I shot the buck several times with a camera and
left the crossbow beside me.
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My old “Fred
Bear” compound bow must be 30 years old. It has put many pounds of venison on
the table here on Lightnin’ Ridge, but due to something called a frozen
shoulder I cannot pull the thing back as easily as I once did. So I bought a
crossbow at the local Walmart sporting goods counter for about 300 dollars,
more than I ever paid for a shotgun or rifle! Some are five times that.
You do not
have to practice much with a crossbow. It has sights that can easily be
adjusted and it shoots a short arrow with tremendous power. I sat in my
tree-stand the other day enjoying the slow coming of fall and I must have
watched two small, young deer feed around me for twenty or thirty minutes
before I saw a buck coming through the woods quite a distance away.
He was just a fork-horn, just what I want for my
freezer. He came in grunting, and paid particular interest in one of the
youngsters only about thirty yards from me. When she jumped away, he
followed, and with my sights on him I had a broadside shot at 40 yards. I
wouldn’t have taken the shot with my old bow, but I squeezed the trigger on the
new crossbow and the buck leaped forward behind the fleeing yearlings. I
figured I got him, but I didn’t know until I heard him fall back in the woods a
ways. I had centered his heart, and the arrow went through him. He
was dead in only seconds.
It was too
warm to let him hang, but I skinned him and quartered him quickly, and had all
the meat soaking in cold water overnight to remove blood. The next day I got
the best loin steaks and ham steaks in the freezer quickly, and cut a good
quantity of stew meat and hamburger meat off the ribs, neck and
shoulders.Much of that hamburger meat will be ground up and mixed with
ground pork to make jerky. There are times when I am eating that jerky
that I wonder why I do anything else with venison. Gee whiz it is good!!
I intend to
kill two more deer this fall and two only. They will not be ‘trophies’. That
will give us plenty of venison in the freezer, lots of jerky, summer sausage
and steak. No meat processors will get any of it, I will do it all myself.
If you aren’t doing the same, you are missing something about deer hunting.
Before the
deer season, this advice for anyone who kills a really big buck… when you call
it in, if you answer the question the MDC asks about number of points and
diameter of the antler, you might well be targeted by agents. They want
them, and they get them! I will have a story in my next issue of
Lightnin’ Ridge Outdoor Journal about the confiscation of big buck antlers by
agents. One agent has a shed full of valuable confiscated antlers he
calls his “retirement fund.”
Those antlers
have a great deal of monetary value, and believe me, none are destroyed as
hunters are told. When they ask about the size of your antlers, tell them they
are only average. Keep it off face book and the computer and the local
newspaper. Otherwise, your deer head may be confiscated for some ridiculous,
made up offense. More about this next week.
I hope all
you Democrats and Republicans will forgive me, but it is my opinion that in
Missouri, It seems that those who seek public office from either side are a
sorry lot. I may be alone in this, but I wonder why decent, average
men no longer want to run for public office. But I do not blame
them. It seems that such offices, whether state or local, are only
available to those who crave and have power or money or both. They exist for
themselves and their enrichment.
Men like Lincoln
and Roosevelt, didn’t do that. There is no one like them left amongst us.
Down to earth, common sense people without great bank accounts aren’t about to
jump into a sewer. Such men still believe that someday all men must stand
before God and answer for what they have done and how they have used their
lives. As for President, we need to forget voting altogether and turn
that decision over to the voters of California and New York, with help from
ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN. The electoral college will always decide that and
our votes mean nothing.
Here in the
Ozarks, we are going to have to live with what those folks want. And they want
nothing to do with the principles our nation was founded on. Where we are
as a nation is easy to see when you acknowledge that this paragraph cannot be
printed in many of the larger newspapers that use my column, because it will
offend the political crowd, and does not go along with the new news media.
But deep in
the woods, there is a refuge from all that. There our Creator still can be seen
and felt, and his voice is strong if you will listen. I am not sure most men
today can say that if they are living according to the dictates of Wall Street.
I am amused
by the arguments over ‘global warming’. Maybe the name should be changed
to “man-made, slow moving, natural disaster”. But it is real, whatever
you want to call it, and there is not a chance of ever reversing it. It
is just too late. Arguing about it does little good… what is coming is coming
and it is too late to stop it. The problem is, there are too many humans
beings on a planet which is always going to be the same size.
There are too
many of us—and no one wants to acknowledge it. There is no answer to those
increasing numbers when you have a defined space for growing populations of
men, and limited space for the declining and degraded soil, water, timber and
clean air to make those numbers happy in a modern world.
I have
studied nature too long to believe that if indeed this earth survives and
continues to spin perfectly around the sun, that the increase of concrete and
pavement will not come to a screeching halt someday. Most of us
old-fashioned Ozarkians believe that someday a disaster like we have never
dreamed of will take the great majority of populations from the earth in all
corners. We don’t worry because we figure we will all be gone by then.
I am not so
sure that day is very far away… I know something awful is coming but I don’t
know what. I can feel it when I am in the woods or on the river. But it is best
to just leave it all in the hands of God and live out the remainder of my years
enjoying what he has created. I am grateful to be so far from the herds
of people who seem trapped, good people who are subjected to the corruption of
modern day government on all levels.
The best of
life is making our existence here on earth beneficial to those few people we
can reach and help. “The least of these” as Jesus called them. In doing
that here in the goodness of the Ozarks, we just have to ignore what we see
today in our elected leaders, in our judges, in our justice system. Sitting in
the woods watching a small stream trickle by and listening to the kingfishers
and pileated woodpeckers as leaves fall and squirrels forage for acorns, it is
much easier to do that. When you mix with that giant herd of humanity
arguing about global warming, it isn’t so easy. I pity those who have no
escape from that.
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