Re: Your first big game animal
Great thread bc7.
I hunted a bit as a kid, but didn’t get into big game until about 9 or 10 years ago. I was living in Whistler and hunted the Pemberton and Squamish areas a bit. Then we moved to Whiterock and I had to travel. Did a couple of Okanagan and Kootenay trips for birds with the dogs, but didn’t see any legal bucks.
Then I planned a water access hunt up the coast for myself and my “son”. We put in a TON of kms of hiking (our biggest day was 17 km) in the steep coastal forest, and finally on the last day before our pick up, we separated and he shot 2 blacktails right at sunset. It was a crazy night packing two deer back to our camp and didn’t get back until midnight. At least our trip was successful, but I didn’t get to cut my own tag yet.
The next year, we decided to go and explore Okanagan Mtn Park and see if we could find a new “spot”. We saw lots of deer, and tracked a moose that went past while we were sitting on a rub zone, but nothing legal was spotted. We spent a week there and then had to get back to work. We were in a good zone though, so plans were made to go back for the rut.
Fast forward a few weeks and just as we were finalizing our plans, the big floods came and all access to the interior was cut off. What to do? Well, I knew of a great spot that reliably held deer near Pemberton, so I planned an afternoon rip up there. The wife dropped me off on the side of the highway and I started hiking in while she took our bird dogs for a rip in the woods at another spot down the road. I knew where I wanted to be from years past, and on my walk in saw some recent sign, so was optimistic. I crossed the slash into the old growth where there was a main trail and did a quick scout. It was getting towards “deer o’clock” so I dropped my pack and set up where I could see the slash as well as the game trail. Pulled out the thermos and poured a cup of tea. I don’t think I’d even had a sip before I saw movement crossing the slash towards the trail in the trees. Binos up and damn, it was a pair of bucks! I left everything but my Marlin 336 and sprinted as far as I dared along the game trail looking for a spot to intercept them. After waiting a few minutes, they didn’t come in to the trail, so I decided to sneak out through the tight noisy trees to the edge of the slash and see if they were still out there. I couldn’t see them, but there was a gully I couldn’t see into, so snuck back in to the trail, ran up to the crest of the gully and snuck back out to the slash. I looked in, and no deer. Damn. They must have come in to the trail and gone south away from me, instead of coming north towards me and the river like they typically do. I was disappointed in my luck, as I seem to never get a break. For some reason, instead of just turning back in to the forest, I do a long turn back towards where I had just looked out 50 yards to the north. Shit! Two bucks standing there looking at me about 20 yards away! They must have come out of the gully towards where I had been standing when I moved back in and went the 50 yards further to see into the gully. The closest one was a spike and was partially blocking the bigger 2x2 behind. I didn’t care about the rack, and when the spider looked away for a second I raised the .30-30. He looked back and I was locked on. Bang. I don’t remember consciously squeezing the trigger, but he took one step and dropped. The other guy just stood there, and I could have dropped him as well, but one was enough, so wished him a happy life and he went on his way. I called my wife and she was able to drive her Tacoma very close to where I dropped the spiker. He was loaded up and we were eating Sushi in Squamish within the hour.
I had a LOT of days in the woods over the previous few seasons with nothing but good memories to show for it. The washouts and flooding forced me to go back to an old spot from my younger years and that’s what it took for my luck to turn. I didn’t start chasing deer until I was in my 40s, and didn’t have anyone show me the ropes. All my big game hunting friends were beyond the local deer phase of their lives and heading up to Chetwynd or other spots chasing elk, so I had to go from birds to bucks on my own. I never had any trouble finding deer, but luck always had the legal deer out of sight, or me with a dog and 20 gauge O/U with birdshot in it when the nice WT buck walked out in front of me. Lots of “if only…” situations. Now I find myself with multiple opportunities each season, and I occasionally pass on a smaller buck if I know there is a big boy in the area. I’m only out for meat, but a bigger deer means more meat, and if it’s early season, I don’t want to end my local hunts too soon. It’s just too nice being out in the woods.
2 black tail on a travois being dragged down to the boat and my first buck after dragging him out to the road. I had Rock Steady do a euro of the spiker for me, and people ask if it was some kind of antelope as his spikes are very curved and uniform.

If we’re not supposed to eat animals, how come they’re made out of meat?
BHA, BCWF, CCFR, PETA, Lever Action Addict.