Just got home from first true DIY muley hunt

mcseal2

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May 8, 2014
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A friend and I went on our first true DIY muley hunt this year. We only hunted with a guide once, but had hunted muleys a couple other times with more knowledgeable friends who helped steer us in the right direction. This time we wanted to do it on our own. We got some advice from people on here and another forum, but once we got to the unit it was up to us to figure it out. We have done DIY hunts in the past for other species just not muleys.

For this trip we went to a big Region in Wyoming with very mixed terrain. It was a late decision made after not drawing for elk and finding out our antelope unit we hunt was still recovering from a round of sickness. We knew pressure was very heavy and there were lots of 2 tracks, but decided to try it anyway. It was also a tag we could get with only 1 point.

I started the preparation for this hunt by re-reading the mule deer books I had and then by buying some new ones. Mike Eastman's, Robby Dennings, and Kurt Darner's were among the most helpful. I read the books a little at a time in the evenings starting late this spring and marked information I wanted to remember with a highlighter. I took the highlighted sections and made a "cliff notes" type file of them on my home computer, a list I can pack on hunts to check over in the evenings when I'm struggling. Doing it this way makes me read the stuff from the book twice by the time it makes my file and helps me remember it. Having the ever-evolving list along makes me think over my strategy when it isn't working and helps me think of all options when coming up with the next day's plan. Its probably not necessary for those of you who grew up in the west and know the game there well, but seems to help me as I try to improve my own ability.

We took a 3 day scouting trip in late August and saw some nice bucks. Nothing was huge and most forked really high on the back, but several were older bucks that we would have been happy taking. It also gave us a chance to look over the unit and have some idea of where to start once we got to the hunt. The deer were visible with their coats and velvet racks so we got an idea of what the unit held. A lot of the bucks fork high on the back and won't score great but are still plenty nice enough for us.

I was competing in and helping to put on a ranch rodeo near home on Saturday the first so we didn't leave for our hunt until 7pm Saturday. We had my truck loaded earlier so my buddy picked me up at the rodeo and we drove through the night, slept a little in the truck and started checking out the hunting area Sunday morning. It was our first time in the area during season so we wanted to see what pressure was like. We weren't really hunting yet, more checking out where the pressure was. It was everywhere! We gave up counting at 150 camper trailers fairly early and never even counted the tents or other temporary dwellings. The area has a general tag for residents and MANY non-residents hunt it also. Closer to midday we checked into our hotel, unloaded, and got ready to hunt for real. We hit some country that evening with less pressure that looked good and where we saw a big 3x3 on our scouting trip but turned up only a group of 18 does right at dark.

The next morning we were back in that same area glassing and looking over more country. We spent much of the day around there and saw very few hunters, problem was we saw no deer either. I'd got a new Polaris Ranger since our scouting trip so we needed a new ORV sticker and the hotel had been sent a book of 2017 stickers instead of 2016 stickers since our scouting trip. We ended up making a 160 mile round trip midday to get the proper sticker so we could use our UTV, got back to hunt that afternoon. Checking out some places we hadn't scouted we found some good looking pinion patches with good rock faces, boulders, and lots of cuts that looked like they should hold a few deer but couldn't glass any up before dark. We glassed parts of that area again the next two mornings and again didn't see any deer. I slipped in to check it out after the second morning and saw almost no tracks or other sign so we wrote that area off. There was probably a big old buck holed up in there somewhere but without having scouted it and with only a few days of season there we decided to try elsewhere despite the hunting pressure.

We headed up to some higher elevation canyons we had scouted. There were 30+ camps on the short road leading into the canyons but during mid-afternoon there were few hunters out. We saw some small bucks and does walking and glassing along some patches of timber that required a few hundred yards of walking to reach but no good deer. By evening we had slipped into a nice spot to glass and saw a few deer and elk, but none with antlers. We could hear ATV's and UTV's above us most of the time on the roads and figured the bigger bucks were probably holed up. Early October isn't prime time for daylight buck activity anyway and we figured it wouldn't take much to keep them from popping out where we could see them.

The following morning saw us trying a new area again. We did a lot of glassing longer distances from or fairly near our UTV. We were again in territory we hadn't scouted and wanted to know what was there, kinda get the whole picture so we could make better decisions about it. The truck, ATV, and UTV traffic seemed to be heavy and fairly constant everywhere we went so we figured ours wasn't going to be the first one a buck saw or make it more nervous. Deer were really moving that day, we saw over 200 deer by the days end and a lot of new country. We picked a spot on some walk-in ground we hiked into and glassed from for that evenings hunt and saw a lot of deer but again no mature bucks. There were enough deer around the walk-in we didn't know if we could reach a decent glassing point without spooking them. A small snow/sleet shower and brief, heavy wind gave us our window to get in and it turned into a nice crisp evening after. Really a neat day watching that many deer even if it was almost all does and a few fork horns.

