about what bucks I shoot now. That is depending on what’s left in the freezer and how late into the season we are lol.

I still will shoot a meat buck in the last two weeks of the season but up till then I’m looking for a larger mature buck to connect with.
 
Congratulations!! You never forget that 1st buck, believe me. Mine was taken over 6 decades ago, and I
can still re-live the event in my mind. That guy you shot will be excellent table fare.

FWIW, I avoid any bigger bucks once the rut in November is underway. I much prefer the earlier ones,
like yours. Great work, nice story posted. Dave.
 
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