What trophy are you most proud of?

KuduKiller

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Bowling Green
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Hunted
South Africa, Ohio, Texas, Tennessee, Indiana, Mississippi, Louisiana, Maine, Alabama, Georgia, Washington, Wyoming,,, I am sure I missed one or two states.
I grew up on a farm in Northern Kentucky and we raised tobacco. My dad got me into hunting at a very young age but didn’t get me into deer hunting until I was about 13. I’m assuming he didn’t get me into it earlier in life because he saw it as a “hunt alone” kind of hunt. I didn’t see it that way and started taking my sine deer hunting when he was 9 but anyway.

Back in the late 80’s if you saw a couple bucks in the 2 week season you were lucky on our farm. Let’s flash forward to around 2010. I had moved about 3 hours away to Bowling Green, Kentucky and was a police officer at the time. I would usually take the first week of deer season off and go to mom and dads to hunt all week.

Around this time a very good friend of mine, let’s call him Adam would come with me and by god we would have a big time! We would cook big dinners for my parents. Mom had had a pretty good stroke around this time and had some memory issues and dad had no teeth so I made sure to cook things he could “gum!” Dad would always ask me “what’s emmul cooking tonight?” Emiril Lagasse,, .

So one night Adam and I got to talking. Our farm (186 acres) by this time was almost completely surrounded on 3 sides by a higher end subdivision. Adam says “ let’s make a couple nice food plots, put some shooting houses on them and maybe the deer will come.” That next late spring we did! We picked a ridge we could get to through the back of one of our old tobacco fields and began cutting trees, bushhogging, plowing and running the disc. By around June we finished the plot and called it “the g spot” because they would come to it. We built around a 6X10 shooting house around 8’ off the ground towards the back of the plot that was around 80 yards long and 30 yards wide. We left a good sized cedar tree in the middle of the plot where we could put out corn or whatever BS attractant was the flavor of the month to try.

So it’s 2011 now. The first season Adam and I hunted together in the shooting house. Talk about good times! We sat from daylight to dark, brought in our lunch and snacks and a few pee jugs. Adam and I flipped a quarter on first shot. I flipped and magically I won, . Both Adam and I took “good bucks, both around 130” and a doe each the first week so it was a success! My son also took his first deer that year during youth season which was a doe.

I left my cameras in until probably March since it was a 3 hour drive and I rarely got up there anyway. I got home that spring and started reviewing the pics of what lived and passed through after we were done hunting and holy s$@t what a buck!!!! I had 2 pics of him in late November on the same day, wow! Yup, definitely putting more time in the woods this year! The pic is included.

Fall of 2012
So my dad had passed in June that year and my mom had several more silent strokes but luckily I had a sister that lived close to keep an eye her but I tried to come up as often as I could. I remember when dad passed, Adam came up and stayed at the farm with me to help out with various things and honestly, just to support me. We got in the plot the night of dad’s funeral, just sat by the tractor and shared my dad’s last PBR he had in the fridge. I was a soup sandwich that day.

So during youth season that year my son took his first buck. Adam and I hunted together again that year but we waited on the buck we had named “jackpot.” I had several pics of damn good deer that year that were 150”+ but since I won the coin toss, we waited! Again, I got a few pics of jackpot but they were at night and very few of them.

Fall 2013
I had pretty much given up hope of seeing jackpot on the hoof but I still had a fire to try. Kind of funny but not really, during early bow season I called Adam to see if he was bow hunting with me the following weekend. Upon answering, Adam was whispering and made the conversation short and I thought nothing of it. I then called my mom to check in her and she asked “why didn’t you come up to hunt with Adam?” Awww you f$&,er!!!! He knew I didn’t want him up there without me but given the help he gave and the support he showed my family when dad died I kept my mouth shut! I knew he was unable to hunt opening week with me that year anyway!

Opening weekend came and went but I stuck with it. Daylight to dark by myself. On that following Tuesday I took some study material with me because I was testing for KDFWR ( game warden) that Thursday and I knew I stood a good chance since I was already a LEO. It started raining late morning and it was a pretty good down pour but it wasn’t too cold. I decided to study in the shooting house. I had put a small corn pile behind the shooting house for my son to get a “chip shot” at a deer a few weeks earlier. While studying I kept my eyes moving as best I could. The rain let up and all of a sudden I got that feeling. Many of you know what I’m talking about, that “something is close” feeling! I looked in front of me to the cedar tree, nothing. I looked behind me out the back window and “oh s$&t” here’s a monster! I got my gun up “muzzle in the shooting house, not outside the window” and sent it! My ears rang for like 2 days! The buck fell dead. I was so tore up I opened the trap door, left my rifle in the shooting house and missed every damn step on the way down! Crap, my rifle! I went back up, got my rifle and came down correctly that time! At that point I realized “it’s jackpot”! I went to put an insurance shot into him, nothing! I had forgot to rack another round in but I figured it out!

