Has anyone successfully stalked & killed a deer?
#1
Has anyone successfully stalked & killed a deer?
I'm talking about roaming through the woods with a bow and have actually taken a deer?
I hunt in very thick woods, but I'm thinking of trying it this year. I know that most deer are taken off stands or blinds, but I rarely hear about stalking.
I hunt in very thick woods, but I'm thinking of trying it this year. I know that most deer are taken off stands or blinds, but I rarely hear about stalking.
#2
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Kansas city, Missouri
Posts: 2,571
RE: Has anyone successfully stalked & killed a deer?
ive shot one doe like this.......i was walking back to the truck and she was in thick cover and i was just kinda moving slowly thru the woods and i looked up and she was right there....it wasnt really a stalk but i still shot her while walking
#3
RE: Has anyone successfully stalked & killed a deer?
Well a family member of mine told of how he did it once. He said he was actually heading back to the truck and just happened to turn around to see a big doe go to bed down on the edge of a cornfield. He said the only way to get to her was through the field (corn was still up). From what he said he kind of looped out around and "flanked" her. I guess he walked through the corn a decent ways and then once he got close he got on his hands and knees and crawled, and when he was close enough he took the shot. He said the hardest part was trying to find a lane to shoot his bow through in the corn andthat the whole thing took him like 2 hours to do, and she was only like 300 yards away when he first spotted her.
I would think that it would be one HELL of a rush.
BTW: I see your avatar is a Reflex logo...what do you shoot? I shoot the Excursion. Not too many guys shoot Reflex.
I would think that it would be one HELL of a rush.
BTW: I see your avatar is a Reflex logo...what do you shoot? I shoot the Excursion. Not too many guys shoot Reflex.
#4
RE: Has anyone successfully stalked & killed a deer?
ORIGINAL: englum_06
Well a family member of mine told of how he did it once. He said he was actually heading back to the truck and just happened to turn around to see a big doe go to bed down on the edge of a cornfield. He said the only way to get to her was through the field (corn was still up). From what he said he kind of looped out around and "flanked" her. I guess he walked through the corn a decent ways and then once he got close he got on his hands and knees and crawled, and when he was close enough he took the shot. He said the hardest part was trying to find a lane to shoot his bow through in the corn andthat the whole thing took him like 2 hours to do, and she was only like 300 yards away when he first spotted her.
I would think that it would be one HELL of a rush.
BTW: I see your avatar is a Reflex logo...what do you shoot? I shoot the Excursion. Not too many guys shoot Reflex.
Well a family member of mine told of how he did it once. He said he was actually heading back to the truck and just happened to turn around to see a big doe go to bed down on the edge of a cornfield. He said the only way to get to her was through the field (corn was still up). From what he said he kind of looped out around and "flanked" her. I guess he walked through the corn a decent ways and then once he got close he got on his hands and knees and crawled, and when he was close enough he took the shot. He said the hardest part was trying to find a lane to shoot his bow through in the corn andthat the whole thing took him like 2 hours to do, and she was only like 300 yards away when he first spotted her.
I would think that it would be one HELL of a rush.
BTW: I see your avatar is a Reflex logo...what do you shoot? I shoot the Excursion. Not too many guys shoot Reflex.
My plan this year is to try and kill one by stalking it. I think the rush would be great. Plus, I hunt really thick woods, so getting to go see new places will be exciting too.
I just wonder how many guys actually use stalking as a technique. Not just accidentally run across them, but really do it as a method.