Big Buck 411 Blog

‘Warm Hollow Buck’

‘Warm Hollow Buck’

By Mike Handley | October 15, 2014

When the smoke cleared and the buck was no longer in the food plot, Roger Poe began shaking. The hunter from Mt. Olivet, Ky., also imagined the worst: that he must've pulled the shot and missed, or else hit the deer too high.

It's always disconcerting when a deer doesn't drop, isn't it? After all, that's why a lot of hunters simply can't manage follow-up shots - though such a thing is almost impossible when one is shooting a smokepole.

R.J.'s worries, however, were unfounded.

He was hunting opening weekend of the Bluegrass State's 2013 muzzleloader season, so eager to get a crack at the magnificent buck his trail camera had photographed six days in a row that he'd arranged to burn his only vacation day the following Monday.

He'd been retrieving photos of the animal since 201o. He'd watched it grow from a decent 9-pointer into something far bigger. And, best of all, he thought he'd nailed the giant's routine.

The camera indicated that the buck was apt to pass through what R.J. calls a "warm hollow," a place with a spring that never freezes, where the very air seems warmer the minute one enters. He has a 10-foot-high, double ladder stand overlooking a small food plot there, and that's where he hunted Saturday (to no avail) and Sunday afternoon, Dec. 15.

It was a little later than usual when he climbed the ladder and settled in around 3:00. Not quite two hours later, the buck with the familiar rack wafted out of some nearby cedars and came onto the plot.

R.J. had to throw out some soft grunts - the second series while at least one doe was nervously seeking out the source - in order to make the deer turn enough for a clear shot.

"After grunting the second time, I immediately put the crosshairs on the buck," he said. "When it turned, I slowly squeezed the trigger."

All the deer scattered afterward, including the buck. It managed to go 100 yards before giving up the ghost.

With a BTR composite score of 200 3/8 inches, R.J.'s buck is No. 6 among Irregulars felled by a smokepole in Kentucky. It's also the largest ever recorded from Robertson County. Dale Weddle's story about the hunt will appear in a future issue of Rack magazine.

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