Gaaaaaaawd damn you got giant balls! Grizz with a recurve!!!
I second that......! Are you related to Chuck Norris???
Gaaaaaaawd damn you got giant balls! Grizz with a recurve!!!
I have a buddy who decided to go out goose hunting with some friends, one of whom had never hunted let alone held a gun (don't get me started on that) So, he has a gun. They're driving along and BOOOOOM!!! Dont ask me why there was a shell in the chamber or why this guy had a gun in the first place. Pellets ricocheted off the frame, blew the tire out, blasted break lines and took out his air intake. I still shake my head to this day as to why he even took this guy with.... luckily no one was hurt.Mine pale in comparison to most of these stories.
1. Not my story but a couple years ago I called in a 5 pt bull for a friend who shot the bull. As we were getting the front half of the bull loaded onto the game cart to get it up to the gated road above us, he slipped and fell face first on the rack. One of the brow tines punctured his lower frontal face area below his lip and above his chin. Made a nice hole that took some stitches to close. Never knocked any teeth out or anything but sure hurt.
2. About 4 years ago I shot a nice cow elk with another friend. She was on a burned hillside with a lot of fallen timber and there was about 12 inches of snow covering everything. The hillside was steep and when I got to about 25 yards from where she lay I stepped on a branch about 2" in diameter that had no bark on it right about where the middle of my arch would be. Of course my foot went right out from under me and I went down in a heap and lit on my left side on a nice downed tree with my day pack (about 25-30 pounds) on my back and my rifle in my right hand. I hit really hard and both of us heard the thump when I hit the log. I cracked a couple ribs on my left side below my armpit. Still had to take care of dressing and quartering the elk out and get the quarters up to the top of the ridge to where we would come in the morning to pack out. The 3 mile hike back to the truck all uphill was tough. I used to box and in a bout one time I got a couple ribs on the same side broken and cracked in my fight so I know what broken ribs feel like. You can't hardly breath and every breath hurts. It's much worse when you start laughing.
We came back in the morning and spent most of the day taking my cow out. It was brutal with a front quarter, both backstops, and tenderloins in my pack while dragging a rear quarter with a small rope behind me!
3. When I was about 15 I was riding in a pickup with my dad's friend, his 12 year old son was sitting between us, and I was sitting by the door. His boy really had no desire to be out there hunting and you could see it and just feel it. He had no desire at all to be doing this and maybe because of this he was pretty careless. We had been out sneaking on some antelope in the snow but never got a shot. We were driving slowly on a little two track as we figured we knew where the antelope had gone and we were going to close the distance and then try and sneak on them once more. When we got back into the truck the windows were up and the heater was on as it was cold. No-one had checked his rifle or asked if he had taken the round out of his chamber. All of a sudden there was a loud boom and the truck cab was filled with dust. The barrel of his .243 had been facing down towards the floor of the cab and to the passenger side where I was seated. The muzzle of his .243 was maybe 4 inches away from my left foot when the rifle went off. The bullet nicked the edge of my left foot striking the boot I was wearing. Only than a scuff on the leather, there was no damage to my boot but it felt like someone had hit me on my little toe with a hammer, and my left leg also stung from the powder blast.
The bullet went through the floor of the pickup and took a small chunk out of the top side of the starter on the pickup. It continued on and struck the aluminum rim on the passenger front tire and the rim just exploded and the truck dropped down onto the hub. My toe and leg hurt and everyones ears were ringing but luckily nobody was seriously hurt.
Not even close to some stories posted in the thread, but..
Hunting with my wife a few years ago. Private 160 acre pasture in SE Nebraska. We're walking out mid morning after downing a couple does, around 930 AM. Cold, cloudy, but low wind day. Ahead of us on a dead tree was the largest great horned owl I've ever seen,easily 2 ft. tall. We're getting close and he/she is staring us down. we're 20 yards away and he takes flight headed directly to us. I initially thought he was after the coyote fur trim on my wife's hunting coat hood but he passed a foot or so above our heads and landed on a cottontail about 15 yards behind us that we walked right past and it had never moved. We turned as he went over us and he landed on the rabbit with a satisfying crunch of bones and one small painful squeal. I remember how silent he was until that crunch of bones and his wingspan was huge. Awesome sight to see. That rabbit hid well from us, we never saw it until the owl came. He may have made it to the thicket if he'd bolted as we walked past but he knew the owl was there.
I knocked an owl aside right before he landed on my head when I was bowhunting out of a treestand one time. I don't think my wool had would have been much protection from those toenails!
We need more of the story on this....Was evaced via rappel last season. That was fun.
We need more of the story on this....