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Creamer's 2021-22 Season Journal

Creamer

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I took the morning to go shuffle some cameras. Scouting mid-season is something I don't do enough. I had a couple of cameras down for gun season (non-cellulars) and one Cell Link setup to put out, also. I was hoping to find fresh sign and did, so that was promising. One camera went into a new location where I have never had a camera or hunted, but sign was fresh (tracks and shit) so we'll see what happens. I'm assuming it's doe traffic but I could use another one of those. Another camera went back to a location where I had one twice already this year, as well as late last year. I was hoping to find a good new location for the Cell Link and I'm pretty excited about what I found. A couple of large rubs, dozens of smaller rubs, and loads of fresh sign (tracks and shit). It's in a pretty open area, which I usually don't hunt much, but it sits between two thick areas. The bench wraps around a short nose and there's a really steep bank/high wall below. I think it's steep enough it's going to help pinch deer on the bench. Entry and exit is pretty good, just a long walk. Here's a few pics from the hike.











 

Creamer

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One of the cameras I hung that day I was hoping would produce a pic or two of the big 10 pointer I had inside 15 yards on the ground. I was 50/50 expecting to see him on this camera I pulled before the extended gun weekend. I got a few pics of him, this was the best of them. Disregard the date/time, I forgot to set it up when I got the camera ready to go. He's a good one for public ground. I don't think I'm out of the game with him yet. I'll get cameras back out and try to nail him down, I have a solid idea where he is staying right now.

 

Creamer

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Sit #14

Forgot to post this one up, mainly because it was a dud and it was between Christmas and our family vacation right after. It was the day after Christmas, and I only had a few hours. I had been wanting to ground hunt a little public spot, close to parking but easily overlooked, where I had found some doe sign. Lots of tracks, some fresh, some shit. It was a trail along a creek leading from private ground towards a cut corn field, also on private.



I liked the setup, but the sit was nearly a complete bust. I could faintly see deer skirting me at dusk and I had to be home by 6PM, so I was in the process of slipping out when they slipped by on private about 100 yards out. It was just light enough for me to see two deer in the cut corn when I left. I literally sat within 85 yards of my car.

 

Creamer

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Sit #15

Saturday, the opener for muzzleloader, I hoped to take advantage of some doe activity on camera at last light to add a doe to the freezer. I knew the weather was not going to be great on Sunday so I was hoping a deer would cooperate on Saturday. I got in the tree about 2PM and figured I'd be waiting until 5:15-5:30 for a shot. I wasn't wrong.



It was a slow afternoon, seeing one small fork horn walk the opposite side of the hollow from me at around 4:30. About 5:20 or so, I spotted a deer crossing the ravine below me and coming towards me. Then another. And another, etc... There were 5 in total, cautiously working my way. Best I could tell, two mama does and three fawns. My goal was to shoot a bigger one, but if the fecal matter struck the air circulation device, I'd take what I could get. They were working my way, one fawn inside 40 yards, and I think the thermals started to betray me. I was smoked up, everything except the gun that I had just cleaned the day before, and that could be what they got. They were nervous, checking the wind, and I could sense they weren't sticking around. One of the mama does stepped into a tiny hole at about 65 yards down the hill, between two trees. I was solid on the side of the tree, centered the crosshairs on the vital V, and squeezed one off.

I saw them scatter and it wasn't hard to figure out which deer I shot. She ran 10 yards, her front legs gave out, and she bulldozed her way out of sight towards the bottom of the (God forsaken home of the devil himself, muddy banks covered in melting snow death trap of a) ravine.





I walked to where I lost sight of her. Yep, she trucked herself right over the edge and all the way into the creek.



The worst mistake of my life was made soon after. One of the worst, anyway. I took the heavy stuff back to the Jeep and retrieved my deer cart. I figured it might help a little getting her up out of there. Yea. No. Never again on a hill like that. I struggled getting the cart going uphill, it flipped over once, so I had to resort to a good old fashioned drag. I found a little drainage area where I had marginal footing and drug her up out of that hell hole. Then I had to walk back down for the cart. The cart did help once I reached the field, but by that point I was almost as dead as she was.



I earned every ounce of that deer.



The landowner out there had just gifted me a couple of old knives his grandfather had used on their farm growing up. He told me they butchered a lot of pigs, so it's hard to say how many pigs this old knife cut up.



I put a quick edge on it and used it to process the meat. The blade took an edge really well and chunked her quickly for the grinder.

 

Creamer

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Sit #16

I thought I was done. There were no plans for buying another tag or hunting anymore this season. Then a buddy called and asked if I wanted to come try to kill a doe at his place. So another tag was bought. I had been shooting the longbow more lately and had been shooting it well.



