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My Doe, Son's Buck, Vacuum Aging 12/27/20

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    My Doe, Son's Buck, Vacuum Aging 12/27/20

    I have a love/hate relationship with my cellular trail camera. Having been on
    this property as a lessee for nearly 25 years, I know that the best cell signal
    is via AT&T service, especially in the lower lying areas of the 500 acres. The
    property lies about 8 miles east of IH 37S and about 1:15 south of my house
    in San Antonio. From my home or office, I can see what animals and when
    those animals begin hanging around their dinner bell area where my tripod sits.
    There sits my only camera, and even though there are times I am sure
    pictures are not being sent when I know they should have been, I do wish
    that I owned at least one more.

    My son and I arrived at the lease just after 2 pm on the day after Christmas.
    Knowing my feeder had run dry just a day earlier, we made a bee line to the
    "Honey Hole" where I normally bow hunt. While he filled the feeder (he's a
    great kid!) I changed the batteries in the Moultrie XA-7000i and then we
    headed to his gun blind, The Meat Locker.

    I have an older Stealthcam (card pull type) set up overlooking the feeding
    area at The Meat Locker. When my son and I head down there to fill feeders
    and/or hunt, we enjoy loading the pics into the Macbook and looking over
    the various deer, pigs, and turkey that visit. This time, though, it would have
    been nice to have been forewarned. It seems that on the evening of Dec 18,
    the feeder came crashing down, spilling around 250 pounds of corn! The
    problem is, the last time we were down was on the 12th, and only to fill
    the feeders up. I felt bad for my son. We spent the next 45 minutes rigging
    up a legless, heavily dented, bent motor mount Frankenfeeder so that the
    pavlovian response of our local herd might be witnessed for this hunt as well
    as the Sunday morning sit. We planned to replace this one with an old spare
    feeder we have at camp. The Stealthcam pics did not reveal the cause.

    I texted my son at 3:38 pm that I was well situated at the Honey Hole. His
    spirits appeared not too sullen as he awaited untold action at The Locker.
    We had poured one 50 lb bag of apple scented Mumme's corn into the now
    questionable feeder as well as hand corned a good portion of land between
    him and the feeder. Prior to climbing my tripod, I hand corned a few spots
    within bow range as the wind picked up and the sun shone seemingly brighter
    than a summer afternoon in Port A. As the afternoon waned toward sunset,
    we texted back and forth. He was seeing few deer, and the deer he did see
    were extremely skiddish. His feeder spun corn rather nicely at both 3:55 pm
    and 5:10 pm, the same as my, new this season, ASF I picked up from TSC in
    late September.

    I watched 1, then 2 doe as they meandered in an out of a 50 yard radius of
    my shooting lanes for more than an hour. I believe it was the 15-20 mph
    winds which had them spooky, as well as the GoPro I had just attached to the
    ASF. The just kept starring at it as if it meant imminent death, which, it
    really did. Having failed to charge the battery fully, I lost the signal to it

    before any deer appeared in its view. As 5:00 approached, the two doe were
    joined by a tall-tined 7 point and they inched into the red zone. I didn't care
    which doe it would be as they were identical in size and weight. I drew once
    while her head was down and the breeze was strong but my cam squeaked
    ever so slightly, send both doe into the brush about 10 yards. By this time
    my son became downtrodden as his once paradise at The Meat Locker had
    been reduced to a near barren wasteland of few deer, none of which came
    out for more than a few seconds. A few minutes later, 5:09 pm to be exact,
    the stars at the Honey Hole aligned. The arrow was flung and the blood
    spewed forth, leaving no doubt as to what the final outcome would become.
    I took a selfie of excitement as I texted and waited to finally find her buried
    in underbrush at the roads edge 80 yards to my southwest.

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    Jackson texted me that after a large 9 point and several doe had dissipated
    from his area, the pigs invaded. I gave him the green light and with one well
    placed shot, the porcine disappeared with one less amongst them. I picked
    him up, we loaded my doe, then headed to camp to meet up with my wife,
    daughter, and my daughter's boyfriend. We grilled burgers and watched Star
    Wars after cleaning the doe to hang in the 40 to 30 degree weather for the
    evening. They drove back to San Antonio around 10:00 pm and we went to
    bed.

    Jackson did not want roll out of his warm sleeping bag. I had been up since
    4:30, lightly prepping for the frigid morning hunt. Not wanting to be a party
    pooper, I laid down for another 20 minutes, finally coaxing him out of bed at
    5:15 so we could make it to the blind by 6:15 as we had decided that I would
    sit with him for this hunt. We both settled in at 6:38 as I had forgotten the
    hand corn and had to make the trek back to the truck. It's a good thing I
    came back loaded down! I made three yellow brick roads of corn about 10
    yards long each running in a line from blind to feeder beginning around 45
    yards from the blind. The feeder motor spun at 6:55 yet not a kernal flew.
    The motor mount had completely given way over night, and as daylight grew,
    we could see quite the pile under the rig. I played a feeder noise I found on
    You Tube. Again, just as the last evening, the deer were very scarce. It was
    odd for this location too not see a dozen or two deer at feeding times, hence
    the moniker "The Meat Locker", but here we were. Deer filtered around, even
    a few pigs made their way near, but none came into the clearing. After the
    second display of a quiet humming of the feeder motor, a buck was spotted,
    though he was nearly 100 yards beyond the feeder, but he was chasing a
    doe, albeit half-heartedly. When the finally decided to follow the road of
    corn, my son was eager to help the family by bringing home some venison
    and "kill a buck" that I thought worthy enough. I told him to aim for the exit
    hole and fire when ready. I am also trying out my hand at vacuum aging
    the meat from the doe, though I did not get to the front shoulders for de-
    boning before I went to bed at home last night at 11:00 pm. The rest of
    the pics and video is below:

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    [ame="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QmI0Rc19Lk8"]Buck down 12-27-20 - YouTube[/ame]

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    Glad it was a long read!

    Todd

    #2
    One more random pic

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    Comment


      #3
      Wow!

      Comment


        #4
        I like it!

        Rwc

        Comment


          #5
          Congratulations to the young man!!

          Comment


            #6
            Nice!

            Comment


              #7
              Awesome

              Comment

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