The next morning we finally caught a break. We had found some country the previous day where we thought the pressure could work to our advantage and it did. Another hunters truck on a 2 track near us bumped a good buck out only 40yds from us and my buddy dumped him at 80yds. The buck was a nice 5x5 and was collared with a transmitter. We were happy as this was the first decent buck we had seen in 5 days of hunting. We got the buck taken care of and hauled out, and contacted the biologist for the area so he could come get the collar. That evening we hunted an area we scouted that had really looked good when scouting and where we had seen some mature bucks. Conditions were finally right to get in there and we were excited. We slipped in very carefully, found a spot we could get across the skyline in vegetation and have cover to glass from. We had barely got set-up when a truck came up the two track in the bottom. As he came up a UTV came roaring down off some private land and went to meet the truck. I don't know what was said but the UTV went back into the private and the truck left the area. We continued to glass the country as the UTV continued to drive around along the fence of the private ground. The guys in it saw our orange where we were tucked in and looked at us for awhile in their glass. Then they worked the fenceline a while longer driving and glassing and then fired a shot that echoed up the canyon before leaving. They gave no indication they were shooting at game, never went and looked for the result of the shot. I think they were either trying to spook something out to shoot or trying to spook the game before leaving with us there. It was to late in the day to move so we stuck it out there until about 15 minutes before dark when the UTV came back and drove through the bottom we were glassing again. We pulled out and made our way back to our truck.

The following morning we were back in similar country to where the buck had been pushed to us the day before. We spotted a buck shortly after first light slipping through some brush. I got the glass on him and decided he had plenty of horn for me. I ranged him at 325yds and got prone over my pack. By the time he gave me a clear shot he was at 358yds and I dropped him as he paused while walking away. I don't think he ever knew we were there but I had to take a tough shot when he paused as he was headed away with no sign of turning broadside. I had faith in the 180gr accubond to do the job from the new 300WM I have been practicing with and it didn't disappoint. The exit wound was right behind the opposite shoulder despite the entry being considerably further back than I'd have liked. The buck was probably leaving to get bedded up before hunters got in that deep. Once that buck was taken care of we headed to our hotel in town for what we considered a well deserved nap. Our schedule all week had been rough for us. By the time we got to our hotel and ate whatever we had thrown in the crock pot that morning, then caught a shower it was 11:30 or 12. We slept a bit and got up at 4 to be at our spots early. Our naps we wanted to get in at midday just didn't seem to be happening as we were always busy exploring, getting the ORV sticker, or something. Anyway when we got back to the hotel and ready to unwind my buddy couldn't find his knife. It was a family heirloom from his Grandpa so we headed back out to see if we could track it down. Luckily we did recover it about 2 miles from where we loaded my deer into the UTV on a 2 track. It had been lying on our cooler in the UTV and luckily it fell off where we spotted it and nobody else had. That day felt like we found a needle in a haystack twice! I put a pic of my buck up first and then my buddy's

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robby denning

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You guys did it right from scouting to the kill. I can tell by your story you were careful where it counted and the photos prove it worked. Enjoyed the story more than most in the mags as I actually learned something. Thank you
 

Wileycoyote

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Some well earned trophy's! Congrats, especially with orange army out in full force


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mcseal2

mcseal2

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Thanks everyone. We definitely learned from the trip and will try to find an area that fits our hunting style a bit better in the future. We were very happy with the results but prefer to hunt deer that are following their natural patterns instead of trying to outsmart pressure. We were frankly lucky to pull off what we did and can't expect to repeat it but still learned valuable lessons that can help us in the future. Our early whitetail experience with walking draws and pushing deer served us well this trip but it's not what we are looking for. We put ourselves in position to benefit from luck, but we relied on a lot of luck this hunt. Hunting pressured deer is always a long shot and is why we changed our whitetail hunting. We now do a lot of long range glassing around home and try to make our first trip into our best whitetail country involve a tag and gun so we aren't pressuring them early by being to pushy.

On a side note we ended up staying next door to a fellow Rokslide member at the hotel and shared several good conversations. His Dad is new to hunting and we all hit it off really well. Our last night they were still hunting so we grilled steaks and potatoes/onions and had supper ready when they got back. Great people we may hunt with in the future. The hunting world is a small one and we have met many great people in it already. Please keep promoting hunting every chance you get, we need all the support we can get to keep our passion alive.

