
| Written By - Larry Porter - 05/22/2007 | |
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Link to Original Article here |
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I had joined a deer hunting club this year with some of my buddies and
this would be my first time to hunt this new property. I went by and
picked up my son's muzzleloader and got my mosquito spray and off I
went as it was only ten minutes from the house. I thought this could be
as much of a scouting trip as a hunting trip since I knew nothing about
the farm I was about to hunt. I am a handicap hunter and if it wasn't
for my trusty Honda 4 wheeler getting me to and from the field I would
have had to give up hunting twenty five years ago when I had a massive
stroke. I was very blessed that over time I have regained almost
everything except the use of my legs and I can get around with the use
of a cane. But through the help of my family and friends and the grace
of God I havent missed a beat in my love for hunting and fishing.
As I got to the field I grabbed my muzzleloader, my fanny
pack, my doe estrus scent and my grunt call. It was 4:00 pm and I had
an hour and a half to hunt. I always carry a drag rag doused with doe
in rut scent behind my 4 wheeler to help cover my scent and also to
attract bucks. I could see a nice big tree stand of one of my friends
from the road that I thought might be a good spot as it was overlooking
a bean field in the river bottom.
I rode my 4 wheeler dragging my drag rag along the edge of the
beanfield and parked in the bushes behind the deer stand. I tried my
best to get up in the stand but it just wasnt going to happen as I
almost fell out trying to get situated. So I climbed down and fixed me
a comfortable spot under the deer stand and leaned my muzzleloader
against the first step of the ladder. As I peered through the ladder I
could see the cars and trucks going by quite often down the highway.
The thought ran through my mind that I'm just wasting my time but I
told myself let's just enjoy being out in the woods and sit here until
dark.
I've always thought the best way to deer hunt was just to be
quite and sit still and let the deer come to you. An hour went by and
all I'd seen were two squirrels. With no deer activity I decided it
couldn't hurt anything to try my old grunt call. I could still smell
the scent of doe estrus on my fingertips from earlier while putting it
on my drag rag. I'm not a professional grunter by any means but I
grunted a few short grunts.
What happened next left me is disbelief as in my 40 years of
hunting I've never seen anything like it. This monster buck bolted from
a thicket looking for a fight or at least to protect his territory and
he was heading right at me across the open bean field in full view. It
happened so quick that when the buck stopped he was at 75 yards but I
hadn't even had time to even get my gun ready. I have a scope on my
muzzleloader but it didn't take any kind of optics to tell this boy was
a shooter. I managed to get my gun up and get my sights on him but he
started walking again looking for the other buck. His hair was all
bristled and his ears laid back as though he was ready to fight.
When
he stopped at 60 yards I pulled the trigger and I couldn't see a thing
for a couple seconds. When the smoke cleared all I could see was
antlers, big antlers like I've never seen before. I waited 10 minutes
to be sure he wasnt going to run off and that was the longest 10
minutes of my life. At 5:10 I got on my 4 wheeler and rode up to him he
had 13 points and some of the longest points that I've ever seen. He
had mule deer forks on both sides and drop tines on both sides. The
deer had a 22 inch spread and weighed 175 pounds. It was the nicest
deer that I've ever seen in my lifetime.
I've never been a big believer in using a grunt call but after
this hunt I will never be caught without it ever again. There's no
doubt the combination of my deer scent and a grunt call did the trick
on this old buck.
Looking back on my deer hunt now a week later I almost didn't
even go deer hunting on that lucky day. Had my daughter wanted to shoot
basketball then I would never have gone deer hunting. Also I had those
thoughts of "its just to hot and the deer wont be moving." Then after I
did go hunting I almost talked myself into leaving early. So the bottom
line is if you get a chance to go deer hunting you better go, you never
know what's going to happen.
I have hunted for 40 years and spent thousands of hours in the
field but you just never know when its going to happen. Its kind of
like that old saying "A bad day of hunting is still better than a good
day at work." Just when I think life can't get any better God pours out
another blessing on me.
Thank you God.
Larry Porter

