For those of us that don't hunt places that look like OLN's Bean Field
hunts, or Buckmasters South Texas Box Blind hunts, but instead hunt
heavy timber, semi-autos can mean the difference between
deer stories, and deer steaks. I have two bolt action rifles, in deer calibers,
one bolt action pistol, and one T/C Encore in a pistol config, yet
in many of my deer hunting situations, they stay home, and the BAR
goes hunting. On opening day, in mixed timber, and farm country,
of NE Wisconsin, those true trophy bucks are moving, and some
times they are flying. You can grunt, blat, fart, whistle, or scream,
and they are not going to slow down. So be practiced at running
shots, know your target, and what is beyond, and then let the
BAR bark. My personal best buck stepped out into an opening,
in a thick creek bottom, and I took an "automatic" 60 yard
broadside standing shot...Dead Deer right? Nope, a tiny twig,
about 5 yards from the deer sent the bullet into the dirt, or a
tree, and Ol' Mossy Horns took off like a shot. I carefully
tracked him, and took 3 more shots, as he went through
openings in the timber. The last flash in the timber,
he was still moving. I thought I missed a big buck!
I went to where I last thought I saw him, and could not
find blood, and there were tons of fresh tracks from other
deer. I went back to the first shot, and found the clipped
twig. I dry tracked him and found one hit in a tree, where
I shot the second shot. I continued, and found another
sapling clipped, at the site of the third shot, and I continued
tracking. At the site of the fourth and final shot, I found
a few sprigs of hair, and a bit of tissue that looked like lung.
About 20 yards from that site, I saw an antler sticking out
of the creek. I pulled a VERY nice buck out of the creek,
that would still be running, if I had been shooting a bolt
action rifle. I have just under 30 whitetail bucks in the
picture book, and more than half of them have been hauling
butt through the northern hardwoods, and all of them have
been taken with semi-auto deer guns. I have three management
deer with bolt action rifles, and handguns.
I do hunt late season with my Savage Striker, in pop up blinds,
since the deer have settled down. So it is nice to have different
"tools" to choose from. But for heavy cover trophy deer hunting,
IMHO, nothing beats a good reliable semi-auto rifle.
Squeeze