Expired Article Hunter Cracked 17

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Honorato Winkel

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Aug 20, 2024, 12:32:22 AM8/20/24
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While we waited for tickets, I started thinking about capturing this whole event on film. With the idea that everyone there would have some kind of DSLR, I wanted to take a different approach. I brought some of my expired 35mm filmstock and a few fresh 120mm rolls of Portra and Ektar, and started taking pictures.

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To think that I was at a different Raceism than everybody else, thanks to the slower process of taking the film photos where every frame counts. Metering, manually focusing, and trying to get the composition right in the middle of hoards of visitors.

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Life is all about decisions. Society sets most of the rules that we must follow. But in the hunting woods, marshes and fields, we're on our own. We alone determine our actions. We must follow the laws, of course, but otherwise we use our judgment based on knowledge, experience and plain woods savvy.

One of the more important decisions we make as hunters has to do with the quick and humane recovery of the quarry once it's struck by our projectile, whether it's a bullet, slug or arrow. Best case scenario is for the animal to fall as soon as it is hit, or close enough where we're able to see it go down. But what about the situation where it runs out of sight, leaving a decent blood trail, or no trail at all?

At that point I had to decide whether to follow immediately or wait. The blood was easy to follow in the snow, but it was inconsistent. There were several hours of light left, and I thought I might catch up to him and take a finishing shot. Tracks in the snow indicated that he bounded away for 50 yards or so, and then started walking.

The blood trail was light, but very vivid in the snow. As I followed, I noted that the deer continued walking at a fair pace. I pushed on, always looking ahead for sign of the buck. The pursuit was well into the third hour when I saw the deer ahead, lying down on his side. I had no idea if he had expired, so I put a finishing shot high in the neck just under his head. He never flinched and I knew he was dead.

As I approached, I looked for sign of the bullet wound. I found nothing and rolled him over. Still nothing. Then I made an astounding discovery. My bullet hit him in the knee joint, not squarely, but a grazing wound. I was certain that the bullet struck him there after being deflected by hitting the branch. I realized that by following him relentlessly, he didn't have a chance to bed down for any length of time. He literally ran out of blood from a wound that was superficial. Had I waited and he bedded, the injury likely would have coagulated and sealed itself. Then his track would have mixed with many others in the woods, or darkness would have taken over.


I can recall many instances when following a blood trail, where a bedded animal was jumped by pursuers and never again left another drop of blood. That leaves you with only one option: searching blindly, hoping to stumble into more blood or locating the dead animal.

Whether you follow immediately or not, there are some cautions that are seldom adhered to when a game animal must be tracked. Most of the time, everyone in the hunting party will want to help follow the blood trail. It becomes a noisy group effort. You'll commonly hear Bill say, "Hey Joe, I've got blood here." Bill lopes ahead and everyone lurches forward. Then Harry finds the next blood and loudly announces his discovery. What you're doing is easily warning the quarry of your presence. Instead, keep the search party small. Ideally, one hunter should follow the trail while the one who hit the animal eases along and constantly looks ahead for the animal. The idea is to move slowly and as quietly as possible, attempting to spot the animal, whether it's walking or bedded. Be aware that it typically will be watching its backtrail. If you know the country, be aware that your companions could make a big circle and possibly ambush the animal far in the distance.

If it's getting dark, you might decide to abandon the trail until the morning. There are a few considerations here. Predators might find your animal and you'll find nothing but bones and a blood spot in the morning. I know a hunter who hit an antelope late in the afternoon. He opted to wait for daylight and found the carcass minus the meat. Coyotes had eaten it. In the country where I live in northwest Wyoming, grizzlies are apt to find your elk in the night. When you return in the morning, it isn't your elk any more, and you could be in big trouble with the angry bear.


Another reason: If you are hunting in warm weather conditions, it's likely that when you find the animal the next morning, it will be bloated and contaminated, unfit for human consumption. That's usually the rule rather than the exception. And, as an FYI, it's not difficult to follow blood with a searchlight or lantern, and there are products that help illuminate blood in the night.

