Speed Goat Lessons

OXN939

WKR
Joined
Jun 28, 2018
Messages
1,792
Location
VA
Somehow the stars aligned this year and I ended up with an NV "Horns Longer Than Ears/Any Legal Weapon" antelope tag in my Hail Mary unit. I've never drawn a desirable tag anywhere out west, so I was super stoked to clear my schedule and dedicate a week to finding a nice one. One of my buddies is getting into big game hunting and was also able to get off work, so this seemed like a great way for him to see what it's all about.



We got to our unit the day before the opener and ran out to do some scouting. We saw one buck that afternoon. Slow, but on the board. Opening morning, we took a two track the better part of an hour back into a large tract of public to be on a good X for sunrise. That morning I passed a decent mid 60s buck and we saw a herd of some does plus one juvenile buck. At this point we were feeling alright.


Then things got weird. We glassed and drove a ton of really excellent looking habitat and saw zero antelope of any kind that afternoon and evening. The next day, we switched it up from hunting higher to targeting a new area with creeks and cattle guzzlers on the flats. Nothing. That afternoon, we checked a conpletely different part of the unit. Nothing. We tried hiking to and glassing from ridgelines, driving two tracks, hunting areas near watering troughs and areas near creeks... not a single antelope to be found. At this point, we were half way through our hunt and hadn't even seen a live animal since the first morning despite hunting hard and putting in a bunch of miles and time behind the glass.


So we went back to the drawing board and found a spot that involved hiding in plain sight with a bonus hint of misery to access. As we were walking in, I snapped a sunrise picture to show to my buddies how great the habitat we were hunting looked, despite how much time we were spending glassing cows. About five minutes later, I saw a little speck out of the corner of my eye that had a very distinct gait to it. Even at 1200 yards, I knew he was a shooter as soon as I put my 10x binos on him.


One unique thing about Nevada is how unbelievably quickly dehydration happens. None of the three pumps I did to CENTCOM even comes close- the last thing I did as I shucked my pack to make the final stalk was take a big drink of water, and I will still never forget briefly debating going to get my water bottle first after breaking the shot and watching him go down. Long story short, he caught a 120 grain Hammer Hunter from about 240 yards, and went about another 25. What followed was one of the moments we all do this stuff for- a mix of the exact opposite of ground shrinkage and high fives with one of your closest buddies in a situation you were starting to think might end up being a bust.


Screenshot_20220826-184351_Gallery.jpg

Screenshot_20220826-183628_Gallery.jpg


Going forward, my big learning point from this hunt has to do with expectation management. I was absolutely stunned when I got the email saying I had drawn this tag, and allowed myself to really start building it up in my mind when I talked to some guys from nearby who had very good things to say about the unit. So, when we got to day three and had seen fewer antelope than I have in the medians of some parking lots... morale took a hit. It ended up being a really incredible experience, but drawing a tag that is tough to get does not by any means guarantee an easy hunt.
 
Joined
Mar 2, 2022
Messages
497
Great buck! Congrats! Crazy how few antelope there are in lots of great looking NV habitat.
 
Joined
Jul 27, 2021
Messages
1,455
Very nice goat, and good for you sticking with it. Thats why its called hunting and not killing. Congrats.
 
OP
OXN939

OXN939

WKR
Joined
Jun 28, 2018
Messages
1,792
Location
VA
Crazy how few antelope there are in lots of great looking NV habitat.

I'd heard this, and was expecting to see fewer animals than the goat hunts I'd done in WY and MT... but man this was on another level. Interesting to see several other threads from this general part of the country talking about super low game densities this year.
 
Joined
Nov 28, 2018
Messages
312
Location
CA
good job. Any chance of a rough score. Heading out in a couple weeks and trying the best I can to judge them a little better
Thanks
 
Joined
Mar 2, 2022
Messages
497
I'd heard this, and was expecting to see fewer animals than the goat hunts I'd done in WY and MT... but man this was on another level. Interesting to see several other threads from this general part of the country talking about super low game densities this year.
My brother had a tag a few years ago in central Nv. He drove around the unit for 2 days looking for bucks and only saw one. He shot it. Turned out to be an 80” buck. Yeah, nothing like WY and many other places.
 

Rich M

WKR
Joined
Jun 14, 2017
Messages
5,178
Location
Orlando
You kept hunting when many guys woulda quit or gone back for the opening day buck. That’s a great lesson for the folks who quit. It aint over til its over. Congratulations!
 
Joined
Jul 13, 2020
Messages
71
Location
California
Just got back from a friends nevada antelope hunt that he drew on a random and had a very similar experience to what you described and got lucky finding a great buck we had pre scouted before the hunt opened and killed opening morning but was stunned at how low density the unit was.
 
Joined
Dec 2, 2021
Messages
79
Somehow the stars aligned this year and I ended up with an NV "Horns Longer Than Ears/Any Legal Weapon" antelope tag in my Hail Mary unit. I've never drawn a desirable tag anywhere out west, so I was super stoked to clear my schedule and dedicate a week to finding a nice one. One of my buddies is getting into big game hunting and was also able to get off work, so this seemed like a great way for him to see what it's all about.



We got to our unit the day before the opener and ran out to do some scouting. We saw one buck that afternoon. Slow, but on the board. Opening morning, we took a two track the better part of an hour back into a large tract of public to be on a good X for sunrise. That morning I passed a decent mid 60s buck and we saw a herd of some does plus one juvenile buck. At this point we were feeling alright.


