Eventually I ended up sneaking in to the pond to see if I might be able to catch something near the water. As I eased around the shore checking out the tracks I noticed what looked like an old antler tine sticking up a few inches out of the mud right at the edge of the water. Near it was another. When I pulled on them both this is what emerged from the muck.
What an awesome find the first night of my hunt!
I cleaned the rack off a bit in the water, and then worked my way back to the road to see if any javis may have discovered the corn trail. From the tracks in the road it was obvious there were plenty of animals around, but nothing other than a lone coyote showed.
It was difficult to sit still on the first night of the hunt, so I eased back toward the pond. I came into it at the same place I had found the whitetail rack earlier, and not 10 feet away from the first find noticed more antler tines. As I approached to investigate these I suddenly froze in place when I saw a bobcat laying in the mud next to the antler. I had walked up to within 15 yards of him, and he just layed there staring at me, obviously hoping that he blended in. After a 30 second stare down, and he finally jumped up and ran off. I had missed the initial camp meeting, but I was thankful that Shaun Webb had taken the time to give me a breifing earlier and he had mentioned that the ranch managers did not want bobcats shot during our hunt, or that if we did the cost would be $500. I didn't need one that badly, but the experience of seeing him was a treat.