175 hours!

jjohnwm

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Super GunNutz
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Manitoba
I was shocked to realize that's how long I sat on stand this year, waiting for this buck to offer a shot. I spotted him on the first day I hunted (day 2 of our 21 day season) and then twice more as the days progressed, but never had a shot. Weather was too warm, no snow on the ground, lots of very windy days. Nevertheless, saw decent numbers of deer almost every day, but I was fixated on him. The last few days, temps dropped a fair bit, and daytime rutting activity increased. I sat out all day, almost every day. Finally, on day 20, out popped a doe with the big guy in tow. He strutted out like he owned the world, took a bullet at 286 yards, charged back into the trees (thick stand of aspen) and I spent almost three hours looking for him, which included an ever-widening search radius in the treeline, a dejected and desperate walk back to the blind, and a mental replay of his final mad dash. I realized that his angle of travel had actually taken him into the trees a little further back than I originally thought, renewed my search and found him within about another 10 minutes. He had travelled only about 75 yards from where he was shot, and had piled up in a thick tangle of downed branches and trunks, almost invisible until I practically stepped on him. One single splash of blood in the open field where he was hit, and then not another drop until I found him in a pool of it.

Tripped the trigger at roughly 10am; by the time I got him back to the house it was dusk, skinned him out in the dark.

I used a Steyr-Mannlicher Professional Model M, chambered in .30-06, with an older Zeiss Duralyt scope, plain old Remington Core Lokt 165gr loads that must have been in my basement for 20+ years. I'm not a .30-06 fan, don't even remember where I got them. Set the rear trigger, stopped him with a loud bleat, and then touched the front trigger. Surprising amount of blood shot meat, especially considering that the only bone I hit was a rib going in and another going out.
2025 buck alone.jpg
2025 buck.jpg
 
Congrats, that is a very nice buck!
I sat for many long hours this fall as well, I was hunting any one of three big 10 pointers that I had on camera. I took a small buck early in the season for the freezer and then waited all season for one of the big boys... no luck yet, but heading out yet again this week.
 
Well done and a nice buck indeed!!
The problem here is you used a 30-06 and not a 223, with the 223 they don’t even take one step or at least that’s what I heard 😂
 
I was shocked to realize that's how long I sat on stand this year, waiting for this buck to offer a shot. I spotted him on the first day I hunted (day 2 of our 21 day season) and then twice more as the days progressed, but never had a shot. Weather was too warm, no snow on the ground, lots of very windy days. Nevertheless, saw decent numbers of deer almost every day, but I was fixated on him. The last few days, temps dropped a fair bit, and daytime rutting activity increased. I sat out all day, almost every day. Finally, on day 20, out popped a doe with the big guy in tow. He strutted out like he owned the world, took a bullet at 286 yards, charged back into the trees (thick stand of aspen) and I spent almost three hours looking for him, which included an ever-widening search radius in the treeline, a dejected and desperate walk back to the blind, and a mental replay of his final mad dash. I realized that his angle of travel had actually taken him into the trees a little further back than I originally thought, renewed my search and found him within about another 10 minutes. He had travelled only about 75 yards from where he was shot, and had piled up in a thick tangle of downed branches and trunks, almost invisible until I practically stepped on him. One single splash of blood in the open field where he was hit, and then not another drop until I found him in a pool of it.

Tripped the trigger at roughly 10am; by the time I got him back to the house it was dusk, skinned him out in the dark.

I used a Steyr-Mannlicher Professional Model M, chambered in .30-06, with an older Zeiss Duralyt scope, plain old Remington Core Lokt 165gr loads that must have been in my basement for 20+ years. I'm not a .30-06 fan, don't even remember where I got them. Set the rear trigger, stopped him with a loud bleat, and then touched the front trigger. Surprising amount of blood shot meat, especially considering that the only bone I hit was a rib going in and another going out.
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Seems like Manitoba just sucked for whitetail season this year. I've never sat as many hours without seeing a single deer as I did this year, but predators are also very plentiful in our hunting areas. Congrats!
 
Great story with a happy ending…Ive grown accustomed to 75 yard final dashes (even with a .223) unless I head shoot them. The recovery takes as much skill and patience as the hunting part. Congrats !!
 
very nice buck and awesome that you did eventually find him.

A little tip to anyone put in the same position, If you are blessed with trying to locate an animal with no snow to facilitate tracking, on three different occasions i have done this ( once for myself and twice helping friends find game). Back out of the bush and find the highest vantage point you can and just sit there watching the tree tops...eventually a damn magpie will come and land above the kill and chatter up a conversation only it can understand but he is telling you that he see's a meal down below him.
 
Thanks for the comments, especially those related to the .223 I should have used. I've been reading those highly informative threads here and elsewhere, and I was tempted to carry a varmint rifle for deer season. But there were one or two of those mathematician-hunters...sort of the hunting-world equivalent of warrior-priests...who commented how some of the cutting-edge .22-cal bullet designs were just too lethal...too effective...too devastating...and should thus be reserved for elk and moose. I didn't want to be guilty of overkill, so I just stuck with a pedestrian .30-cal round. :)

And, wouldn't ya know it? There I was, hoping for snow every single day of the season...but no such luck. I'm an hour north of Winnipeg...and no snow at the end of November? Seriously? We never had anything more than a couple flakes here and there, never any accumulation. Then, I shoot the dang deer on Saturday...and what do you suppose I woke up to on Sunday? Yep, a nice white dusting covering the landscape, and more in the forecast in the next couple days. Dang! :)
 
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Nice score. Thanks for sharing. I sat for 124 hours and came up empty handed this year. A couple of nice ones on camera, but never showed during legal light.
 
I went back on my calendar, I was in deer stands for 114 hours give or take, and made 14 four hour round trips to my hunting area... but that pales in comparison to my spring bear endeavors. Yeah, we don't hunt to save money on meat... but there is no comparing the "quality" of the meat we harvest to the stuff most are forced to buy from grocery stores.
 
Nice score. Thanks for sharing. I sat for 124 hours and came up empty handed this year. A couple of nice ones on camera, but never showed during legal light.
Yeah, there's no shortage of deer, at least not around here; but if the weather isn't right, they are simply not interested in daytime hanky-panky and confine most of their activity to the night shift.

It sounds like you and I both need to learn the same lesson from this season, and here it is: don't do the math on hours spent, as it tends to be depressing. :)
 
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