"Learn from my mistakes, and not your own". Really, is there a better way to learn than that? I know that there are some of you that have the art of blood trailing a wounded whitetail down to perfection, but for the rest I truly hope that you can use the following tips this upcoming season to insure your success. Years ago I put this whitetail blook tracking guide together for a speaking event, I still use each and everyone of the tips and I can't wait to share them with you! Afterall there was only 1 way to really learn these tips completely, and that was unfortunately by witnessing many mistakes first-hand, often of my own. At the same time, the losses of deer have not been a very high % within the process of the learning curve, because even when mistakes are made a solid recovery can be experienced if care is taken.

The first set of tips are the most critical aspect of tracking a whitetail. When an arrow is released, what you personally do within the following few minutes will often determine what happens within the next 24 hours or more. If you are too aggressive your potential buck of a lifetime could be pushed miles away, with no blood trail and virtually zero hope of finding him. We have all been there, and my hope is that the advice in this article will keep you from going there, again. Check out these estimated time and distances to expire based on common shot placements, and follow below for the #1 blood trailing tip that you can practice.

1. Heart Shot (good, bright-red blood): 5 to 10 seconds, up to 300 yards depending upon cover (often 100 yards or less in thick, high stem count habitat and up to a few hundred yards in open ag-land). And if you think 300 yards sounds like a long ways, it is! However, take some time to stop and think just how long a full-grown whitetail can run at tops speed (45mph) within 10 seconds.

3. Liver Shot (dark, red blood): Up to 1 hour, could travel miles if pursued. Again, at even moderate speeds-possibly even a slow stead walk mixed with short bursts-a deer can travel a very long way in a mile.

4. Gut Shot (blood smells, bits of food, greenish tint-be careful, could go through stomach and be washed clean byintestineon way out, making the arrow appear to be a heart shot or a better shot than the stomach: Up to 5 hours, will travel miles if pursued

5.IntestineShot (good, bright-red to watery blood) 12-24 hours is common, and sometimes 2 days or more! An intestine shot deer unfortunately has the strength to travel many miles with little to no blood trail.

Trust me I have heard them all, including: "It's going to rain", "the yotes will find him first" and "snow is coming". Although some hunters may not admit it, I think you can even add, "I have to get home" and "I have to work tomorrow", to the list of reasons not to back out. However, the hunters I personally know who experience nearly a 100% success rate for recovering mortally wounded whitetails, all have one thing in common: Patience. If "when in doubt, back out" is the king of whitetail recovery phrases, "Patience" it's single root word of success.

Exercising patience with anything in life is difficult and the art of tracking a wounded whitetail is absolutely no exception. But, if you want to consistently find a deer that you just shot, you have to apply a whole lot of patience. The decisions that you make within the first few minutes after you shoot a deer, will directly dictate the rollercoaster of emotions that you experience for hours or even days to come. The reliable level of predictable tracking success is based on the behavior patterns of wounded whitetails.

*A mortally wounded deer will lie down within 200-300 yards (or first thick cover) and will expire in the time-frame of the specific hit. Unless pushed, this will be the final resting place for your deer. If pushed from this location, the deer will usually go in excess of mile or more, depending upon cover, with little to no blood trail. Unless you are extremely lucky the odds that you find your whitetail are extremely low, even if you only jump him 1 time.

*If raining or snowing, you dont have much to lose by waiting. If you have a good hit, the deer will only go a short ways, making recovery relatively easy, even with no blood trail! If the deer had a marginal hit, hurrying to track because of an approaching rain or snow will only push the deer and you have a great chance of losing the deer anyways. Do you have lots of coyotes or other predators in the area? Same thing...jumping a bedded deer will only lead to the same results of jumping him in the rain or snow. 1 jump and he is typically gone for good, so taking a chance that a predator finds him is better than the certainty that he will be lost if he is pushed to early.

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