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The
journey to my first whitetail began when the owner of the company that
I work for called me into the office. He had a “favor” to ask of me, he
wanted me to take his friend’s son-in-law elk hunting.
Now anyone that knows me will tell you that I hunt hard and often, and
I also have a hard time telling the boss no, so I agreed to talk to this
guy. I called him and he introduced himself as Jeremiah Upp, a professional
archer from Lancaster, Ohio.
Jeremiah
and I talked elk hunting a bit and we instantly hit it off. He informed
me that he only had three mornings to hunt, as he was coming here for a
vacation, and would have to spend the afternoons with the family.
I thought to myself “no pressure, all I have to do is get this guy an
elk in less than a day’s worth of hunting”. Luckily for me with the help
of my father, Harold, we have secured some of the best hunting in the West;
consequently I wasn’t too worried about the task at hand.
On the third and final morning, I got Jeremiah into some bugling bulls
down in the oak brush. We pushed these bulls hard until about 10:00, along
the way Jeremiah learned that in the oak’s a bull can be thirty yards away,
and you can’t even think about a shot because it’s so thick. Earlier that
morning Jeremiah had told me with this being his last morning he would
take a cow. However once he heard those bulls bugling he changed his mind,
for a while.
We were closing in on a draw ahead, and I knew these elk would hit a
wallow there. So we quickly sneaked out to the edge of the
draw and set up. Jeremiah was in front of me about 40 yards so I could
pull a bull past his position. As the morning dragged on, it became apparent
that these bulls were content to stand out there and scream at us. With
a cow only 25 yards away, Jeremiah shrugged his shoulders and let an arrow
fly at her.
Upon impact the arrow zipped through her, and she went maybe 10 yards
before falling.
After that Jeremiah and I made plans for him to make a return trip the
following year. In our phone conversations he invited me to Ohio numerous
times for a whitetail hunt. I was a bit apprehensive at first, but after
killing one of my 190 gross mulies this year, I was going to Ohio to get
some “REVENGE”.
The month of October found me spending countless hours with my Mathews
Legacy shooting whitetail 3-D’s in the back yard. Luckily for me, I have
spent a lot of time in a tree stand here in Western Colorado hunting for
both mulies and elk.
I am one of the few from the west that utilizes tree stands as much
as possible, as well as my favorite tactic, stalking. There is nothing
like putting the sneak on a P&Y buck, all of your senses versus his
keen eyesight, an unbelievable sense of smell, factor in, that during an
early season hunt he is usually part of a bachelor group of bucks, so there
are probably any number of eyes peering in your direction. It doesn’t get
any better than knowing that you faced him on his level and came out the
conqueror….until November 9th.
My first morning was spent in a stand that Jeremiah and his father Ed
had taken many P&Y bucks from. Jeremiah had positioned this stand in
a saddle between two draws. He assured me that when the bucks were chasing
does, this would be the place to be.
Being from Western Colorado there is not a lot of opportunities to rattle
for deer, as our hunting season takes place before the rut. I had seen
a few does earlier that morning, but no bucks. So around 8:00 I decided
to do some rattling.
I was a bit nervous at first, but have been rattling for Elk for years
(sounds crazy, I know, but I will save that for another story). I rattled
for about 10 seconds when directly in front of me, about 150 yards away,
I spotted movement. It was a buck!
With only four days to hunt, I was planning on shooting the first respectable
buck that gave me a shot, and this one was definitely respectable. Being
an eight pointer that would score in the 120’s, I slowly put the antlers
down and grabbed my bow. By this time the buck was within 85 yards and
closing fast. There was a pine tree of to my left side he seemed to be
heading for.
There was another pine tree directly in front of me that split into
three large branches about five feet from the ground. He seemed to be playing
hide-and-seek behind it.
I had always heard whitetails were spooky animals, but this buck was
being extra cautious. At about 60 yards he came right toward me staying
behind the three-branched tree the whole time. He slowly came in looking
for the two bucks who had made all of the ruckus, and was now a mere 30
yards away. As he topped the hill that he was coming from he realized there
weren’t any deer around. He then turned and went back the exact way he
came, never offering a shot. At about 50 yards I grunted at him, and he
glanced in my direction and then disappeared.
As I sat there, I replayed the whole scenario over again in my head.
What had I done wrong? I had done everything just as I would have with
a bull Elk. I had stopped calling when he was at roughly 100 yards, just
to make him look for me. I didn’t get caught moving or anything, and then
I thought, "sometimes they just get away!"
I sat there pondering the morning hunt for about thirty minutes or so,
and decided to rattle again. I clashed them together for a few seconds,
and from the same direction the first buck came, I caught movement. I assumed
it was the same buck, when suddenly the sun hit his antlers.
It was a good thing I was wearing a safety harness, because I almost
fell out of the tree with excitement! The buck was about 80 yards away
and I still had the antlers in my hands. He closed the distance to about
60 yards as I grabbed my bow, and all of a sudden I felt the wind on the
back of my neck.
That’s a terrible feeling for a bow hunter, but we all have been there.
Needless to say, he didn’t stick around long. I thought to myself, that’s
probably as close as I’ll ever come to a real-life “booner”.
I explained to Jeremiah that this buck was one of incredible proportions,
and he said I probably wasn’t used to field judging whitetails. That evening
Jeremiah put me on a stand that was down on the point where those two bucks
had come from. I saw a few nice bucks, one with the right side of his rack
broke off, and a few does. Jeremiah was trying real hard to put me on some
bucks, and we decided the next morning I would sit there again.
The next morning we awoke to the sound of the wind howling, and it was
unseasonably warm out, not exactly ideal deer hunting weather. Jeremiah
was going to hunt a stand past my position, and we agreed that if the wind
kept up we would meet up at about 9:30 or 10:00 and call it a day.
