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Lessons in life. There’s always the unknown.

fairchaser

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 13, 2011
Messages
9,121
Location
TN, USA
My son and I took my 6 year old grandson on his first deer hunt this weekend. We wanted to hunt public land near our lake cabin. So we hunted the TN National wildlife refuge. The hunt was more about nature, memories in the deer woods and life long experiences. We also knew my grandson would not last very long sitting still and quiet.

We found a good set up on the edge of a backwater slew on the river. Not long after, my son spotted a doe on a far bank. She saw us but the distance was far enough that she seemed more curious than frightened. This allowed me time to get my rifle set up for a long shot of 384 yards. I dialed in my dope and got my grandson to cover his young ears. My son was keeping vigil with his binos. At the shot the doe took off but didn't seemed hit. My son said I hit the dirt well short of the deer. The shot felt good so I was really scratching my head.

I can accept a miss at the outer limits of my range but I wasn't expecting a miss this badly. I started thinking and asked my grandson to go check a limb hanging down near my line of sight. See the pic below. Dead center hit.

Sometimes you can do everything right but the woods whammies prevail. Such is life. You can learn lessons from ANY experiences you have. I believe we learn so many life lessons while deer hunting that make us better people as well as hunters.

I'm so thankful to have my family and the opportunities to spend time together learning the lessons in hunting and life. Precious memories.
 

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My son and I took my 6 year old grandson on his first deer hunt this weekend. We wanted to hunt public land near our lake cabin. So we hunted the TN National wildlife refuge. The hunt was more about nature, memories in the deer woods and life long experiences. We also knew my grandson would not last very long sitting still and quiet.

We found a good set up on the edge of a backwater slew on the river. Not long after, my son spotted a doe on a far bank. She saw us but the distance was far enough that she seemed more curious than frightened. This allowed me time to get my rifle set up for a long shot of 384 yards. I dialed in my dope and got my grandson to cover his young ears. My son was keeping vigil with his binos. At the shot the doe took off but didn't seemed hit. My son said I hit the dirt well short of the deer. The shot felt good so I was really scratching my head.

I can accept a miss at the outer limits of my range but I wasn't expecting a miss this badly. I started thinking and asked my grandson to go check a limb hanging down near my line of sight. See the pic below. Dead center hit.

Sometimes you can do everything right but the woods whammies prevail. Such is life. You can learn lessons from ANY experiences you have. I believe we learn so many life lessons while deer hunting that make us better people as well as hunters.

I'm so thankful to have my family and the opportunities to spend time together learning the lessons in hunting and life. Precious memories.
Sheesh a 384 yard shot on public land doesn't seem very responsible or safe. At that distance you could easily miss seeing someone situated in the woods beyond the deer. Am I wrong? For someone who likes to call people out because you don't like their truck bed pictures it's only right someone call you out for being that irresponsible. If it's private land sure shoot as far as you want but you can't be doing that on public
 
Sheesh a 384 yard shot on public land doesn't seem very responsible or safe. At that distance you could easily miss seeing someone situated in the woods beyond the deer. Am I wrong? For someone who likes to call people out because you don't like their truck bed pictures it's only right someone call you out for being that irresponsible. If it's private land sure shoot as far as you want but you can't be doing that on public
Yes you're wrong! I know what's behind there and also I know who else is hunting. Also, a solid back drop. But thanks for pointing out the dangers as well as calling people out. I should be more sensitive.
 
Thanks for sharing. Definitely time well spent.

Last year I missed seeing a limb up close on the deer I shot and it wasn't until I went back to the stand days later that I figured out what happened. Shot grazed him behind the legs. Luckily he gave me another opportunity that ended up with the shot landing exactly where I aimed.
 
Yes you're wrong! I know what's behind there and also I know who else is hunting. Also, a solid back drop. But thanks for pointing out the dangers as well as calling people out. I should be more sensitive.
No problem man I just saw my shot and I took it. No hard feelings. Some of the comments I've seen you make just make it seem as though you have that "holier than thou" mentality and it can rub people the wrong way. That one guy was just excited that he killed a big deer and wanted to come here to show his internet campfire buddies and while you did congratulate him the rest of your response just seemed to crap on his post. Dont be like that.
 
No problem man I just saw my shot and I took it. No hard feelings. Some of the comments I've seen you make just make it seem as though you have that "holier than thou" mentality and it can rub people the wrong way. That one guy was just excited that he killed a big deer and wanted to come here to show his internet campfire buddies and while you did congratulate him the rest of your response just seemed to crap on his post. Dont be like that.
Thanks for reminding me. I have a flaw and working on it.
 
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