Daughter’s first deer.

hooray!!! and the legacy lives on through the kids :) nice work both of you and congratulations on a great 1st buck. She showed some grit, and saw some neat stuff, hooked! keep having fun, and get some casual shooting practice in for fun through the coming year :) keep talking about safety, and hunting technique in short casual conversations and keep growing your hunter ;) awesome!
 
hooray!!! and the legacy lives on through the kids :) nice work both of you and congratulations on a great 1st buck. She showed some grit, and saw some neat stuff, hooked! keep having fun, and get some casual shooting practice in for fun through the coming year :) keep talking about safety, and hunting technique in short casual conversations and keep growing your hunter ;) awesome!
That's exactly my plan.
 
This is so awesome. Congrats dad and hunter on an awesome trip and memories that won't be forgotten! My daughter is chomping at the bit to kill something but she needs another year or two of weapon training. Can't wait to experience her first animal like this.
 
I wasn't sure at first if my daughter was going be a hunter. I was ok if that's what she decided, hunting animal's isn't for everyone. After a family camping/hunting trip this year I think she felt left out. It was almost two weeks into the Montana general season when she decided she was going to do it.

Step 1 Online hunter's safety crash course to get her certified.

Step 2 Getting her behind a rifle bigger then a 22 or my AR 15. No worries there the girl has always been a natural and very deadly shot.

Step 3 Finding her a buck, any buck.

First 2 days were spent chasing a little 4 point mule deer on block management land. He was dumb with love but his does were not and kept us at about 600 to 800 yards.

Day 3 I took her to some state land where her brother killed a little whitetail the week before. Does we're abundant and the rut was on. First thing in the morning we saw two beautiful whitetail bucks, a massive 8 point (eastern count) and a nice 10 point. Only problem is they were on the wrong side of the fence. The 10 point eventually ran up through the thick vegetation of the state land. By the time I saw him and got her to see him he was safe again on the wrong side of the fence. We spent the rest of the morning sitting and waiting in the wind and the cold, looking at deer we couldn't shoot. I decide I better get her warmed up. We went up over the crest of the hill where the wind was less, got her warmed up a little and some food in her. She decided she wasn't ready to give up yet. We went back and toughed it out for another couple of hours. Just when she was ready to give up I saw a doe come busting out of the thick stuff. She holed up in a patch of brush right on the edge of the fence. A few minutes later I saw another deer moving out of the bottom thick stuff. I manage to identify him as a little buck. We got my daughter laying down resting over my pack. She managed to find him in the scope. He wouldn't hold still until he got to the doe. I ranged him at 409 yards and told her where to hold on the old Nikon BDC reticle. At the shot I heard the bullet strike meat. I watched him stagger about 30 yards and pile up.
She went through every emotion possible in the next few minutes. After I got her calmed down and assured her she had made a clean kill and that her deer had not suffered needlessly she was ready to go see her first deer.

We went from not having hunter's safety or shooting a deer rifle to a 409 yard kill shot in one week. There's no way I could be more proud.

Stats
Mom's left handed X Bolt micro hunter in 7mm-08. Mom's shooting shoulder has been replaced twice so a muzzle brake has been installed.
Scope is an old Nikon Monarch 5-20x44 with BDC reticle.
Star line brass
Win LRP
Varget
140gr Nosler Ballistic tip
Muzzle vel. 2737fps

Shot went through the back of the right shoulder and exited just in front of the left shoulder.
Been times I wished that I had a deer like that too shoot. Times when you figure out I'm the only thing out here moving! Nice deer. I'm that guy nobody likes anymore, I'm thinking freezer not wall. If a big ol boy comes along I bust him but if a nice eater shows up he's goin home with me!
 
I like you Bigbrad. I killed a spike buck this year because I drove right passed him standing 10 yards off the road. I was 150 yards passed him and I stopped to open a gate. I told myself if he's still standing there when I get the gun out, load it, put one in the chamber, and walked back around the corner he was going to get it. He was. This was my drag.
91DE71C1-A2BC-4713-9206-AE32D34CF5F0.jpeg
Both of the kids deer were like a mile back in the thick steep stuff. I had to drag my daughter's deer out by myself. My deer couldn't have been any easier and the best meat ever! I say "He won't look good on my wall, but he sure looks good in my freezer."
 
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I wasn't sure at first if my daughter was going be a hunter. I was ok if that's what she decided, hunting animal's isn't for everyone. After a family camping/hunting trip this year I think she felt left out. It was almost two weeks into the Montana general season when she decided she was going to do it.

Step 1 Online hunter's safety crash course to get her certified.

Step 2 Getting her behind a rifle bigger then a 22 or my AR 15. No worries there the girl has always been a natural and very deadly shot.

Step 3 Finding her a buck, any buck.

First 2 days were spent chasing a little 4 point mule deer on block management land. He was dumb with love but his does were not and kept us at about 600 to 800 yards.

Day 3 I took her to some state land where her brother killed a little whitetail the week before. Does we're abundant and the rut was on. First thing in the morning we saw two beautiful whitetail bucks, a massive 8 point (eastern count) and a nice 10 point. Only problem is they were on the wrong side of the fence. The 10 point eventually ran up through the thick vegetation of the state land. By the time I saw him and got her to see him he was safe again on the wrong side of the fence. We spent the rest of the morning sitting and waiting in the wind and the cold, looking at deer we couldn't shoot. I decide I better get her warmed up. We went up over the crest of the hill where the wind was less, got her warmed up a little and some food in her. She decided she wasn't ready to give up yet. We went back and toughed it out for another couple of hours. Just when she was ready to give up I saw a doe come busting out of the thick stuff. She holed up in a patch of brush right on the edge of the fence. A few minutes later I saw another deer moving out of the bottom thick stuff. I manage to identify him as a little buck. We got my daughter laying down resting over my pack. She managed to find him in the scope. He wouldn't hold still until he got to the doe. I ranged him at 409 yards and told her where to hold on the old Nikon BDC reticle. At the shot I heard the bullet strike meat. I watched him stagger about 30 yards and pile up.
She went through every emotion possible in the next few minutes. After I got her calmed down and assured her she had made a clean kill and that her deer had not suffered needlessly she was ready to go see her first deer.

We went from not having hunter's safety or shooting a deer rifle to a 409 yard kill shot in one week. There's no way I could be more proud.

Stats
Mom's left handed X Bolt micro hunter in 7mm-08. Mom's shooting shoulder has been replaced twice so a muzzle brake has been installed.
Scope is an old Nikon Monarch 5-20x44 with BDC reticle.
Star line brass
Win LRP
Varget
140gr Nosler Ballistic tip
Muzzle vel. 2737fps

Shot went through the back of the right shoulder and exited just in front of the left shoulder.
Awesome!! IMO, better feeling when your kid shoots one than shooting one yourself. Well done on raising your kids right!
 

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