No pics from the hunt, but the difference between hunting pressured public ground and manicured deer property is pretty stark. Between the walk in and the hunt, we saw 19 deer. I think 6 were bucks. I probably would have to sit 5+ times on public to see 19 deer. The swirling wind was causing some issues, the deer were picking something up but weren't blowing out. Finally, at the end of the evening, some does worked closer for a shot. I had been shooting well and the one "miss" I almost never make is high. And I missed high from 16-17 yards. Go figure. They had no clue what happened and just kind of walked off. The ground was so hard the arrow skipped when it hit the ground. I go out the next day to shoot and wear out the middle. Oh well, we'll give it another shot next weekend.

 

Creamer

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Sit #17

Last Saturday I went back to my friend's place to try the elevated blind again. Conditions were good, very cold, marginally favorable wind but that shouldn't have mattered much from inside a hard sided blind. I got in clean, got my black outer layers put on and handwarmers activated, and settled in for the evening.



It wasn't a long wait for seeing deer. I was there maybe 25 minutes and had three does appear to work towards me. They ducked into the thick brush below the blind and never reappeared. I found their tracks walking out that suggested they cut through the brush and kept moving away from me.



The first deer to be in range was, of course, a young buck. We had seen him the previous week when I missed the young doe. Of course he came right in and was in a very killable spot for a few minutes, while does stayed out of range.



Later on, after he left, I had a half rack fork horn come to check out the remnants of the corn pile. While he was there, three does tried to come in and he ran them off twice. One doe fawn tried to sneak back in while the half rack was busy running mama away, and I almost got the blind window open, but he returned and ran her off, too. Later on, after they were gone, another small buck worked into 12 yards. He was a tiny little basket 8.



At last light, 3 more does came out well below the blind and cut across the bottom of the field. So all in all, a solid sit late in the year. 12 deer spotted, 3 bucks, all of which I could have killed. As luck would have it, the does stayed just out of range and never offered a shot. I figure I'll give it one more crack this weekend before season is out.
 

Creamer

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On Tuesday, I took advantage of an open afternoon to go scout a spot I wanted to see in person on public while the snow was still on. There were also two trail cams I needed to retrieve in the area. I suspected the location I wanted to scout should have some beds visible in the snow. The buck I missed in November with the longbow had come from this direction along a bench and my hunch was he was cruising between that suspected bedding area and another near where I was hunting. My hunch was correct.



I also found some buck sign in the area, confirming that bucks were moving through.





Away from multiple clusters of beds was a single, larger bed with fresh shit by it. I think it will be worth coming back through in another month to check for sheds. The bench is south-facing and had some cover, considering it's surrounded by open hardwoods.



I had a cell camera near where this trail was located. I got over 100 photos from that camera in about 3 weeks, so I wasn't shocked to see paths like this near it.



What I was shocked to find was turkey tracks. Lots of them. In my three years of hunting this chunk of public, I have seen precisely 0 turkeys. Haven't seen them, haven't heard them, haven't found sign of them until Tuesday.



Another south-facing bench I walked turned up more beds, fresh sign, and several rubs. I had found buck sign along this bench late last fall, meant to get a camera in there this season, and just forgot to do it.



A few of the rubs were large.



It was a good afternoon hike. Lots of sign was found, suspicions were confirmed, and both of my cameras were still there.
 

Creamer

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Sit #18

Last one. No pics for this sit. Sunday was out because of family plans, so Saturday was my final day to hunt. My buddy and I went to his Redneck Blind for one final sit. Action did not disappoint. The first animal we saw was a very healthy bobcat at about 100-120 yards up the hill in the woods. There was no mistaking that little tail bouncing back and forth while he slinked through the bench above us. I think that was the third cat I have seen while hunting in Ohio, and the first this year.

The deer movement started a bit slow, but picked up in a hurry in the last 90 minutes of the sit. A family group of 6 does came off the point in front of us and appeared to be working away from us, but they simply dropped into the gulch below us and approached the corn from downwind with thermals in their faces. Clever ladies. We kept the blind sealed while they were downwind and didn't get busted. Twice we attempted to open the shooting window while the group was inside 20 yards, and both times they caught movement (we think) and spooked back just out of range and out of the shooting lane I had. Finally one broke from the group and came back. We got the door open, I started to draw, and saw buttons. No go. Of course he had no reaction to the door at all.

More deer walked the ridge in front of us and never got closer than maybe 60 yards. At last light, a lone doe stalled out in front of us well out of my range. We tried to get the larger window open for him to take a compound shot as she walked below us and couldn't make it happen quickly enough. It was a great sit for seeing numbers, we don't even know exactly how many we saw but it was a lot. Deer were tight to us several times, we just couldn't get the window on the blind opened when we needed it for a stickbow shot.