Author Topic: Bad night bowhunting  (Read 360 times)

Kingcreek

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Bad night bowhunting
« on: November 10, 2021, 09:52:11 AM »
Got into my tree stand at 2:40 yesterday. At 2:45 a big buck walked across open field crosswind to me about 75-80 yards away. He was moving like he was injured. I tried calling with grunt tube to see if I could turn him around but he ignored me. 2 minutes later an even bigger buck followed him like he was going to run him into the next county.
I tried calling again but he ignored my calls.
A little forkhorn came from behind me and was under my stand for a little while before going back the way he came.
At 5pm about 10 minutes after sunset a decent 8 pt came by and gave me a broadside shot. I hit him a little low and back and my arrow passed thru. He was standing behind some heavy brush for awhile and looped in again at 30 yards. Light was going but I stuck him again and he bolted into thick cover.
I called a friend who said he would head out to help. waited about an hour before tracking him. Almost no blood. Tracked him 1/4 mile thru thick creek bottom. Lost any sign of tracks or blood after 3 hours. Never found my second arrow. We were down to a fleck of blood every 10 yards or so.
I’ve killed over 70 Illinois whitetail and only ever lost 3, none in recent years and never one I hit twice! I’m frustrated as hell and can’t figure out what happened. A big doe I shot last year at the same spot went 45 yards with no blood trail because there was a big plug of fat and lung plugging the exit wound.
Low last night was 41 degrees and supposed to be upper 50s today so meat would spoil. I can’t imagin the deer surviving.
What we have here is failure to communicate.

charby

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Re: Bad night bowhunting
« Reply #1 on: November 10, 2021, 11:34:36 AM »
Check nearby water sources.
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Ben

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Re: Bad night bowhunting
« Reply #2 on: November 10, 2021, 11:57:23 AM »
Well, that sucks. I know how you feel. I absolutely hate losing downed game.
"I'm a foolish old man that has been drawn into a wild goose chase by a harpy in trousers and a nincompoop."

Kingcreek

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Re: Bad night bowhunting
« Reply #3 on: November 10, 2021, 12:42:18 PM »
Check nearby water sources.
The trail crossed a feeder creek twice and the main creek once in addition to going thru 2 or 3 boggy seeps. Last fleck of blood was on a steep uphill where there wasn’t even trail. It was like running into a wall of thick honeysuckle. I was on hands and knees and can’t figure out where he went from there.
What we have here is failure to communicate.

Lennyjoe

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Re: Bad night bowhunting
« Reply #4 on: November 10, 2021, 01:11:28 PM »
If you think you may have missed the vitals and hit farther behind, gut shot deer will seek drinking water.  We tracked a deer for hours with a hit a little farther back than wanted and after almost giving up we walked the creek and found her. 

The risk with bow hunting is the potential loss of game.  It’s a part of the risk with archery hunting.  It sucks, but it happens. Hope you find him.

Kingcreek

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Re: Bad night bowhunting
« Reply #5 on: November 10, 2021, 01:37:18 PM »
I think I hit a corner of one lung based on the 2 big splotches of jellied blood but there was almost nothing on branches 2’ off the ground, mostly small drops in the middle of the trail.
What we have here is failure to communicate.

charby

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Re: Bad night bowhunting
« Reply #6 on: November 10, 2021, 11:04:43 PM »
Deer can die in the damnest places, but I'd be looking for crows to recover the antlers.
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