Sounds like a great morning on stand! I'm not sure I could have passed him up, but I don't have near enough self-control when it comes to bucks. You did the right thing, you will be much happier when hes a year or two older!
Did the trail cam pics spare his life?
Purdy buck! Did he act like he was the boss hog for the area?
Cant shoot a 150" deer if you take a 130" deer though.
And this is where I'm at right now in my career. I've wanted an OBB qualifier for longer than I have been bowhunting and it still eludes me. The deer on my wall are trophies and I do not forsake them, however they don't scratch that "big buck" itch that I've dealt with for years. Despite their age, if I keep killing 130" deer, I'll continue to long for that OBB I've coveted for years. This buck is a trophy by some standards and many people would be thrilled to shoot him. Now that I've had some time to let yesterday's hunt sink in, I know I made the right choice. I may very well eat a tag this year and that is probably the most likely outcome to my season. But if I had turned one loose yesterday, the only guarantee is that the 2014 season would yet another season where I didn't kill a buck that satisfied a craving nearly 20 years in the making.
Opportunities to fill your freezer. Got a feeder in my back yard and we saw 14 does within a 1/2 mile of the house last week. My freezer will be fine.
Opportunities to build the "confidence" of being able to making "kill" shots (take your doe miss earlier this year) like it's muscle memory. I still have that confidence. There was no doubt that deer was dead. I didn't need to shoot him to verify that.
Opportunities to make sure your stand, stand up sequence, turning in the stand, changing your 1pin sight to the correct yardage, drawing back, etc. is error free. I was standing, bow in hand long before he ever got in the wheelhouse. I had 3 chances to draw when he was facing away from me. And at 5 steps, not a lot of thinking is need to pick a pin.
Opportunities to work on your tracking skills. There will be plenty of those chances. Again, no need to shoot something I won't be satisfied with just for the sake of practice.
Opportunities to have your daughter around deer and understanding that is where the food in the freezer comes from. She's too young to make that correlation and I'll kill deer this year, so she still will get to be around one.
What happens when you get that one great deer? What will be your motivation to hit the woods as hard the years to follow?I can take a deep breath and let it all soak in. Did you lose motivation after you shot what is easily the deer of a lifetime?
You are the brother I never had, so I know where you are coming from and what you are getting at. We won't ever see eye to eye when it comes to "trophy hunting". I use that phrase loosely as we all know what a trophy to be is vastly different. My trophies from that hunt are the pictures above. If I shoot that deer, I don't get to witness the scrapping, rubbing and fighting. That hunt was a success and in the long road, it was more of one because I didn't shoot...
Understood. Just know you're on a "probationary deer whining” period if you are not satisfied with your non-killing opportunitiesrotflmao
HA. No complaints here. I'm used to eating tags. Took me some time, but I finally learned that there ain't no guarantees in the deer woods. Don't matter how hard I work. How much I want it. Or how dedicated I may be; it'll simply happen when it happens. Thought for years I could WILL it to happen and that's just lunacy. I worked harder than any one person should to kill a deer during the 2006-2007 seasons and didn't kill shit but my desire to be out there. I'm over whining about deer. Really don't care much about them compared to what I used to be like. I'm to the point now that the only reason I go is to be in the woods. But I'm still not compromising because I know one of these days, it'll all come together and if I kill bucks before they reach their potential, there won't be any big ones to kill the next year.
Please let me know the time and date and I'll be more than happy to introduce him to a 3-blade Muzzy 100 While I agree it takes time to build a "shooter" buck, I think you are passing up great opportunities. How you guys pass up a deer of this caliber (or lack thereof in your eyes) amazes me! I am coming at you with the following comments as a friend and a brother from another mother. If you have a bone to pick with me when I'm done, call me:smiley_clap:
Missed opportunities:
Opportunities to fill your freezer.
Opportunities to build the "confidence" of being able to making "kill" shots (take your doe miss earlier this year) like it's muscle memory.
Opportunities to make sure your stand, stand up sequence, turning in the stand, changing your 1pin sight to the correct yardage, drawing back, etc. is error free.
Opportunities to work on your tracking skills.
Opportunities to have your daughter around deer and understanding that is where the food in the freezer comes from.
All of these "opportunities" is what makes a great hunter, in my mind when they are executed with excellence. I know you're stuck on killing a OBB, but does it not say something about a hunter on the number of successful hunts they've had, no matter the caliber of deer taken? Sure everyone's idea of a "successful hunt" is different, but I think a majority of hunters would prefer to have a full wall of good deer and the memories that came with them, than an empty wall with one great deer and one memory. What happens when you get that one great deer? What will be your motivation to hit the woods as hard the years to follow? Will you hang it up and only chase ducks and bands……meaaahhhhh.
I know I'm late to this party, but. One doesn't need to kill deer every season to be successful. Most of the opportunities you speak of can be acquired by target practice in the backyard. Not to crucify you, but your type of mentality has been a big help in reducing our herd to numbers that are not pretty. I haven't shot an arrow in 3 seasons and it has nothing to do with missed opportunities, or lack of hunting skills. We all have our goals that we want to achieve. Thing is all are goals are different from one anothers. A wall full of antlers is nice for some, but it is not my cup of tea. I prefer hunting for a buck or bucks that I desire to kill. Killing just any buck that comes by to add to my trophy wall would shorten my season and leave me a bit unsatisfied. To each their own though.