Jump to content

First Deer: My day with Elkhunter


The Mighty Prawn
 Share

Recommended Posts

Yesterday morning I was awake before the 0600 alarm clock, hadn't slept much as this was the day I'd been looking forward to for the last two weeks - I had booked myself onto Elkhunters hands on training day taking a deer from field to fridge.

 

Loaded the car and set off, after travelling on most of the midlands motorway network (nearly the full set of M42, M6, M69, M1 just missed the M5 and M45) after an hour and forty I arrived at an electric gate and a sign that announced "here be bison and deer" (I'm paraphrasing as I added the 'here be' to make it more mysterious!) and here I met the man we know as Elkhunter, who in reality is called Andrew.

 

A few minutes later we are on the range, today using Andrew's Sako TRG in .308 win. After a talk about the target areas on deer and their reaction to a shot in these places we are on to some test shots which go well at 100 yds, time for a couple at the full sized deer target, a good group but a little far back for the boiler room - these words will come back to haunt me...

 

imagejpg1_zpscc88e134.jpg

 

Happy face at the range.

 

After shooting at similar targets at 150 and 200 yds and a quick distraction to try the x-bolt in 6.5mm it was time to head into the park and find ourselves a deer.

 

Climbed to the top of the hill, found a good shooting spot and Andrew nominated our target who rather kindly stood in profile with a solid backstop. A deep breath, squeezed trigger, bang, the animal flinched but horror of horror it didn't go down. Even with binos we couldn't see where the shot hit but we knew it had definitely hit, a quick follow up was called and this time our lad was quickly on the deck.

 

imagejpg2_zps83540032.jpg

 

After a safe approach past the half ton bull bison that also calls this field home we examined the deer and realised my first shot was too far back and I had gut shot him, I was excuse the pun gutted myself, the last thing I wanted was to not get a clean kill but at lest with a quick follow up it was over as quick as possible.

 

Field gralloch, after reading and watching about this it was good to get hands on, although the smell is quite something for anyone who's never done it! Deer was trailered and we went to the butcher area.

 

Deer hung and under the excellent guidance of my teacher we legged and skinned, we removed remaining organs and inspected (including the lungs and liver which my second shot had obliterated, making me feel better at least that was quick) it was fascinating to get my head around what each cut would produce, and why some are much better than others.

 

imagejpg3_zpsb2b672e1.jpg

 

Here's my boy nearly skinned and just hanging out.

 

imagejpg4_zps2ff8b04d.jpg

 

And finally here is what he became, four hours from field to fridge.

 

A quality day with Andrew, he's an excellent teacher and great company. Finally got home about 1830 and absolutely shattered but I can't recommend a trip out with Elkhunter enough, I will definitely be doing it again and cannot wait.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thank you Andy for your kind words and it's nice to see a guy being honest and up front about the gut shot. As Many seasoned stalkers know all to well it happens. But you stepped up and got your hands dirty which is the hoe point of the day.

 

For all thoses interested being a park deer the gut is full 90% of the time and rearly full of soup, more the concistency of silage. So even though the shot entered the gut it's like hitting a lump of clay. It does burst the stomac, you don't get the explosion of fluid resulting in spoiled meat. If gutted quickly and correctly minimum amount of carcass is lossed. We lost the liver, both flanks which Andy took for the dogs and I looked today a fillet is now gone. So not the end of the world.

 

I had a most enjoyable day out with Andy and hes a dark horse on the range, wouldn't like chanlange him to a shoot off, half inch group at 200 yards with a 6x32 scope is nothing with my rifle. Dam good in my book.

 

Andrew

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A really interesting thread with good pics. Top marks for honesty sir. Mistakes happen.................that's a fact !! Surprised that you haven't had the usual tirade of abuse from the armchair critics that loiter on the fringes of PW, ever ready with criticism and snippy, childish comments.

 

I hope you enjoyed your day, well done sir.

 

ATB

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...