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Hunting
How To Hunt Big Game
Typical mulie approach
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<blockquote data-quote="Buffalobob" data-source="post: 175865" data-attributes="member: 8"><p>The last mule deer I shot before leaving Utah back in 1981, we used the technique you mention. There was a herd of about five bucks that used a scrub oak hillside. They could not be gotten unless you set up across the canyon on a rock outcrop which was about 500 yards away. </p><p></p><p>We scouted them during archery season and left them alone during elk season and came back for them when it was rifle season.</p><p></p><p>Opening morning we eased into position as quietly as we could in the dark and waited silently for daylight. Of course when it got light they were nowhere to be seen on the far hillside. That is until we heard them 20 yards below our rock outcrop. The contrary deer had switched sides of the canyon on us. We had been very quiet getting into our position and had stayed quiet so until we shot they had no idea we were there. We even managed to coordinate by signing who would shot which deer and both got one of them.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Buffalobob, post: 175865, member: 8"] The last mule deer I shot before leaving Utah back in 1981, we used the technique you mention. There was a herd of about five bucks that used a scrub oak hillside. They could not be gotten unless you set up across the canyon on a rock outcrop which was about 500 yards away. We scouted them during archery season and left them alone during elk season and came back for them when it was rifle season. Opening morning we eased into position as quietly as we could in the dark and waited silently for daylight. Of course when it got light they were nowhere to be seen on the far hillside. That is until we heard them 20 yards below our rock outcrop. The contrary deer had switched sides of the canyon on us. We had been very quiet getting into our position and had stayed quiet so until we shot they had no idea we were there. We even managed to coordinate by signing who would shot which deer and both got one of them. [/QUOTE]
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Typical mulie approach
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