All Terrain Rentals

Epic Experience

This was one of the most amazing nature experiences of my life, made better only by the fact that I got to share it with my dad and brother.  It all went down on thanksgiving day a few years ago.  The three of us had gone out to look for deer prior to the customary turkey festivities kicking off.  It was actually about 10:00 and we were just getting ready to call it a day, even though we hadn’t seen anything worth getting the cameras out for.

As we were heading down a dirt road to a turn around spot my dad mentioned that perhaps we should go glass of the rim a nearby canyon.  This sounded good to all, and we made our way the short distance to the lip of a deep canyon.

We sat there only a short while when my brother and I, as usually happens, got ants in our pants.  We decided I would walk down the east side of the canyon, my brother would go down the bottom, and my dad would stay and watch from where he was on the rim.  Immediately after splitting up my brother split like a mountain goat down the canyon and I wandered along the lip.  After a short time I lost hope and motivation and made my way back to my dad.  I hadn’t seen a thing so imagine my surprise when my dad excitedly proclaimed, “did you see that buck”?  “No”, I answered, “was it big”? Turns out my dad had seen the buck about a half mile away as it exited the canyon as soon as my brother hit the bottom.  As I pressed him for details on the buck he just kept saying, “all I know is it was big”.

As we sat there discussing and waiting for my brother I saw a doe run over a distant hill, my dad and I pulled our glasses up just in time to see the huge buck pop over the hill right behind the doe.  Still to far away to pick out much detail we watched as the buck chased the doe down into a wooded draw and never re-emerge. After about a half hour the buck never re-emerged so we figured he had bedded down and the hunt for a photo was on.

When my brother returned we explained what was going on and his excitement was evident as him and I set out while my dad stayed behind and stood watch.  What followed was the most painfully slow stalk I have ever been a part of.  The country was wide open around the wooded draw so we had to scoot on our butts for what seemed an eternity.  Finally we were able to locate the buck laying under a tree about 200 yards away.  I slowly raised my binoculars and took a quick peek.  I told my brother it was a huge buck with 4 on one side but the other side was in a tree  branch so I couldn’t tell what it had.  What happened next made my heart stop cold.

As we were sitting there trying to decide how to close the rest of the distance the buck went from a dead sleep to a trot down into the thick of the trees.  This in itself  was enough to cause my heart stop but what really almost killed me was the fact that when the deer trotted off the branch covering the left antler was no branch at all but rather a mess of points and cheaters like I had never seen before.  It was then that I decided it is much less stressful to try and close the gap on a deer that you have an idea is big  rather than a deer that you know is the biggest you have ever seen.  With the weight of the situation weighing on our minds we did the only thing we could do and that was to continue to sneak in the direction the buck disappeared.

A short while later would find us pinned under a juniper tree having a stare down with a doe who was onto us.  We sat frozen, I with my camera out and pointed in the direction of the doe and my brother directly behind me with the video camera trained in the same direction.  There we sat, motionless, as doe after doe and fawn after fawn even a few small bucks filed up to stand next to the doe.  Now what happened next will forever be imprinted in my mind.  While we sat, legs burning from trying to hold our positions, we saw a mess of points appear out of the wash below. Just the tips at first, then a little more and a little more as the monster buck made his way up, head down, to stand with the other deer.   There he was, the buck I had dreamt about, got out of bed at 4:30 in the morning for, spent my life’s savings on my first camera for, walked a million miles for.  A lifetime of dreaming and chasing around in the hills and there he was 30 yards in front of me.

The next few minutes were a blur as the only thing to break the silence was the shutter of my camera as I fired as fast as I possibly could. The experience lasted only a few minutes but the celebration lasted days.  When the buck finally left for good back down the draw he had come up, it began: the whooping, the hollering and the high fives.  My brother and I celebrated like two grown men probably shouldn’t but we had dreamt countless times about the very experience we had just had.  We then ran back to where my dad was and excitedly started showing him the photos on the cameras LCD.  It was a thrill to see my dads face as he was able to see just how big the buck he had found really was.

It was my dad who instilled in me a passion for hunting and more importantly a passion for the outdoors so it was awesome to share this experience with him along with my brother whom I have been dragging out in the hills since he was a youngster.  Now the tables have turned and he drags me around out in the hills but no matter, we share countless fantastic memories, this experience likely being at the top of the list.

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4 Comments so far

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  1. Mark

    This is a great site. Thanks

    • Travis Topham

      Thanks Mark.

      We’ve been working hard to create a site that focuses primarily on photography of big game. So whats the point? Most deer you see in magazines have already been “harvested,” or are on private property. Our site is proof that trophy big game still exist on public land… they’re just a little harder to find. I guess you could say they are the most elusive (for lack of a better word). Photographing the deer that are still roaming the foothills of public land ignites a sense of hope in all of us who still love the thrill of a fair hunt.

  2. Ryan Thompson

    What you say about public land is true! When I see a big buck next to somebody that they harvested, for instance, on the Henry’s, I don’t get nearly as exited as if the buck was harvested on public land. Also, it’s ten times better that the deer you photograph are alive, and not already harvested (this sentence kinda makes it sound like I don’t like hunting, which is very the opposite of true!). Also, I guess this answers my question on “Oh Thank Heaven”. He is on public. Wow didn’t mean to write a novel…..GREAT SITE!

    • Travis Topham

      We know exactly what you’re talking about when you say “it’s ten times better that the deer you photograph are alive, and not already harvested…” because we feel the same way. We built the site with the intent to stay away from kill shots or pictures of “harvested” animals, not because we don’t like to hunt, it’s actually the opposite. We focus on live game because we do like to hunt (if that makes sense). Nothing against pictures of people with their big harvested animals, we have our own little stash of those, it just not the focus of this website.

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