starting turning around, pivoting on one knee and they never saw me. I started to shoot a few times but I was in such an awkward postion, I couldn’t get the crosshairs steady on the biggest doe. Finally I adjusted my knee and got a little better rest going on. KA-BOOOM! I saw smoke first then soy beans and dirt fly… I missed! The 2 biggest does just walked over to the edge of the field and got behind some cover. Not real spooked but knew they didn’t want to stay in the open field until they figured out what just happened. As I pouted I noticed the other smaller does did’t move. They kept looking in the opposite direction thinking the loud noise came from there. “No way… are they going to let me re-load this thing?” I started to ease another load into my muzzleloader, slipped a cap in place and shouldered the ‘ol smokepole once again. At this point I was standing and had my stance like I like it. Sure enough the does started eating soy beans again! I steadied the crosshairs on the doe that was broadside… KA-BOOOOM! Never saw where she went because as the smoke cleared, so did the deer. I heard her hit the soybeans and plow threw them though. I knew I had made a good shot on her but I walked to the truck to get another load for my fire stick and get a good flashlight.
I walked to where I marked 2 points where the deer were at the time I shot. No blood. Not a drop. I walked up and down the rows of soybean and nothing. I knew I hit her so I wasn’t planning on giving up anytime soon. I walked into the old over grown CRP field and followed a few trails for 20-30 yards each looking for blood or signs of crashing. Nothing. I kept thinking to myself “I know I hit that deer good.” I kept at it. No blood, no signs of the deer crashing. This is nuts! Finally after checking 30-40 yards down each trail exiting the field I found her! Perfect shot. Guess she jumped and lunged forward a couple times, she didn’t drop a single spec of blood until I was on top of her.
This by no means is a huge deer, not the matriarch doe I attempted to shoot first but it was a great hunt! I guess I can put this in the category of a semi-stalk hunt. I knew I would have a chance hunting that soybean field but never would have thought I would get a chance at one just sitting on my knees at the edge of the field. Nevermind the fact that I was able to re-load my muzzleloader and shoot again! This was a fun hunt. I held that smile for quite some time last night…
Have a success story you’d like to share? Email your story and pictures to john@704outdoors.com.


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