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    2007 November - Lowcountry Hunting - Helping hunters to have successful Lowcountry hunting experience

    Archive for November, 2007

    Sickness and Work Kill Week’s Hunting

    I apologize for not posting more this week, but I have been busy as anything since Thanksgiving, and I have been sick all of this week!

    Fortunately I am making a full recovery. And we have quite a few members up this weekend as well as a camera full of pictures ready to be checked, so that should allow me to provide some new reading material here at LowcountryHunting over the next few days…

    As for me, I did feel well enough to make it out to the woods tonight and decided to go down in to the bay on Cubbedge Hill. Right off of the bat, I bumped a medium (I think, it was a quick look) buck going in. I could see him tip toeing around trying to locate the source of the sound he heard, so I just kept trying to get the cross hairs on him to get a better look at his rack. I could have shot him, but I just could not ever tell for sure what he had on his head, so I passed. He finally got spooked and trotted off; I then snuck on to my stand.

    I settled in and figured after that, the deer must be moving. I also heard distant shots all night, so I figured the deer must be moving. Plus it was a perfect night in the woods, so the deer should be moving… The air was cool with a bit of fog, and it was gray and overcast. I just knew something huge was going to come by me.

    However the night passed without another single sighting until, with just a few minutes of shooting light left, I heard something responding to my grunt calls – running quickly my way! I jerked my 30-06 up and quickly turned off the safety. Here he comes I told myself! I prepared for a snap shot as the sound of the crunching leaves got closer.

    Just then, a beautiful doedillo (for those of you who do not know, that is a female armadillo) bounded in to my sights followed by a monster buckdillo. The rut was in full swing, and this guy was giving her a run for her money…

    I almost threw up as my adrenaline rush vanished!  Oh well, it was a great night in the woods…

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    Posted on 29th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Hunting Report, Cubbedge Hill Plantation | 2 Comments »

    The Webb Avenue Monster’s Owner is… Will Castro!

    Will Castro with the Webb Avenue MonsterThis past January, J.O. found a huge set of antlers from a dead buck on his Cubbedge Hill property, but very near the Webb Center’s oak-lined avenue. We all wondered, and hypothesized, on who had killed that deer.

    I asked over at Webb to see if any of their hunters had ever complained that they had lost a HUGE buck anywhere near where the rack was found, and they said no. And I thought we had only lost one big deer, and that was our old member Earl who wounded a monster down in the bay during late Nov. about 750 yards from the rack’s pick up spot. So I thought that possibly that deer had made it up and out of the bay to lay up on the thick pines near the avenue.

    It is definitely not out of the question for a deer to make it that far since we have tracked them hundreds of yards before on bad hits – plus you figure it would only take a buck about 20 seconds to travel that far at a good sprint. In addition, Earl searched the bay (and it is open late in the year, so it is easy to see) for a day, and I did for several more later on, so we knew that buck had gone somewhere, but was it up to the avenue???

    Well, Raymond goes the whole year without saying anything about his theory on who shot the deer until he came up this week. And he dropped a bombshell! He claims our dear friend Will Castro did…And I am afraid he is RIGHT!

    Early on in the rut, Will took a shot at a buck right in that EXACT spot J.O. found the deer from a ladder stand we had in the area. He could only see the deer’s head sticking out making it a tough shot, so when he did not find blood or the deer, he just assumed he missed. He told me about it, but by the time the buck was found, I gave it no thought – again because Will’s was a miss, not a wounded deer lost.

    But Raymond had been in the stand right next to him, and he had not forgotten! So he lets us go on believing that we had found Earl’s buck until he had a chance to talk to Will in person to jog his memory. And after getting some more details without saying where he was going with the questioning, Raymond just kicks Will in the nuts by telling him that the avenue buck is his deer!

    Now Will is in just a complete frenzy…He has been trying to kill a monster for several years, and when he finally does – he loses it! Then worse than that, when the buck is found, it is not by Will. And we all know that possession is 9/10ths of the law. So now he can hardly speak, much less sleep and eat, knowing that his deer’s rack sits just across the street just waiting to be put on a nice cape and hung in his NEW house.

    So we are trying to work out reproduction rights as I type. And I hope we get it soon before Will has a heart attack. And you just have to know how much fun we are all having with Will now – ragging him that this may not be his deer (even though we all know it is). I call it the O.J. buck since he most likely shot it, but probably could not be convicted of it in a court of law!