Then things got weird. We glassed and drove a ton of really excellent looking habitat and saw zero antelope of any kind that afternoon and evening. The next day, we switched it up from hunting higher to targeting a new area with creeks and cattle guzzlers on the flats. Nothing. That afternoon, we checked a conpletely different part of the unit. Nothing. We tried hiking to and glassing from ridgelines, driving two tracks, hunting areas near watering troughs and areas near creeks... not a single antelope to be found. At this point, we were half way through our hunt and hadn't even seen a live animal since the first morning despite hunting hard and putting in a bunch of miles and time behind the glass.


So we went back to the drawing board and found a spot that involved hiding in plain sight with a bonus hint of misery to access. As we were walking in, I snapped a sunrise picture to show to my buddies how great the habitat we were hunting looked, despite how much time we were spending glassing cows. About five minutes later, I saw a little speck out of the corner of my eye that had a very distinct gait to it. Even at 1200 yards, I knew he was a shooter as soon as I put my 10x binos on him.


One unique thing about Nevada is how unbelievably quickly dehydration happens. None of the three pumps I did to CENTCOM even comes close- the last thing I did as I shucked my pack to make the final stalk was take a big drink of water, and I will still never forget briefly debating going to get my water bottle first after breaking the shot and watching him go down. Long story short, he caught a 120 grain Hammer Hunter from about 240 yards, and went about another 25. What followed was one of the moments we all do this stuff for- a mix of the exact opposite of ground shrinkage and high fives with one of your closest buddies in a situation you were starting to think might end up being a bust.


View attachment 445152

View attachment 445153


Going forward, my big learning point from this hunt has to do with expectation management. I was absolutely stunned when I got the email saying I had drawn this tag, and allowed myself to really start building it up in my mind when I talked to some guys from nearby who had very good things to say about the unit. So, when we got to day three and had seen fewer antelope than I have in the medians of some parking lots... morale took a hit. It ended up being a really incredible experience, but drawing a tag that is tough to get does not by any means guarantee an easy hunt.
Congratulations!
 
OP
OXN939

OXN939

WKR
Joined
Jun 28, 2018
Messages
1,792
Location
VA
good job. Any chance of a rough score. Heading out in a couple weeks and trying the best I can to judge them a little better
Thanks

Guy we were renting our cabin from guides and said 79-81". I tend to think he'll be towards the lower end of that spectrum. Super stoked on him either way!
 

tmoz

FNG
Joined
Sep 1, 2022
Messages
8
Somehow the stars aligned this year and I ended up with an NV "Horns Longer Than Ears/Any Legal Weapon" antelope tag in my Hail Mary unit. I've never drawn a desirable tag anywhere out west, so I was super stoked to clear my schedule and dedicate a week to finding a nice one. One of my buddies is getting into big game hunting and was also able to get off work, so this seemed like a great way for him to see what it's all about.



We got to our unit the day before the opener and ran out to do some scouting. We saw one buck that afternoon. Slow, but on the board. Opening morning, we took a two track the better part of an hour back into a large tract of public to be on a good X for sunrise. That morning I passed a decent mid 60s buck and we saw a herd of some does plus one juvenile buck. At this point we were feeling alright.


Then things got weird. We glassed and drove a ton of really excellent looking habitat and saw zero antelope of any kind that afternoon and evening. The next day, we switched it up from hunting higher to targeting a new area with creeks and cattle guzzlers on the flats. Nothing. That afternoon, we checked a conpletely different part of the unit. Nothing. We tried hiking to and glassing from ridgelines, driving two tracks, hunting areas near watering troughs and areas near creeks... not a single antelope to be found. At this point, we were half way through our hunt and hadn't even seen a live animal since the first morning despite hunting hard and putting in a bunch of miles and time behind the glass.


So we went back to the drawing board and found a spot that involved hiding in plain sight with a bonus hint of misery to access. As we were walking in, I snapped a sunrise picture to show to my buddies how great the habitat we were hunting looked, despite how much time we were spending glassing cows. About five minutes later, I saw a little speck out of the corner of my eye that had a very distinct gait to it. Even at 1200 yards, I knew he was a shooter as soon as I put my 10x binos on him.


One unique thing about Nevada is how unbelievably quickly dehydration happens. None of the three pumps I did to CENTCOM even comes close- the last thing I did as I shucked my pack to make the final stalk was take a big drink of water, and I will still never forget briefly debating going to get my water bottle first after breaking the shot and watching him go down. Long story short, he caught a 120 grain Hammer Hunter from about 240 yards, and went about another 25. What followed was one of the moments we all do this stuff for- a mix of the exact opposite of ground shrinkage and high fives with one of your closest buddies in a situation you were starting to think might end up being a bust.


View attachment 445152

View attachment 445153


Going forward, my big learning point from this hunt has to do with expectation management. I was absolutely stunned when I got the email saying I had drawn this tag, and allowed myself to really start building it up in my mind when I talked to some guys from nearby who had very good things to say about the unit. So, when we got to day three and had seen fewer antelope than I have in the medians of some parking lots... morale took a hit. It ended up being a really incredible experience, but drawing a tag that is tough to get does not by any means guarantee an easy hunt.

Great buck and great story, thanks for sharing!
 
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