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natureboyfloyd

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About natureboyfloyd

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    Southern AZ

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  1. natureboyfloyd

    Spot/Stalk

    I am a recurve and homemade bow shooter, and I as a result need to get close. ( i have missed six times this year, and I can tell you that I know my limitations again) Friends tell me I get more opportunities than most get in a life time; in three half years, two small deer, by still-hunting. Weak credentials, I admit... Yet, IMHO, Even at twenty five-twenty-fifteen yards, a deer can move fast enough to not be there when the arrow arrives (for me 150 fps...basically move your hand as you say "one mississi..." and see how far your hand can be from the start point). Even with a compound, think about where you can draw unseen. Yesterday, the doe saw me draw at 23 yards, and downhill from there. However, I had spotted this guy I have been after for over a year, and I kept moving from "window of opportunity" to another place where I could draw and shoot. What gave the chance was alot of the above advice: check the wind( constantly), try hunting crosswind, sound natural ( three steps at most, and breaking a twig means chilling a while), and ALWAYS LOOK OVER THE GRASS OR THE SMALL KNOLL AS YOU GO UP. You may be closer than you think to deer, just never seeing them leave. The two deer I killed where from following the capitalized advice. I would have killed yesterday, again ("woe, despair, and agony on me"), but I simply could not believe the deer and doe where there. They both were, along with a big one I have pursued two plus years now. Possible EXCUSE: My mind was on a friend's cancer, but I botched it regardless. Of all the advice I read online, the best came from a man who hunted with African bushman: never peer over bushes, peer through, run when needed, crawl if needed, and forget watches.
  2. natureboyfloyd

    Disappointing Hunting

    Guy I was with passed on a smaller bull, at 40 yds, and we soon enough (two + hours) found the females we assumed were with the larger bull we glassed earlier. We made ourselves comfortable, figuring the bull would come down with the cows in a few hours. However, a truck must have gone around a barrier, and pushed at least 45 elk towards us. They passed within 75-100 yards, but the speed of thier escape, and the literal shoulder- to-shoulder grouping of the thundering herd prohibited an ethical shot. Of course we followed on the tracks, but the same truck came up again: "See anything?" Healthy guys, just driving around. This occured in 3C, and given the criss-crossed-with-roads nature of the unit, anyone cutting around barriers is a bit weak.
  3. natureboyfloyd

    Need some Advice

    For what it is worth, be ready at all times. Repeat, at all times. I am hunting with a friend, he has the bow, and I am tagless, carrying the big binos and the pack to haul out the venison. This weekend, we feel crowded on a high hill, and are ready to get off said hill (another story), and my friend puts his bow in the sling, and is reattaching the trigger. A guy is had walked right between us, to glass, managed to get to notch one by signaling us a buck we'd been off and on was basically right there. coming up quick. The buck was up in our laps fast...and my friend could not get the sling off in time... the mule deer walked 40 yards by us, by the rest of others, who missed. Had that trigger been on, and the sling off? (Had I had my recurve and tag and arrow....?) Floyd (Oh, and for me, sometimes I listen to my wife. Sounds like you guys have a god team.)
  4. natureboyfloyd

    tag soup

    Talltines, you were only taking a trophy, right? With the recurve, that is tough I hear. I tagged out a few days ago, a spike with 44# recurve and homemade arrow. (after considerable good luck and some skill placing me in the 20 yd zone of the bigger ones earlier, and missing once I went after this guy and his friends in the steep stuff.) Had I held out for the big ones, or made time to get back there, I might be waking early to hunt,not scout for mulies. Way to hold to your goal. I admire that. Floyd
  5. natureboyfloyd

    Got my first buck.

    good job on the bolt action, working it fast and picking up the buck again.
  6. natureboyfloyd

    Unit 33 Monster Buck

    I read the heading, went into the living room and told the Minister of Finances "I think someone may have got The Bruiser or Jed." The only other time I was nailed so was a heading on Trad Gang, something about Chicks shooting archery in too small bikini's.
  7. natureboyfloyd

    A week from now...

