Big Buck 411 Blog


BB411 Blog

NO Image:

The Buck That Wasn’t

The Buck That Wasn’t

By Mike Handley

When Doug Laird of Russellville, Missouri, talks about the deer he shot in 2014, pronouns appear to jump the tracks. "A big buck came through at 9 a.m., about an hour before I normally leave the woods," he says. "It had a small doe with it, and an 8-pointer was chasing her. The 8-pointer stopped broadside, right in a clearing. I put the crosshairs ... READ MORE

Have Time, Will Look

Have Time, Will Look

By Mike Handley

Cows on the lam lead Nicholas Johnson of Coleman, Oklahoma, to the bull of the woods back in 2012. Nick hadn't planned to hunt the opening day of rifle season, a Saturday, because he'd scheduled the next nine days off from the casino where he works. But the 34-year-old rose early that morning anyway. "That Friday night, Nov. 16, a neighbor called ... READ MORE

Illinois ‘Elk’

Illinois ‘Elk’

By Mike Handley

Had Timothy Nichols not seen the No. 1 buck on his wish list, not to mention other bucks and a hot doe they all very much wanted, he might have gone home soon after the clouds broke on Nov. 11, 2014. But the deer was close and not likely to leave without its girlfriend, so the bowhunter from Glen Ellyn, Illinois, sent his father, Robert, a one-word... READ MORE

The Turtle and the Unsmelling Buck

The Turtle and the Unsmelling Buck

By Mike Handley

Unless they enjoy being human metronomes, deer hunters in Nebraska and Kansas - the two windiest states in the U.S. - do not scale skinny trees. Nor do they sit in elevated blinds or tripods, if the legs aren't sunken or staked into the ground. The wind must be relatively tame for Lonnie Hermann of McLouth, Kansas, to channel his inner squirrel. Th... READ MORE

Good Things Come

Good Things Come

By Mike Handley

Ryan Slopko almost missed out on his 15 minutes of fame in 2014. If he hadn't passed up an 8-pointer on Oct. 22 that year, the Ohio teenager would never have seen the much larger whitetail in its wake. Ryan and his stepbrother, Danny, were bowhunting about 200 yards apart on their grandmother's Ross County farm that afternoon. Both were hoping for ... READ MORE

Thanks, Boss

Thanks, Boss

By Mike Handley

After seeing a humongous buck while glassing a soybean field in July, Justin Mooney secured permission from his boss, who owns the adjacent 20-acre block, to hunt it. He wasted no time in creating a mineral lick, strapping a trail camera to a nearby tree and hanging a stand. When he returned to check the camera three weeks later, it held 967 photog... READ MORE

What a Difference a Year Can Make

What a Difference a Year Can Make

By Mike Handley

Fifty-four days after an open-mouthed Greg Tomlinson gawked at a buck his trail camera had photographed, he was aloft and testing his safety harness, squatting and leaning in order to find open air between his broadhead and the deer's vitals. The veteran bowhunter pulled the photo on Sept. 21. Familiar with the 200-acre tract he'd hunted for 15 sea... READ MORE

Public Land via Boat

Public Land via Boat

By Mike Handley

With a precious couple of inches separating the gunwales from the water, Troy Thomas was thinking he needed a bigger boat. That his buddies Matt Medley and Gerald McCumber had chosen to blaze a trail back to the truck rather than ride with Troy and his dead buck probably saved them all a drenching. If Troy had been using an outboard rather than a t... READ MORE

Doghouse Deer

Doghouse Deer

By Mike Handley

Josh Baslee can tell you what the inside of a doghouse is like, and not because he's a nuisance animal control expert. The 39-year-old from Osawatomie, Kan., has been living in one for months, ducking the nails in the roof, ever since he tagged the buck his wife, Sandy, wanted to shoot. "I don't know if my first name is Josh anymore," he said, not ... READ MORE

By Any Other Name

By Any Other Name

By Mike Handley

It isn't uncommon for enormous bucks to gain nicknames, whether bestowed before or after they're dead. But they're usually named for a distinguishing characteristic of antler, some other physical trait, the person who shot them, or the land they once roamed. Few hunters haven't heard of the Hole in the Horn Buck, Ol' Mossy Horns, the Milo Hanson Bu... READ MORE

Virginia’s No. 2 Rifle Buck

Virginia’s No. 2 Rifle Buck

By Mike Handley

Austin Sturgill and his family were certain the giant whitetail he shot on Thanksgiving morning - his second buck for 2011 - was the one that had set tongues wagging for weeks in that corner of Wise County, Virginia. "He got a big 10-pointer, the biggest one ever killed in the family to that date," said his father, Jimmy. "We were very happy and pr... READ MORE

Samaritan Continues to Reap Rewards

Samaritan Continues to Reap Rewards

By Mike Handley

While hunting a decade ago, Brad Heuvelmann of Burlington, Iowa, ran into an older gentleman dragging a trophy buck over fresh snow. The man had shot the deer early that morning and had been struggling to get it to his truck. It was about lunchtime, and the man was only halfway to his vehicle. "I was happy to give him a hand, just for the opportuni... READ MORE

Grocery Shopping

Grocery Shopping

By Mike Handley

When Glenda Holmes climbed into a 20-foot-high tripod before dawn on Dec. 13, 2013, she had on so many clothes that she could barely lift her arms and legs high enough to scale the rungs. A friend had given the woman from Manhattan, Kansas, permission to hunt from the deer stand in Riley County, and Glenda wasn't going to let the opportunity slide ... READ MORE

Unspeakably Big?

Unspeakably Big?

By Mike Handley

Louis Locke says he was on Cloud Nine after he shot a buck with a tremendous rack in November 2014. But he might've been even more excited than he admitted, according to his wife. "When he called, I couldn't understand a word he was saying," Karmen Locke said, adding that her husband was dropping consonants as if he were reciting the list of Hawaii... READ MORE

Bullet-worthy

Bullet-worthy

By Mike Handley

Perry Richardson doesn't spend a lot on broadheads or bullets. He could easily punch his Kentucky buck tag every season, since the Meade County farm he hunts is crawling with whitetails. But the 29-year-old generally holds out for really good ones. Perry says being picky means he might go two or three seasons between deer, though that wasn't the ca... READ MORE

Copyright 2024 by Buckmasters, Ltd.

Copyright 2020 by Buckmasters, Ltd