Jackpot was so damn heavy I couldn’t get him on the 4 wheeler. I had to throw the cable over a limb to hoist him up the best I could but he kept lifting the front of my Polaris. I’d get him up a foot and have to jump on the front as more weight to the 4 wheeler. I finally was like “good enough”, got him strapped up and back to the house I went. I took several pics and sent them to Adam. “BS, you photo shopped that deer bro!” After a few more pics involving my middle finger Adam figured out that it was in fact jackpot!

Jackpot field dressed at 245 and scored 176 3/8”.

2014
My mom passed in May. I know I mentioned a sister earlier but I have/had 2. So, after my mom’s rounds of strokes she was declared incompetent and placed in assisted living prior to her death. Remember me saying she was declared incompetent? So that was in January and she passed in May. My parents last will and testament was made up in 1979 and it had my oldest sister taking care of me and “the good sister” until we hit 18, the farm was to be sold and divided 3 ways but a clause was in there that 2 siblings could buy out the other for the equal share and be kept. So at my mom’s passing I got a letter from a lawyer with a copy of the “newer will” that had been changed by my mom in April of that year? But wait, she was declared incompetent by a judge in January and my mom had a new will made up in April? Kind of odd as well but the good sister and I received nothing from our parents in the will, strange huh? The “good” sister was the one that got my mom into assisted living, made sure she was taken care of, had food, bills paid and had things taken care of but the oldest sister got everything and didn’t do anything for my mom? Hell, she was barely even around in my parents later years. Oh, forgot to mention, she hooked up with a guy that had just got out of the penitentiary for trafficking meth right around Christmas that year. Funny too, mom hadn’t been gone for a week and they moved into my parents house. Regardless, the story continued but that’s for another day and some adult beverages. Needless to say, my family farm was lost to me and my good sister but I hope my oldest sister and her “man” enjoy it.

The memory and story of Jackpot will live in my heart and mind until I leave this place. That story has been told many times to friends as it’s almost a bitter sweet story but it’s true. I wish things had been different and I could have passed that farm on to my son, his son and so on like it had been from my GG Grandfather. You know what they say, “it is what it is!” I know my dad was with me that day I took jackpot and I joke and tell people that my dad led him to me going “here, that’s for the hard work and dedication!” I hope you enjoyed my story.

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Oh I failed to mention. We think jackpot was actually smaller than the first year we had a pic of him but he did grow a drop tine. Also, that deer would have been top 3 in the state of Kentucky that year!
 
Nice buck. Great story and well told. Tragic you and your sister lost the farm.
 
My very first kudu bull, shot 40 years ago. I was hunting on a farm in South Africa, not very far from the border with Botswana. The only person with me was a young farm labourer who knew the area like the back of his hand. We stalked and were able to shoot the bull at close range, it was an unforgettable experience. The rifle was a Heym .375 H &H.
 
Nice buck. Great story and well told. Tragic you and your sister lost the farm.
Three great memories; 1. My largest whitetail using my Black Widow recurve bow with my own made wooden arrows. 2. My first DG animal with @TSALA HUNTING SAFARIS
 
My first man eating Royal Bengal tiger. The hide was gifted by the President to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II during her state visit in 1983. She wasn’t just another VIP that I met & accommodated during my career. She was a very likable, laid back & approachable person face to face.

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My first man eating Royal Bengal tiger. The hide was gifted by the President to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II during her state visit in 1983. She wasn’t just another VIP that I met & accommodated during my career. She was a very likable, laid back & approachable person face to face.

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@Hunter-Habib: Ok Now that’s just Not fair and You (and Jim Corbett) won’t be allowed to play anymore !! I mean really, How could you ever lose here - maybe only Tarzan killing a Lion with his knife?? Of course Tarzan was only a movie and You are the Real-Deal…. Good photos too …thanks
 
@Hunter-Habib: Ok Now that’s just Not fair and You (and Jim Corbett) won’t be allowed to play anymore !! I mean really, How could you ever lose here - maybe only Tarzan killing a Lion with his knife?? Of course Tarzan was only a movie and You are the Real-Deal…. Good photos too …thanks
@HankBuck

I feel so embarrassed to be compared to the likes of the great Jim Corbett (my childhood hero). But thank you so much. It wouldn’t have been even remotely possible without the exceptional logistical support of the Sundarbans Department of Forests. My men made a buffoon like me succeed against all odds.

Same for my second & third man eater.
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There have been several over the years, but perhaps a tiny one was my most challenging.

I was determined to take a blue duiker that was clearly a male, with a rifle, and do so while stalking him on my hind legs. Over three safaris in two two different countries, I allocated quite a few days to that effort. On one hunt in Mozambique we spent an afternoon removing every leaf from a trail for about a kilometer through thick forest so we could ghost it at dawn. Never saw a hint of one though the trail was covered in tiny prints mocking us.