Over the years I have kept a continually updated hunting journal both for inspiration on hunts, and because I entertain the idea of writing a hunting book someday when I'm unable to physically hunt if life works that way. I can't imagine becoming totally unconnected from my passion if age removes me from hunting myself. After every hunt I add a journal entry (what I posted here) and then have a "What I Learned" entry that I don't always share. It's usually pretty simple but reading it during a tough hunt helps me keep going.

Much of this personal pep talk I'll post has been built over a lifetime and not specifically this hunt, but I keep adding it to every entry for motivation. I have been fortunate enough to have 8 whitetail on the wall that average 172" gross and a 200" muley before this hunt. The previous muley was 90% pure luck, 10% effort and taken from a private ranch that had never produced a buck of this caliber before or since. The whitetail are a result of a ton of luck and hunting our ranch that has good genetics and that I work at full time and am intimately familiar with. I'm not a great hunter, I just put more into it than most and hunt great areas. I fill a whitetail buck tag around home about once every 3 years. The success I have had has pushed me to try to repeat those results and that has pushed me to hunt every possible hour no matter if conditions are favorable or not. I've also learned to be very careful and hunt places as smart as possible to not let deer know they are being hunted for as long as possible. My What I Learned Post will read a lot like a high school coaches halftime speech for a reason, keeping after it when times are tough is key for me.

Anyway, here is my "What I Learned This Hunt" file from this trip. Much of it is repetitive. Hopefully some of it will be of use to some of the members here.

What I learned this hunt
-Opportunity is earned most times not stumbled upon. Even what is stumbled upon is usually earned by time in the field.
-Never Quit. The most common denominator from successful hunters is enthusiastic time spent where game lives
-In line with the last post, it's very easy to get discouraged but you work all year for a short hunting season. Look at every day hunting as your last high school football game. You'll have tons of time to reflect on what you wish you would have done when it's over. You have all year to reflect on what you wish you'd have done with the weeks or days of season where you had a tag, Don't Waste It.
-Use glass, patience, and distance to your advantage. These are the most potent tools you have to hunt pressured deer.
-Binos on a tripod, even my 10x when I don't care to pack my 15x, is the biggest glassing advantage I don't see used. 10x glass on a good tripod beats any spotter I've seen for FINDING game. I run an Outdoorsmans compact medium tripod with three options for glass. Leica 10x42 Geovid HD binos in a Bushnell mount, Swaro 15x56 HD SLC binos in and Outdoorsmans mount, and a Swaro STM 20-60x65 spotter. Usually my hunting partner has my 15x Swaros and my Promaster tripod so we can work as a team. My eyes are better than his through the spotter, he is colorblind, and the binos work best for him.
-Know your gun and don't let missed opportunities occur. Everyone that shoots misses but you shouldn't often if you practice and pick your shots.
-Prepare to shoot far but never shoot any farther than necessary
-ALWAYS KNOW THE WIND AND NEVER SKYLINE YOURSELF
-Binos with a rangefinder built in make shots fast when necessary, and a rangefinder bino mounted on a tripod is the best option for ranging distanct targets.


The flip side:
-I can live with and be proud of an un-filled tag (and have done it) if I know I did everything I know how to to fill it. If I put less than maximum effort into filling a tag I will be disappointed with myself for the entire off season (and have done it).
-When you aren't in the game you will never be successful. Time spend out of game habitat during season is time you can't recover.
-Plan hunts around weather, but don't let weather keep you out of the field if time allows.
-Don't force hunts. If the wind isn't right do what is needed to free your time up for when it is.
-Find the balance between focus and fun. A hunt is a poor use of vacation time if it isn't fun.
-Be confident: You are hunting where you are for a reason, give it time to work
-The key to being still is being comfortable, dress to stay warm when sitting, cool when walking
 
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realunlucky

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Very nicely done guys. Congratulations on some great bucks earned with hard work

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mdfanatic1980

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May 8, 2016
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Abilene, TX
I do the same. I always take post season notes and reflect each year on them. I like the idea of a journal to be able to go back on. I think I'll give that a try this year on my hunt. I also take post season notes on what I'd do different, what to remember the next time, what didn't get packed on my gear list and what should've been packed on the gear list.
 

Nomad

Lil-Rokslider
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May 19, 2016
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West Texas
Congrats on well deserved bucks.

I really appreciate that you took the time and effort to paint the picture of your hunt through this commentary. I can picture myself squeezing the trigger.

Excellent read.
 
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