    Seems that when you find the water, you'll be on the deer. My two cents is to pack in the following categories: food, water, shelter, and tools. Water includes filter, iodine, rope for lowering a canteen into a hard to reach crevise. Shelter is bivy, shirt, socks, etc... For me, tools include spare bow string (mice ate part way into one, when I left it out last year around a Dec. fire as I slept. My compound buddie noticed into a stalk, and watched as I slipped off one and replaced it with another, already with nocking point.Simple tool-the bow). Spare flints and frizzen for you? You get the idea. Relax. We all see game when unpressured. At least I move more slowly, sensing more. Definitely post pics and a story. Sounds like a solid great time.
  8. natureboyfloyd

    I quit

    Yesterday, oh yesterday, on stalk #4 on my "trophy", one 4x4 sprinted to the other side, and saw me move one step...and you know the rest. Today, I "clocked out" for maybe 20 seconds....deer move out, and when they appear, no spike ( but I pass on thems anyhow). Point is this: I see more coyotes, lions, foxes, female mulies about to walk on me, fawns purposely bumping into mamma, crazy insects to ever give up this craziness called bow hunting. I use a recurve, so my hunt sort of starts where a compound (if you canshoot) ends. A madness all its own, the trad archery.I own my failed ambushes and stalks. Sure the wind moved once,like a little devil on my back (stalk # 3), but the rest are pilot errors. But, and a big but, I am learning one heck of alot, and when it happens, aka you connect, you'll love it. Like some one said, "Arizona offers a lot of hunting opportunities." The success rate for archery in Missouri is quite high; not so much here as evident by the paucity of posts --go girls. (You'll be there in December) Floyd, out I am ready to make blinds...
  9. natureboyfloyd

    30B

    Oh, and since this is Mule Deer, a rancher in that unit along the river said that, yes, mulies are to be seen in the river area. good luck
  10. natureboyfloyd

    30B

    In 2008, I killed my first deer along the San Pedro. I scouted, and hunted, the north part of the Dragoons...remember, my first year out, for what it is worth. I saw no bucks....but took a day off work, and killed a meaty spike in the bosque along the San Pedro, by 7:45 or so. 51 yds for the shot, paced out, along the river bank, as it is thick in areas. Next year, my wife and I are walking around, and she sees three bucks in the area where I would park my rig, so that is my two cents. If Aug is unsuccessful for bow, I may pick a left over WT tag, and I will hunt the bosque along the river, and the close hills.
  11. natureboyfloyd

    Hunting Couse on state land

    My own stupid human trick related to this thread... I got a little nervous as well, and I did a great deal of scouting in the Little Tortolitas. Found mule deer, patterned and started on a blind. Of course, this unit 37A is closed to bow, but I somehow fixated on 37B as the unit closed for summer bow. Getting older... A friend reminded me, after I bragged about learnng about mulies w/in 10 yds of the blind,, one big coyote and a bobcat at 8feet twice. My wife came out and I told her we would see animals, and that bobcat dod not dissapoint. Gotta read that reg. book a little more often. Its all good?!?
  12. natureboyfloyd

    December archery success

    A three point and decent, very aware, forkie at a spring in a copse of oaks below some saguaros and the all important cholla, and despite four opportunities to w/in 20 yards, I never got a shot. Similar stories: sparring, a little chasing, etc... To point out the obvious: at close range, these deer do not miss a thing.
  13. natureboyfloyd

    NOV 2010 Buck

    Great looking rifle on a solid hunt. Wood stocks still just look right.
  14. As bowhunting is intense, maybe a lessons learned for all us 99% of unsuccesful Fall hunters might help. I'll go first... First, jumping and arrow flight: As indicated earlier, I learned about the Coue's rapid response to sound from my recurve. Going back to the area, I glassed and stalked the deer again, and a swirling wind ended 4 plus hours of nitty gritty low crawling and attempting to circle in the cliffs. 27 yards, and poof! He seems quite fine, enough to bounds out of sight with friend over one of those low angled cliffs. I'll be back. I shot last evening, at 23 yrds, and believe the arrow flight allows enough time to bolt. I'll tape to the quiver "no release when busted" until it is burnt in my head. Nonetheless, I am thinking about shooting wood or aluminum, with 125 gr, for better penetration. Thus far, carbon with 100 gr Magnus Stinger Buzzcut...hard to sharpen. Another lesson: A doe kept going to a cliff area, and I thought the large puma hauled my three pointer there, but it was the fawn. At any rate, the hike up the cliff gave me a northward look from high at my area, and a large cedar (you know the type) just seemed right. That is where my prey lay. A new vantage. Never considered that slope before... It is amazing how many dead deer lay about in nooks, ledges, from this puma. Congratulations to all successful hunters. A buddy of mine, very successful, commented on the difficult nature of coues compared to Midwestern Timber deer. I concur fully.
  15. natureboyfloyd

    Two days left

    CMC, thanks for the reply. Reading my post this morning, I see I mislead about the leading. I "lead" the deer even though he was stationary, as I thought he'd jump the string. He came out and then stopped. Yes, I think looking this evening is a good idea. Thanks again.
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