    Also, you just have to know how hard poor Will has hunted for the past few years – only to have the proverbial rug pulled out from under his big feet every time! The first time he I brought him up to hunt, his crappy bushmaster’s firing pin did not go when pulled the trigger on a nice buck. It of course ran right off when he slapped another round in trying to get it to work. (later at the range, that same gun went off when it was chambered! He sold it immediately – with a warning of course to fix it).

    His luck then got worse… The next season, he missed two great bucks when his detachable scope rings went bad. The screws literally stripped out of them from the 300 rem mag recoil and this let the zero wander all over the place. He fixed this problem just in time to then gut shoot a nice buck that we searched for with a trail dog to no avail.

    Finally Will did manage to shoot a good buck two years ago, so that kind of helped. However he immediately started last season off with a miss on two monsters at the Blount Place when his seat squeaked as he prepared for the shot! Then add a few more monsters that did not allow for a shot when they ran by him chasing does, and you have a series of very SAD hunting stories…

    Therefore we are all very happy that Will finally got his monster. He hunts harder than anyone I know (except for myself of course), so he deserves him. Congratulations Will!

    Will and his buck

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    Posted on 28th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Harvest Report, Cubbedge Hill Plantation | 2 Comments »

    Another Giant Buck Down!

    Webb Avenue BuckIt seems that we have found the owner of a HUGE buck (147 B&C) that was found this past spring on Cubbedge Hill… and you will not believe who it is!

    Please check back on this late-breaking story…

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    Posted on 26th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Harvest Report | 1 Comment »

    Happy Thanksgiving!

    Our House with new flag for Veteran’s Day

    I just wanted to wish everyone a Happy Thanksgiving, and to thank everybody for reading LowcountryHunting! Please take a moment today to stop and think about all of the things in your life that you have to be thankful for. Also please keep our soldiers in your prayers during this time as they are the ones who keep us free so that we may all celebrate (or not) those things that make our country great.

    One of the things that I am most thankful for is the fact that I live in a free country where I have the RIGHT (not privilege) to own/carry a gun as well as to use it to harvest the bounty of our great nation. I am also truly thankful that we have the RIGHT to free speech, and that I am able to utilize that on this site without fear of being rounded up and carted off by secret police. Of course I am really thankful for my great family and friends, especially my wonderful life with my beautiful wife and two healthy baby boys! Whenever I think that I have real problems, I just look at them to remind myself how blessed I am. And I can’t forget my MOM, the one person who has stood by me all of my life and sacrificed so much to help me become the person I am today…

    On this Thanksgiving, I also wanted to show off the flag that we permanently put up for Veteran’s Day to celebrate the sacrifices of the men and women of our armed forces. We were out of town that weekend, so I thought I would put it up today.

    Remember Freedom is NEVER Free!

    Happy Thanksgiving.

    Jeff

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    Posted on 22nd November 2007
    Under: Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

    Big Bucks Move During Midday, If They Move at All

    I just came in from loading up the corn on Aunt Mary’s tract over in Scotia, and I saw a GIANT buck run across the road at 11:30 on the dot. He was only 75 yards from one of their stands, and he was a true monster!

    Like I have been saying, if you want to kill a big buck right now, you have to be in the woods during the midday hours. The big ones just do not seem to be moving until at least 8:30am, and often much later. I believe that most of the mature bucks are tending does right now, and the only times they are moving are when they are chasing the doe they are with, or when they move around during the midday looking for a new doe.

    As for the weather, it is like summer here. And it is not supposed to get much better over the next week. About the only thing we can look forward to is a small cool down this Saturday. However the cold weather did not help us last weekend, so I am not counting on it now. I think everyone just needs to accept that the abundance of acorns still in the woods along with the heat is KILLING the deer movement… and is going to for the rest of the season!

    So just remember it is the RUT, and hunt hard especially during the midday, preferably as deep in the woods as you can get, and you might just luck up. If you are not willing to do that, then just go ahead and cut on the Outdoor Channel because that is as close to a big buck as you are going to get.