We split up and as I was preparing to get in my stand , I glanced to
my left and not more than 30 yards away was the young buck with only the
left side of his rack left, this being my first whitetail hunt, I debated
whether to shoot him or not. After much deliberation, I decided I would
pass on him.
After he moved off, I climbed into the stand and got comfortable, with
the wind howling, I didn’t think I would be here too long. I decided, after
sitting for an hour or so, to hit my grunt call a few times ... nothing.
The wind was blowing so hard I wondered if anything could even hear
me, so I made the decision to just hold on and ride the wind out.
Suddenly, I saw a doe about 100 yards away off to my right. As she moved
forward she would look behind her occasionally, and then I spotted movement.
It was a buck, and a “shooter”.
I was sure he would hear my heart pounding out of my chest; I took a
deep breath and tried to calm my nerves, and started looking for possible
shooting lanes. He was a very clean eight-point, maybe around 125 inches.
I watched the doe and when she got to a good shooting lane, I hit her
with my rangefinder, it read 38 yards, I couldn’t believe it, just moments
before I had guessed her at around 60 yards. The combination of being 25
feet up and the doe being an additional 30 feet below the base of my tree
made her appear much farther than she truly was. My initial thought was
that my rangefinder must be on the “blink”, but then I decided to trust
Bushnell on this one.
The eight-pointer was 30 yards behind the doe and in hot pursuit. I
began to focus on the buck, being careful to pick a spot high behind his
shoulder.
Suddenly the buck froze and looked behind him, something else was coming.
It was a buck, and a huge one. I had to make a decision, shoot the eight-pointer
that was nearing my shooting lane, or wait for a shot that might never
happen.
Some may call me crazy, but I have always been told “a bird in the hand
is better than ten in the bush”, and with only two days left to hunt, the
eight-pointer looked good enough. What happened next was, I think, more
fate than luck.
As the eight-point approached my lane, I drew my bow. At 40 yards I
knew I would need a standing still shot to feel good about it, and anyone
that has ever been lucky enough to hunt the dense hardwoods of Ohio will
tell you, sometimes you can’t even see 40 yards, let alone shoot.
The bucks attention was now squarely on the doe, who had stopped to
eat acorn’s. When he was 5 yards from my lane, he suddenly ran toward the
doe, darting through my shooting lane.
I grunted to stop him, but I had no shot, so I let my bow down. As the
eight-point neared the hot doe, he grunted at her twice.
This was more than the big buck could handle, as he displayed in a stiff-legged
strut. With his ears pinned back, he approached my lane; I came to full
draw and tried to relax.
When he reached my lane, I grunted, and to my surprise the buck looked
in the opposite direction of me. I slowly let the pin settle, and as the
shot broke I lost the arrow in the dark trees, but I heard that familiar
“thump”
of arrow hitting home.
I wasn’t sure where I had hit him, until he took two steps and I could
see the blood pumping out of him. He took another two steps, stopped, and
before I could even nock another arrow, his feet began to “dance” and he
fell headlong into a big oak tree, tumbling out of view.
I immediately had to sit to keep from falling out of the stand. I waited
and listened, and when I couldn’t wait any longer, I got out of the tree,
being careful to take my time.
I went to where he was when I shot, and quickly found hair, blood, and
my arrow. The arrow had gone completely through and stuck in an oak tree.
I followed the blood maybe ten yards, when I spotted a patch of white on
the hillside below me.
I raced to the buck. His rack was folded under him, and my initial thought
was he had broken his rack when he hit the big oak tree.
However, when I rolled him over his antlers came flying out. I have
shot many P&Y mule deer, but this was clearly the biggest buck I had
ever taken.
I have never had one of those out-of-body experiences, but this was
as close as this red-neck bow hunter will ever come to one. I sat there
for about thirty minutes just admiring him, and thinking how lucky I had
been this year.
This was my third animal in less than two months. I had taken a 170
gross mulie buck and a 5-point bull back home in Colorado earlier. One
would think this was where the story ends, but not so..
(L) Corey Snoke and (R)
Steve Byers with Steve's booner buck.
I met Jeremiah at 10:00 and told him what had happened, after high-fives
and taking many pictures we headed back to the truck. When we got there,
there was a guy parked by us. He was preparing to hang a stand on the farm
just north of us.
Jeremiah knew him from the local archery shop, his name was Corey Snoke.
Corey asked if we had shot one, and I told him that I had shot a monster,
possibly a “Booner”.
Corey told us that 11 days earlier he had hit a big buck over on the
farm he was hunting, but had never found it. Corey explained he had hit
the buck too high, narrowly missing the spine. After searching for days,
he presumed the buck must still be alive.
Corey offered to help us get my buck loaded, so on the ride I told him
all that had happened on this hunt. When we got there we hopped out of
the truck and Corey’s jaw almost hit the ground. This was the very buck
he had arrowed 11 days earlier, upon closer examination my buck had a wound
from Corey’s arrow right through his back straps. I thought Corey was going
to throw-up after seeing the buck up close.
After getting back to Jeremiah’s house we put a tape to the buck and
came up with a whopping 186 5/8.
There are a lot of people I would like to thank for helping make this
happen. My Father, Harold Byers, who introduced me to archery, some 25
years ago. Thanks to Evan Baize for the Mathews legacy, sorry Ev, but you’re
not getting this bow back. Most of all, my wonderful wife Cassie, who has
endured my hunting addiction for the last 10 years. She used to be a widow
every fall, but she finally just broke down and bought a bow in order to
see me.
And last, but not least, Jeremiah Upp who without him I wouldn’t of
even had a stand to sit in. I know this was hard to swallow, but turn about
is fair play. “REVENGE” is sweet!!!