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Bodork sorry about your knife

Started by lone hunter, September 01, 2007, 11:16:00 AM

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lone hunter

but I got it a little dirty last night.


Ground blind, 65# Toelke Whip,620 gr arrow tipped with 160 gr STOS.

Guru

So you shot it's front leg off    :clapper:
Curt } >>--->   

"I love you Daddy".......My son Cade while stump shooting  3/19/06

STOBBER


lone hunter

If first pic is inappropriate please delete it. Those Helle knives work great.

sticshooter

YOWZERS! PICS PICS PICS??? CONGRATS<><
The Church of God is an anvil that has worn out many hammers.

"Walk softly..and carry a sharp   Stic."
TGMM

Guru

First pic is fine...just messin' a bit....Very nice,congrats again!
Curt } >>--->   

"I love you Daddy".......My son Cade while stump shooting  3/19/06

SouthMDShooter

"Two roads diverged in a wood, and I --
I took the one less traveled by,
And that has made all the difference."
- Robert Frost

BigRonHuntAlot

>>>-TGMM Family Of The Bow-->

The Moon Gave Us The Bow, The Sun Gave Us The Arrow

Walk Softly and Carry a Big Stick

Crooked Stic

I would think that you done Bodorks knife proud!   :clapper:
High on Archery.

Tim Fishell

That is awesome!!!  Congrats!  I love those Helle knives!!
Dreams can not be bought; they are free to those who have lived. -Mike Mitten

We must go beyond the textbooks, go out into the untrodden depths of the wilderness & travel & explore & tell the world the glories of our journey

TGMM Family of the Bow

Huntrdfk

Now we got some pics.....how about some more with the story!  Great job Mike!


David
TGMM Family of The Bow
PBS Regular Member
Comptons

"People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf." George Orwell

vermonster13

Nice job.

NOW THE STORY, STORY, STORY!
TGMM Family of the Bow
For hunting to have a future, we must invest ourselves in future hunters.

Gil

Congrats on a very fine bear..and a nice knife to use on it.

Gil
There's plenty of room for all of God's creatures.Right next to the mashed potatoes.

One can pay back the loan of gold, but one dies forever in debt to those who are kind."

COMPTON TRADITIONAL BOWHUNTERS

adeeden

"I would rather be lucky then good, any day!"

yellow bow


Roger Norris

https://www.tradwoodsman.com/

"Good Lord....well, your new name is Sledge."
Ron LaClair upon seeing the destruction of his new lock on the east gate

"A man that cheats in the woods will cheat anywhere"
G. Fred Asbell

JEFF B

'' sometimes i wake up Grumpy;
other times i let her sleep"

TGMM FAMILY OF THE BOW

lone hunter

Thanks for the kind words guys.
Not much of a story teller but I'll give it a go.

Its been awful hot in my neck of the woods this year so I decided to hunt a familiar elk wallow. This wallow has been very productive over the  years. It's in a shady little draw protected by old-growth red fir and a few cedars. Seepage oozes out from around the base of the cedars forming a bit of a trickle that flows into the wallow.
 I was 30 hours into a scheduled 4 day vigil from my ground blind. Not much was happening but just at dark I heard a racket on the hill above me. As I turned around, I was thinking elk but instead saw this bear moving on the horizonal trail above me. He was moving from left to right and not offering me an acceptable shot. When he was right above me, he stopped to drink at the base of one of the big trees. I released the arrow and everything felt right but when he bolted, I could faintly , in the fading light, see my chartreuse fletching protruding from his side.Strange, I thought, this setup normally blows through elk. Something isn't right. As I listened, I could hear him growling and making a racked but after awhile all was quiet.
 I packed my gear into my daypack, put an arrow on the string and eased up to ribbon the hit site. At this point, I wanted to preserve as much information as possible for a follow-up in the morning. As I was putting ribbon on a low bush I looked in the direction of the bear's flight and thought I could see the fletching of my arrow twenty feet away. I cautiously eased forward to retrieve the arrow and ribbon that site. About 10 inches of the point was broken off cleanly. I squinted in the dusk to make a final survey of the area before hiking the two miles back to the rig. Imagine my surprise when I focused on the bear laying not 10 feet from me. Thankfully he was dead. He had only traveled 30 feet after being hit.
 When my son and 13 month old grandson went in the next morning to pack the boar out, we discovered why the arrow didn't pass through. There was a blow-down right behind the bear and the arrow buried itself 4 inches into the wood.Essentially pinning him to the tree. When the bear took off, he snapped it clean.


It was a great experience and I hope all of you have similar adventures this season. Mike

Bodork

WOW! That's awesome Mike!  I hope everyone that has one of my knives gets to do that with it. I guess I should make one for myself! Congratulations! I think I'll keep that picture handy. Mike

defiant


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