    And as if I needed more proof of what is going on with the deer movement, two friends of J.O. were down last weekend hunting on Palachacola, 6500 acres of prime WMA land. And one of them had this to say about his hunt:

    Jeff,

    Buddy and myself were down this weekend staying at the house hunting the Palachacola Drawed Hunt. Just dropping a line to let you know it was terrible. There were 21 hunters hunting 3 days, the result for the whole weekend equaled 7 does, 1 button buck, NO antlered bucks. The weather was bad Thursday night with 22mph wind but Friday and Saturday the weather was no excuse. I have read your notes and you are probably right, the bucks are in the woods with the does. I saw 3 bucks Friday night but they were small basket racks. Mr J.O. invited us back in December to help you guys take a few does out of the herd when yall start doing so. Have a good week and good luck

       Thanks, Bryan
    So there you go… Now suck it up, get up here and hunt like you mean it!

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    Posted on 21st November 2007
    Under: 2007 Hunting Report, Cubbedge Hill Plantation, Webb Center WMA | 1 Comment »

    New Series “Dwight Moore – The Shooter Remembered”

    Dwight Moore with his 1978 State Record BuckI am excited about starting a new series on LowcountryHunting. I will be routinely posting some great Southern Americana hunting photographs taken by my good friend Dwight Moore.

    Dwight was a true outdoorsman as well an avid photographer who captured daily life for 50 years in a small community that revolved (and still does) around hunting. He passed away this past March at the age of 74 and left behind an incredible body of work which he gave to me. I am just ecstatic at the thought of going through all of his old files to find images to share on this blog! I am also very excited about keeping his memory alive as well as showcasing some of the great work he did.

    The picture above is Dwight and his 1978 state record deer. That buck, which netted 147 B&C, now hangs in our local diner for all to see along with a small plaque remembering him. We also have a nice exhibit up at our local museum that displays many of his old cameras as well as 50 of his best images representing his 50 years of photography.

    Along with Dwight’s big buck picture, I am starting this series off with three that he took in the 60s. One shot shows a young man and his nice velvet buck sitting on a homemade dog box in his dad’s old pickup. The second shows a scene still playing out all over our great country right now – hunters gathered around a truck looking at the BIG buck in it. And the third image is of my Uncle Nick as a boy and his catch.

    The Shooter Remembered-kid with velvet buck

    I would also like to include this short biography that I wrote to go with Dwight’s exhibit so that you would know a little more about him:

    Dwight Moore (1932-2007) was born in Sylvania, GA and moved to Garnett, SC in the early 1950s. There he started on his way to photographing Hampton County and its citizens for the next 50 years. In that time, The Shooter as he was known, took almost a million pictures and captured many people and places that are no longer with us. These photos are just a few examples of his life’s work that included many of our local Watermelon Festival over the years.
    Dwight was a dedicated sportsman who spent his life hunting and fishing the woods and waters of this county’s outdoor paradise. In addition to being an avid squirrel hunter, Dwight was a veteran deer hunter. He used this experience as a guide for the Jones 601 hunt club in Brighton for many years. And it was there he killed his state record buck in 1978, along with over 300 other deer.
    Dwight was a life-long member of St. John’s Methodist Church in Garnett and the photographer for the entire Black Swamp Charge. He would usually attend several services every Sunday, and he never missed a funeral, christening or homecoming. Pictures of all of those, plus many family reunions, weddings, festivals and graduations, are now forever saved due to the “Shooters” determination to capture a slice of small town South Carolina.

    Thanks, Shooter!

    The Shooter Remembered-buck in truck

    I also want to point out that Dwight did what many of us try to do these days – introduce young people to the outdoors. And if you ever wonder what type of affect that can have on on someone, all you have to do is read the eulogy my Uncle Nick Hunt gave at his funeral. It is truly worth reading!

     

