andrew's first deer!!!!!!
![Image](http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid216/p8ecd4c581ecf9d0da3206d3dfd18d0fd/ec84e2bc.jpg)
mathew's first deer!!!!
![Image](http://www.imagestation.com/picture/sraid216/p0e70a10257f681713e2dd122cbfa652d/ec84f76b.jpg)
IT DOESN'T GET ANY BETTER THAN THIS, GUYS!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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Moderator: F9K9
bubaloo1983 wrote:poor dear.....you eat them right?
the top photo is a weatherby 30.06(very sweet rifle),,, the bottom one is a ruger .44 mag!!!daevans315 wrote:I was trying to figure out what looked wrong with those pic's. It took a second but I figured it out. The barrels on the guns are too small. You must live in one of those states where you still actually use a rifle to hunt with. Here in good old Chicago, I mean IL, its shotguns with slug barrels for everything but coyotes.
I get that feeling almost everyday but I don't kill the humans I hunt.bwenny247 wrote: I never feel as alive as I do when tracking an animal. every sense titillating, so finely tuned as to hear and see a pine needle drop, catching sight of a drop of blood 10 yards away, breathing faster, heart pounding, pupils dialated, muscles tense, you can almost smell the kill. reviving that primal instinct and getting in touch with the overwhelming natural high of the the thrill, the hunt, and the kill. it's something that no drug can deliver, but is just as addictive.
oh yes,,,they held the legs out of the way for me.Walt wrote:Did they help you dress the deer David?
Here are our tools of the tradeWalt wrote:I prefer to use a rifle (30.06) in most of my hunting as well, but do have a shotgun for use when a rifle isn't practical.
Right here in the wild and wonderful northern panhandle hills of WV.rlrnr53 wrote:WVHogRider, where did you get that Good looking rack? There's some really good hunting in So. WV. I don't hunt but I work with a bunch of hunters, so they keep me well apprised of their hunts.
Hah! They wouldn't last long around here. We have a tradition of 'bloodying-up' after your first deer. While cleaning it, everyone gets to put some of the blood on your face.top_sgt wrote:oh yes,,,they held the legs out of the way for me.Walt wrote:Did they help you dress the deer David?![]()
i did most of the dressing,,,,the "smell" seemed to bother them the most. i was asked by both boys "how can you stand that??" i said i've done a few,, you just get used to it!!!!![]()
both of them did help me skin the deer when i got home. they could stand that ok!!!!!
and mathew, my step son,, helps with making the burger!!!
I hear ya! I don't know any recipes for antlers. I just had some fried cubed steak, rice, and gravy for dinner last night... and it sure was tasty!WVHogRider wrote:I find every deer a trophy...due to it being meat in the freezer.
Understood. There are some counties around here that do the same as well.bwenny247 wrote:We hunt state land and I know we need to take does out of the herd here, but they don't issue antlerless tags in our county. we need to bring balance to the herd but we can't. the big does eat up all the sustinance left in the good mother earth and there isn't anything left for the young yearling bucks in the dead of winter, and they die.
GOOD LUCK to all the hunters, and stay safe!
~Ben
Hey Top, I saw Bubba last night along with two of his body guards..top_sgt wrote:deer number four in the freezer!!! it was a button buck, that i thought was a doe!!! oh well,,,,, more meat for the grill!!!! yum......yum!!!!
still looking for a "bubba"!!!!!!!!