He continued on a slow walk until he reached my right side. The only problem I had now was that all I had to shoot at was his hind end. At a distance of 3 steps a deer goes from broadside, to quartering away, to straight away in a matter of a split second. As he walked away I really thought it was over. I was going to have to explain to my hunting friends how I had a deer that close and didn't get a shot at it. He was about 10 yards away when he made an abrupt turn that would bring him back in front of me at 18 yards. I slowly followed him with my bow arm and started to apply tension to the string. As he entered a shooting lane straight in front of me he stopped and put his head down. I concentrated on a spot behind his shoulder, came to full draw, and released the string. The small buck never moved until the snuffer slammed into his side. He took off on a dead run until I lost sight of him. A second later I heard a crash and then all was silent. I couldn't believe what had just happened. The shot looked good, just a tad bit high, but I still wanted to wait and calm down a bit before taking up the trail. I sat there shaking my head, grinning from ear to ear, and chuckling to myself. That did not just happen, that did not just happen, that did not just happen. But it did. I tried not to get over confident in what I thought was going to be a short blood trail and forced myself to wait for twenty minutes before looking for blood sign. A short distance from where he was standing I found this:
The 75 yard trail was easy to follow and at the end of it lay my first whitetail killed from the ground. After taking several deer with a recurve, it was also my first with a longbow. I knelt down beside him a gave a short prayer of thanks. I had been truly blessed with an unbelievable experience.
He's not the biggest deer I've ever shot but it sure was a Pope and Young experience. Thanks to all you ground pounders out there that have shared your experiences and given encouragement to guys like me to try something new. I owe you one.
Bill