    There are some people in your lives that you simply cannot imagine “not being there” anymore. Dwight was one of them. He has “been there” since 1959. I was twelve years old (Dwight was 27) when his family, including his devoted sister, Jane, moved to Garnett. Garnett was a fairly lonely place for a young boy until Dwight arrived.
    In the late 1950’s and early 1960’s few people lived in Garnett. There was not much for young people to do. That remains true today! Unless you could entertain yourself in the outdoors by hunting, fishing, playing sports, or other games you would be fairly miserable. But I was a lucky young boy to have Dwight come to town. He was a veteran of the great outdoors and loved nearly all sports. He was a near constant companion in all of my early adventures and many ever since.
    Dwight took me on one of my earliest fishing trips to the Ramsey Fish Pond in Shirley in 1959. Dwight fished with a grown up spinning reel from the dam in the large pond. I fished with my cane pole alongside him but had no luck. I was overwhelmed by the size of the pond and bored by a lack of bites after an hour or two. I decided to go down the opposite side of the dam to the spill-well outflow from the pond. I fished on its edges by myself. Dwight may have caught a bass or two from the large pond but I caught a dozen of what I thought were the largest bream in the world. Rather than be angry he had been “out-fished” by a child, Dwight was happy for me. He took a picture of me that day as I held up my stringer of fish.
    We spent hundreds of hours hunting rabbits on beautiful early mornings, freezing mornings, or late afternoons. Rain or even snow rarely slowed us down. We hunted with our dogs in lots of different places in and around Garnett. We never killed many rabbits, but we had great fun in the woods with our dogs. His dog was “Rover” and mine was “Ace”. Ace is immortalized in a picture Dwight took of the Black Swamp Methodist Church. That picture is on display in St. John’s Methodist Church in Garnett today.
    Before moving to Garnett Dwight had lived a couple of years with his family on the Hamilton Ridge property deep in the Savannah River Swamp. As a young boy I was terrified of being lost in the swamp. Over time Dwight taught me by example to appreciate and respect it but not to fear it. Over the past half century Dwight and I spent thousands of hours in the swamp together. Our territory was mostly Belmont Plantation but sometime on Hamilton Ridge, Gravel Hill or other private lands.
    We paddled into Flat Lake on the Webb Center many times before dawn in pitch darkness. He always said we needed to catch the fish “while they were sleeping!” We drove the dirt roads around Garnett just for the pleasure of it. We might see alligators, hawks, owls, deer, wild boar, turkey or quail. Sometimes we saw a fox squirrel, a bluebird or nothing but the beautiful woods, swamps, and fields. Sometimes we would search for arrowheads and pottery shards. For years now I have taken dozens of people into the Webb Center. I now give tours of a place Dwight taught me to love. I took Dwight there last summer for old time’s sake.
    We did our share of squirrel and dove hunting as well. Dwight, Lee Barfield, Sidney Jones and I spent even more time fishing in tiny little creeks. We often fished on the railroad right of way behind the Black Swamp Church and Cemetery. No body of water, no matter how small was immune to our fishing attempts! Once we came back empty handed, but not for lack of fishing luck. We simply were not able to find the fishing lake in the swamp!
    I would be remiss if I didn’t mention Dwight’s love of deer hunting. He spent vast amounts of time on deer hunts but that was a sport we never shared. He hunted mostly with Major Jones, later Ms. Chris and/or Marty. Deer hunting and helping manage the deer hunts was one of the true loves of his life. Dwight killed an amazing number of deer in his lifetime. If I could not find Dwight in Garnett, which was unusual, I always knew where he was. He was either on a deer hunt or at Ms. Chris’ store in Brighton. His trophy deer of 142 Crockett points from 1978 (twelve point buck) is on display in the local restaurant in Estill. As sick as he was this last year Dwight hounded Jeff and me until we got this done for him!
    In the 1960’s when we weren’t fishing or hunting we spent time in the “big store”, the huge two story store built in 1894 but now long gone. We heard many tall tales and plain lies around the old pot bellied stove on winter days. We spent time with Ms. Lucille Nix, station master, at the old Garnett Depot. Our “field of dreams” was next to my home and across from the big store. It was the site of hundreds of pick up baseball or basketball games in its season. Dwight worked tirelessly to keep our field in good order for the “Garnett Yankees”. He organized, maintained and stored our baseball gloves and bats. He even maintained statistics of our batting averages, number of homeruns, etc.
