What A Buck!

November 19, 2009

Take a look at this dude! This could be one of the oldest bucks I shot and I shot him the other day in my old stomping grounds of central South Dakota. He’s got a monster neck, body and rack on him. Sure, he’s a little weak in the point department, but you can barely get your hands around the main beam between his G1 and G2 points.

I actually saw this buck several times, but looked hard for something with a better score. When I couldn’t find a better buck, I went straight back to him and his maturity put me to the test. He wasn’t a pushover. Not only did he find a secluded dry river bed to hole up in, but he didn’t brazenly rut in the wide open day after day. Late in the hunt I targeted him and it took me all day to finally get within rifle range.
 

Dude! You need to go on Jenny Craig!

Dude! You need to go on Jenny Craig!

Remember when I said hunt aggressively? That’s what I did and with only minutes of shooting light left I spotted him from afar, hustled and then crawled to a high point for the shot only to watch him disappear into the brush. Thinking aggressive again I started to grunt and rattle. While hoping for him to show up two smaller bucks cruised in and he couldn’t stand it any longer. He ran in and I shot him with my TC Arms Pro Hunter  .300 Winchester Magnum at less than 100 yards.
 
I learned something new on this hunt. You can fool a mature buck. Rarely do I aggressively call to an old buck since they often won’t leave their does. He did and I ended up with a great trophy by breaking my own rule.
 
I was hunting with my good friend Pat West at Dakota Ranch Outfitters. If you want a great Western hunt for whitetails or muleys (giants), look them up. Hunt hard. The rut fun is going at warp speed now!

Mark Kayser

4 people like this post.
  • Share/Bookmark

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

michael rhinehart November 22, 2009 at 8:30 am

Mark, I enjoy watch your hunting style and listening to your advice! I would like to change careers and get into guiding out West, can a guide make $20-$30,000 per year to cover my nut? Would you give me some advice on how to get started and who to contact? Thanks and keep up the great work!

age beauty November 26, 2009 at 1:55 am

I really like your site , it’s full with lot of information. You have found one constant visitor and a fan of this web site.

markkayser December 10, 2009 at 6:39 pm

Michael,

To be honest, I don’t think most guides make that type of money because the hunting season window is so short. I guided for several years in southeast Montana and I loved it, but I couldn’t make a living off of the brief income. Outfitters can make that type of money and maybe you should look at starting your own outfitting business. A small mom and pop operation offers personalized service, and low overhead. You might be able to strike up a deal with an outfitter getting ready to retire or secure public land licensing for outfitting. Anything is possible if you put your mind to it.

Mark Kayser

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: