Warning: if you're PETA, or if you're squeamish, you might want to skip the third, fifth and sixth pictures in this post.
Given that we have a lot of project stuff we've been trying to accomplish before winter sets in, and that DH was able to get an elk on his trip out west in October, neither he nor I have hunted as hard this deer season as we have in years past.
For him, that meant not going out in bow season (Oct 1-Nov 14) hardly at all. For me, that has meant if I'm not feeling up to the hike to the woods and up the ladder to the tree stand, or if the weather is rainy, (or like the several days in the second week of firearm season snowy, windy, and suddenly subfreezing) I haven't gone out. So, although deer season is not done yet, I'm going to post about it now. December gets really crazy with all the Christmas stuff added in.
The morning of November 15th (opening day of firearm season) was beautiful, if a tad warm. I didn't even wear my insulated bibs (and I chill easily), that's how warm it was. The sunrise from the tree stand was reddish, and I thought of the old saying about 'red in the morning, sailors take warning' and wondered if it applied to deer hunters too.
The deer were active. I saw many in groups of two or three, and occasionally a lone deer also. But they were either does, which I wasn't going to shoot on opening day (especially as we are low on freezer space since DH brought an elk home from his Colorado trip), or they were fawns or small bucks. I began naming the bucks as I saw them: Skewers (tall, spindly spikes reminiscent of shish kebab skewers), Tiny Basket (six points, but the whole headgear was shorter than his ears and wasn't any wider than his ears), Fork-Half (antler on the left only, and forked, which distinguished him from the buck DH has seen that also only has an antler on the left but has four points on that one antler).
Small deer eating windfall apples at the entrance to the woods
DH was also seeing does and smallish bucks. Until, slightly behind him over his right shoulder and coming through the trees, he saw a much wider rack. I heard a shot ring out to the south of me, where DH was sitting, and I got excited, thinking he'd gotten something. Then a second shot rang out, and my exact thought was "either that's not him or he's shooting trees", as rarely does DH take a second shot unless the first one missed.
As I found out a few minutes later, via text, he'd shot a tree. Literally. His scope was not adjusted quite right for that distance.
But he'd also shot a deer and there was a clear blood trail. So looked like we'd be bringing a deer in from the woods later that morning.
While they may not have had classes at school that afternoon, they got quite a life science class at this little place here instead. Started with Field Dressing 101 where they watched intently and asked questions while DH dressed the deer. That rolled into an Anatomy Class as I explained each step of the process and DH pointed out organs as he removed them.
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