    Dwight gladly helped with whatever chores I had. If I needed help, Dwight was always there. We delivered groceries far out into the countryside from the store in the 1960’s by pickup truck. During the summers of 1964/68 we loaded tons of estate sale furniture into my father’s big International Box Delivery truck. Then we drove for hours in the bumpy, hot, muggy truck at 45 miles per hour up and down US Highway 17 or some other rural roads in Georgia. One week we made five roundtrips between Macon and Garnett, loading and unloading furniture at each end! This was before most of the interstate highways.
    One of Dwight’s other “jobs” was to help Ms. Jones’ with the trot lines for shad and catfish she ran in the Savannah River. He often drove the fish to market in Savannah. In his spare time he cut grass for nearly everyone and many churches over the years. Later in his life Dwight devoted much of his leisure time to holding up the front wall of J.C. Housey’s store in downtown Garnett. In fact there is a recent history of Garnett that Dwight posted on the walls inside J.C.’s store from his pictures and clippings from The Guardian and other newspapers.
    Dwight had a number of eccentricities. Over the years Dwight had a variety of cats upon which he doted. Nearly all of them were named Susie”, whether female or not! He did his best to never eat anything “green”; not even pistachio ice cream served at a birthday party he attended. When we were painting the bedrooms in our house in Garnett we painted one of the bedrooms pink. Unsolicited, Dwight observed that he would never paint a room pink! At times Dwight would use the front porch of our home in Garnett for a “deer stand”. He kept a red folding chair and a heavy coat in his “stand”. One weekend morning we were startled awake by the discharge of a 12 gauge shotgun from our front porch! On Sundays Dwight would often attend multiple church services & picnics to make sure he ate well!
    Dwight was a man of few words; but his ever willing spirit combined with his love of nature and the outdoors spoke volumes. We rarely had long conversations yet we communicated in our own way. At times we caught a large number of fish. Most often we did not, but we always enjoyed each other’s company. No matter where we went or what we did Dwight had his ever present camera or cameras! Do you folks realize that Dwight took thousands if not over a million pictures during his fifty year career as The Shooter??
    Dwight literally took hundreds of pictures of me and many others. Often he didn’t even know the people he photographed. He freely shared the pictures with me and the other subjects of his camera. He was so proud whenever one of his pictures appeared in The Hampton County Guardian! When I graduated from Estill High School in 1965 he gave me a graduation gift. It is a photo album with dozens of pictures of me, my family, friends and our hundreds of adventures together over the first six years we knew each other.
    This is no ordinary photo album. I brought this album with me today for those of you who may wish to see it. Dwight purchased this album and had my name inscribed on its cover. He devoted hours into painstakingly arranging and labeling each photograph with names and dates as he secured them into the album. They are assembled in more or less chronological order. These pictures span from when we first met until I was a high school senior. The album includes many long gone adventures, faces and places but Dwight preserved it all for me.
    Dwight’s remains will be in Sylvania with his mother and father, but his spirit will always be here. Local sporting events, family reunions, and Watermelon Festival parades will never be the same without Dwight. I would like to close by quoting just a few lines from one of my favorite songs. It is from the 1960’s during my heyday with Dwight. The song is “Puff the Magic Dragon” by Peter, Paul & Mary. Its symbolism has often been debated but I choose to think it was just about a young boy growing up.
    “A dragon lives forever, but not so little boys painted wings and giant’s rings make way for other toys. One grey night it happened Jackie Paper came no more and Puff that Mighty Dragon, he ceased his fearless roar.
    His head was bent in sorrow, green scales fell like rain, Puff no longer went to play along the cherry lane. Without his life-long friend, Puff could not be brave so Puff that Mighty Dragon sadly slipped into his cave.”

