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My 12-year old son was fortunate enough to draw one of only five youth licenses to hunt pronghorn antelope on New Mexico's White Sands Missile Range, an Army base widely recognized for its healthy population of free-ranging Kalahari oryx. You may recall our recent hunts for oryx You'll also recall that the Army allows only limited photography, so I don't have any cool pictures of oryx, the beautiful desert and mountains, the numerous tarantulas we saw, and so on. On these hunts you're only allowed to take a few pictures of your trophy, with numerous restrictions about the background and what can be included. The boy and I left home Thursday after school and met my dad in a small town near the gate through which we would enter the range the following morning. Dad was on the way to elk camp with his "retirement camper," so we had a nice place to stay for this hunt. We got our gear ready and hit the sack. The next morning we leisurely made our way to WSMR for the mandatory 10:00 safety briefing. After the check-in, vehicle searches, and finally the briefing, we were released to hunt about lunch time. The five youth pronghorn hunters were sharing the range with 45 oryx hunters, so we let them all head out before getting too excited. By about 2:00 I had spotted a small herd of antelope with a nice buck, so we started a long stalk. As we were getting into rifle range, a pair of fired up bull oryx charged into the area, spooking the pronghorn off, but rewarding us with quite a show as they duked it out. That set the stage for our hunt though - the rest of that day and all of the following were "Murphy's Law" days. When things could go wrong, they did. We glassed, walked, jogged, got on the sticks, watched antelope run off, and so on. On Saturday afternoon, we were contacted by a range game warden, who asked us to meet him near the northern fence, where he had a nice buck spotted. We made the 30-minute drive and were soon looking at a couple decent antelope. We tried a stalk, and you guessed it, it was blown by some passing oryx hunters. We tried another spot and found a couple groups of pronghorn, but they were too far out in the brush to attempt a stalk before the mandatory check-out time. So, we put them to bed and headed out. We returned to that location the next morning, but cooler temperatures and high winds seemed to have kept most critters in bed. We covered a lot of ground in the pickup, glassing from high points. By about 8:30 we started to see a few critters, mostly oryx, but then a few antelope. We made a couple short unsuccessful stalks before bumping into some oryx hunters who told us about a nice lone buck they'd seen just a couple miles away. We hurried over there, located him about 1,000 yards from the road. While we were trying to get into position to start a stalk, those same fellows pulled up in a cloud of dust and excitedly told us about a bedded buck about three miles from us just a short distance from the road. We followed them there and sure enough, there was a decent little bucked bedded in an open grassy area. We ditched the trucks in the bar ditch, grabbed the rifle and Trigger Sticks, and quickly planned a stalk through the brush. We used a slight rise and big yuccas to close the distance to about 120 yards. By the time the boy got loaded up and comfortable on the sticks, the buck had stood and was intently staring at us. My son repeatedly said he was solid and comfortable with a straight on shot, and given the close range, I relented and okayed the shot. He missed. The buck spooked off a few yards and stopped, this time just slightly quartering to us. The second shot found its mark and the buck was down after a short run. We field dressed him, then put up the game hoist on the truck and quartered him into the cooler. And since the game hoist was up, we offered its use to a successful oryx hunter who we had seen gutting his oryx just a few hundred yards from our excitement. Here are a couple pictures that meet WSMR's photography guidelines. The boy and his pronghorn. Three generations celebrate a young man's first antelope. _____________________ A successful man is one who earns more money than his wife can spend. | ||
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Congratulations to you all. Great way to start a young man. Roger ___________________________ I'm a trophy hunter - until something better comes along. *we band of 45-70ers* | |||
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Good job Dad you are raising your kids right!. That buck has real nice prongs (cutters or whatever you prefer). Thanks for sharing the story and pictures. Tell your boy congratulations! | |||
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awesome! I want to hunt pronghorn SO bad!!! NRA Life Member Gun Control - A theory espoused by some monumentally stupid people; who claim to believe, against all logic and common sense, that a violent predator who ignores the laws prohibiting them from robbing, raping, kidnapping, torturing and killing their fellow human beings will obey a law telling them that they cannot own a gun. | |||
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Outstanding! Congrats | |||
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Outstanding and you will never have to go bail that young man out of jail, Fathers, grandfathers, that pass that down to their kids, don't have them on the street sucking on a Marihuana pipe. Good on ya and give the boy my congrats.. It worked on my kids and grandkids, they grew up hunting and competeing in rodeos where their has never been a knee taken to prayer or the National Anthom, or the American flag.. Ray Atkinson Atkinson Hunting Adventures 10 Ward Lane, Filer, Idaho, 83328 208-731-4120 rayatkinsonhunting@gmail.com | |||
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Big congratulations to the young hunter ________________________________________________ Maker of The Frankenstud Sling Keeper Proudly made in the USA Acepting all forms of payment | |||
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Great job. He will remember this trip his whole life. | |||
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Congratulations! | |||
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Congratulations to you and your son on an excellent hunt. I have long believed that Pronghorns are the best animal for a beginning hunter to hunt. Even the rocks don't last forever. | |||
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Congrats on a successful hunt. | |||
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Now THAT is how it is done!! | |||
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Thanks fellas, we appreciate the kind words. I'll tell you, my kids have hunted a lot more big game than I did at their age. Back then, no starling was safe, but larger animals and the opportunities to hunt them weren't nearly as abundant or within our family's reach. I'm fortunate to be able to offer them this many chances at what I consider to be fairly high quality hunts. I'm thrilled that they get to participate in this aspect of conservation that I'm so invested in.
Thanks, either works. Unfortunately, he had broken off his right cutter, but that left one is pretty impressive. We weren't trophy hunting, so this one worked fine. The kid was absolutely stoked; how can it get any better? He's got his whole life to try for a monster. I think we do kids and other new hunters a disservice when we get hung up on trophies. My trophy is the hunt experience. _____________________ A successful man is one who earns more money than his wife can spend. | |||
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Congrats to an awsome threesome!!!! | |||
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Thanks for sharing and congrats to all. Great lessons AND memories! | |||
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Congratulations! ------------------------------- Some Pictures from Namibia Some Pictures from Zimbabwe An Elephant Story | |||
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Conglads, that's the way it's suppose to be done. Memories to last a lifetime! Bob | |||
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I love seeing someone younger than me behind their animal on here. Soon he will be ready for elk. Thank you for sharing this hunt with us. | |||
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I agree completely, the HUNT is the Trophy. For me any Pronghorn/Mule Deer or Elk is a Trophy. As I get older, the best trophies are the ones you can back up to with the ATV or Pickup and load. Even the rocks don't last forever. | |||
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Congratulations to the young hunter. Don't limit your challenges . . . Challenge your limits | |||
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It's my pleasure to brag a little. He's already taken two cow elk in 2015 and 2016, and we keep trying for that elusive bull tag. He has several more years during which he can apply for the slightly (just) easier to draw youth tags. My fingers are crossed that he or one of his sisters will pull a good bull hunt before leaving home. _____________________ A successful man is one who earns more money than his wife can spend. | |||
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Great job, Dad! Your boy will have memories of hunting with you that he will treasure for the rest of his life. Frank "I don't know what there is about buffalo that frightens me so.....He looks like he hates you personally. He looks like you owe him money." - Robert Ruark, Horn of the Hunter, 1953 NRA Life, SAF Life, CRPA Life, DRSS lite | |||
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Well done! I hunt them every year I am here and usually with my sons! | |||
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I hope between now and then he draws two of them. He beat me by some years. Good shooting. When he do s we want you on here bragging a lot. | |||
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