peez3006
Active Member
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- 603
Hi, these pictures are of my buddy's 2003 A zone buck.We first saw this buck on the second weekend of season and let him get away.We didn't relocate him until week four, once again he outsmarted us. Weekend six we found him again. He was with two does and a small forked horn. He was in a very stalkable position. We closed the distance and peeked into his canyon.
We instantly spotted the forked horn bedded 40 yards below us.Then one doe 80 yards out, but no 4x.We glassed the canyon for 5 minutes before my friend Jeff spotted the buck's muzzle watching us from behind a juniper. The buck must have known he was spotted, because he was on the move. Jeff hit him with his first and third shot and put him down.
Again, not the biggest buck, but tall and with lots of character. Another 4x4 for us in place where forked horns are the norm. By the way we shoot the good forked horns too. Also all of our hunting is done on public land. (lots of scouting and getting away from the crowd)
We instantly spotted the forked horn bedded 40 yards below us.Then one doe 80 yards out, but no 4x.We glassed the canyon for 5 minutes before my friend Jeff spotted the buck's muzzle watching us from behind a juniper. The buck must have known he was spotted, because he was on the move. Jeff hit him with his first and third shot and put him down.
Again, not the biggest buck, but tall and with lots of character. Another 4x4 for us in place where forked horns are the norm. By the way we shoot the good forked horns too. Also all of our hunting is done on public land. (lots of scouting and getting away from the crowd)