Alright, tests are out and no wandering eyes...yet. The buck in my avatar was taken on the third day of our season, 9/17/08, in NE. I passed this buck up reluctantly on the last day of '07 season, 12/31. It was the only time all year I could say I passed on him. In the spring, I found his right side shed antlers from '07 and '06 seasons. Based on that evidence, he'd gone from about a 96" buck to a 113" buck to about 140" gross this past fall when I killed him. I'm not hung up on scoring deer, etc., but I find a buck's development fascinating and I'm sure many of you do too.
Well, 9/17 was a miserably hot/humid day when I reckon few Nebraskans even bothered going out. I chose a stand on the edge because with little wind to cover my entrance/exit, I wanted to spook as few deer as possible but still wanted to monitor traffic from a timber/swamp to a cornfield. In fact, the easiest/quietest stand to get to was my buddy ladder stand where I take my girls. Near quitting time, I was just getting my stuff together to leave when the next train rumbled by when this big buck came cruising through. I didn't recognize him right away, just saw some very tall tines, made my decision, and within a few seconds it was go time. Heart shot, he went maybe 50-60 yards as I recall.
There's more to it than that, of course, and the full story will be in a future issue of Bowhunter Magazine. My other '08 buck will be spotlighted in a future issue of Traditional Bowhunter and I'll get back to you shortly with a preview on that story.
Here's a different angle on this buck.
Guru--You're gonna want to kick me, and sometimes I kick myself in the arse too, but I did not get this buck mounted. While it's a beautiful deer, I mounted way too many of my earlier bucks and my den is FULL. So I've been doing skull mounts of most of my recent deer, which is kinda sad, as they dwarf many of the deer that are mounted but I'm not really in a position to build a second den yet.
My two capes from this season did make a NE taxidermist very happy.