    Uncle Nick

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    Posted on 19th November 2007
    Under: Hunting stories, Photographs from The Shooter | 10 Comments »

    Cold Does Not Help Deer Movement

    mdgc1102web.jpgmdgc0995web.jpg

    The weekend hunt did not produce any big bucks or big buck sightings. Hell, it only produced a couple of deer sightings period. The big bucks seem to be hunkered down with the does, and only the small ones are moving. I saw three spikes Saturday morning, and C.J. passed on the 6 point in the first picture over at the Blount Place. He also saw a 6 point standing in the new road when he went to pick his dad up at 10 am this morning.

    And that fits the pattern I have seen lately. Many of the bucks I have spotted have been later in to the morning, and while they are not monsters, these two bucks pictured show that. Like I said, the big 6 point was on the camera at the Blount Place several days in a row at various times during the day. And the smaller 6 point was in the bay on Cubbedge Hill every day at different times during the daylight. Of course I also did not shoot my buck last week until close to 9am.

    CH button buck mounting doeSo to help everyone get through the tough times, I thought that I would post a picture of a button buck trying to mount a doe – demonstrating how strong the urge to breed is for a whitetail. Combine that with midday movement (when most of our hunters are long gone) – and that shows why no matter how hot it is, how slow the deer movement, how tired you are – during the rut, you should be here sitting in a stand waiting on a monster!We also finally have proof that we occasionally have hogs on the Blount Place. I knew I saw their prints every once in a while, and Chip and I definitely heard one squeal two weeks ago, so it is no surprise. But it is nice to prove it…

    Blount Place Hogs

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    Posted on 18th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Hunting Report, Cubbedge Hill Plantation, Trailcam pictures | 2 Comments »

    Bomb Plant Buck

    Bomb plant buckFor those of you that do not know, the bomb plant (also known as the Savannah River Site or SRS) turns out some monsters every year during their unique draw dog hunts. Located on 189,000 acres, the cold war nuclear processing facility holds some unbelievable bucks on their mostly unhunted land. However several times a year, 100 hunters are drawn to come in and either be a stander, or if you have deer dogs, a driver.

    During the hunts, standers are placed about 500 yards apart on logging roads in order to surround a block. The drivers then drop the dogs in to the blocks and run everything out… and I mean everything. The one time I hunted there, I saw deer, turkeys and even squirrels scrambling to make an escape! It is a very exciting hunt, and lots of deer of all age classes and both sexes are taken since it is a management tool to reduce the number of car collisions in the facility as well as preserve the biodiversity of the forest.

    My friend Brian has been drawn many times, and he just sent me this email about their last hunt:

    Jeff,

    I had a hunt today on the Bomb Plant for the first time this year.  It was the best hunt I have seen in about 10 years. There were so many huge Bucks killed.  Here is a picture I took of a 17 Pt. It looked like it had about a 24″ spread with about a 10 inch kicker coming straight out from the back of the main beam.  Man it was a crazy morning.

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    Posted on 16th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Harvest Report | 2 Comments »

    Cold Front Should Keep Bucks Moving

    Big Oak 9 pointBig Oak Buck

    Big Oak buck ejaculatesBig Oak big buck, small rackBig Oak 5 point

    While it had warmed up for the last few days, a big cold front is rolling in tomorrow. And that should put the bucks back on their feet for the weekend’s hunt. We should also have another full house, so hopefully we can kill one of the nice deer caught on the camera at the Big Oak over the last week.

    Check out the heavy 9 point working the scrape by the corn in the first picture. In the second, a good buck shows off his broken tine due to fighting for his place in the pecking order. The third is a very rare picture – it captured a middle aged buck ejaculating after working the scrape! The fourth picture is of a HUGE buck with a mediocre rack at the scrape. That thing looks like a cow, and has to be at least 3.5 years old (if not older), but just does not have a very good set of horns (very similar to the 5 point I shot a few weeks ago). And the fifth image is just a cool looking 2.5 year old 3 point working the licking branch.

    I just thought these were all great shots, and all truly show off how different a buck’s rack can look on deer in the same age classes.

    I also thought I would have a report from this morning’s hunt, but Will obviously did not go due to the rain since I still see his car out by his trailer. And we did hunt last night, but did not see ANYTHING in the 80 degree weather.  So check back in the morning for a fresh hunting report…

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    Posted on 15th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Hunting Report, Cubbedge Hill Plantation, Trailcam pictures | 2 Comments »

    Veteran’s Day Weekend Report

    No big bucks were killed this past weekend, but several good ones were seen and one was missed!

    After a big “Day out with Thomas” on Sunday, I just had to call C.J. to find out what went on without me. He said that he had missed a good buck from #6 at the Blount Place Saturday night, and that Richard had seen a good one chasing does at Cubbedge Hill but that he would not stop for a shot… Ugh! I was sure hoping that they would have put down a good buck or two while I was gone, but that is hunting.

    Another cold snap is coming in this weekend, so it should help keep the bucks moving. And the two nights of frost last week should also help spur some movement since the deer will have to move more now that all of the natural browse is dead. I just hope they run out of acorns soon too! That is what has really hurt us, and everyone else too. There has just been so much food down in the woods that the does have not had to come out for corn, so the bucks haven’t had to follow them out either…

    Please check back since I should have daily reports up for the rest of the week. Will is coming tomorrow, and we are going to hunt hard until he kills something BIG. And a few more members should be joining us by Friday, so hopefully we will have new monster down soon, and we can put his pictures up!

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    Posted on 13th November 2007
    Under: 2007 Hunting Report, Cubbedge Hill Plantation | 1 Comment »