Finally managed to take the perfect bull on Takeri in Zambia with @spike.t and @PeteG late one afternoon with my .275.
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@Hunter-Habib: Ok Now that’s just Not fair and You (and Jim Corbett) won’t be allowed to play anymore !! I mean really, How could you ever lose here - maybe only Tarzan killing a Lion with his knife?? Of course Tarzan was only a movie and You are the Real-Deal…. Good photos too …thanks
He is truly an exceptional member!!!
 
Very fine bull.
My first whitetail buck. I was 10 years old and used to sit in the apple orchard after school hoping to get a partridge or two. I hunted with them my old Mossberg 22lr. This one afternoon I was there as usual when I heard something that definitely was not a bird. Momentarily I saw this old buck come into the orchard. For a minute I didn't know what to, just sat there watching him.
Well, now, this is something else. Could I take him with a 22? Maybe, maybe not. Let's see what happens if I try a headshot like a partridge. OK, I waited until he put his head down for an apple and I gave him two right in the ear. WOW!! Dead before he hit the ground! I held the rifle on him for a minute to be sure he didn't jump up and run off but he never twitched.
My first big game kill and I was thrilled beyond belief. I built a plaque and mounted the antlers and have them on my wall today.
 
First bighorn on my own ,looked on google earth for area that seemed like it might hold sheep, my brother and I packed what we thought we would need to make it . Bought general tag , walked in 25km to where we decided to put camp. Bushwhacked up mountain portion on old game trails( not another hunter anywhere near us as area was horrible to get too)Took us two days to get to tree line, saw no sheep those days. 4th day decided to hike overtop of mountain into valley beyond, sat there all day glassing for sheep, finally looked up as we were packing up to leave and spotted 7 rams bedded there the whole time.There was one whopper ram ( in retrospect should have shot the whopper)that only had one horn and this just legal ram . Had to shoot about 350 plus yards, missed first two shots. Once he was down , we had to debone him and pack him over mountain back to camp in mostly darkness. Unfamiliar terrain and some hairy moments , both myself and brothers pants shredded from sliding down rocks and I lost my canteen on belt. Would have slid right by camp if I hadn’t hung a glow stick in a tree before we left in morning . Then 25 km pack out next two days . Eating as much sheep as we could to reduce the weight. Great trip with my Brother , he stuck with me through some really nasty stuff , and all he did was video me , didn’t care if he shot , was in it for the adventure.
 

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First bighorn on my own ,looked on google earth for area that seemed like it might hold sheep, my brother and I packed what we thought we would need to make it . Bought general tag , walked in 25km to where we decided to put camp. Bushwhacked up mountain portion on old game trails( not another hunter anywhere near us as area was horrible to get too)Took us two days to get to tree line, saw no sheep those days. 4th day decided to hike overtop of mountain into valley beyond, sat there all day glassing for sheep, finally looked up as we were packing up to leave and spotted 7 rams bedded there the whole time.There was one whopper ram ( in retrospect should have shot the whopper)that only had one horn and this just legal ram . Had to shoot about 350 plus yards, missed first two shots. Once he was down , we had to debone him and pack him over mountain back to camp in mostly darkness. Unfamiliar terrain and some hairy moments , both myself and brothers pants shredded from sliding down rocks and I lost my canteen on belt. Would have slid right by camp if I hadn’t hung a glow stick in a tree before we left in morning . Then 25 km pack out next two days . Eating as much sheep as we could to reduce the weight. Great trip with my Brother , he stuck with me through some really nasty stuff , and all he did was video me , didn’t care if he shot , was in it for the adventure.
@Travis Johnson: Your overall adventure is something any Man would be proud of and the fact you got a Sheep/Ram On-Your-Own is very impressive. Just hiking in there (unknown area, using Map, 25km ie: 15 miles - very determined and very physical. I consider myself a Hunter and any animal I took On-My-Own means more to Me then any “Guided Trophy” —-But I don’t know that I could’ve done that even in my 20’s-30s? Physically Yes but the ability to maintain your focus & goal after all that effort & knowing your odds were Low….that’s a level of “Drive” few Hunters have.
Congratulations, You will ALWAYS remember that Hunt !
NOTE: placing that “Glow Stick” before you headed out from Camp = Brilliant !!
 
Very very unimpactful in terms of size and/or stature but:

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Folks from outside the NE that are avid waterfowlers look at a black duck, alone, as a trophy. Folks in that group look at a banded one as potentially one of the Holy Grail's of North American waterfowling. We see a ton of black ducks here. In fact, if you want to shoot a black duck, NJ and NY are basically like Texas for wigeon, California for pintails, Arkansas/Missouri for mallards, etc.

I can't say I did much other than putting in the hard work to be there and not missing on that particular shot. Took me 10 years to finally shoot a band.

It was taken in one of the most storied gunning marshes in the USA. Gunning River in Barnegat Bay NJ. It was a 10+ year old duck that was banded literally, 5 miles from where I shot it.
 
Very very unimpactful in terms of size and/or stature but:

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Folks from outside the NE that are avid waterfowlers look at a black duck, alone, as a trophy. Folks in that group look at a banded one as potentially one of the Holy Grail's of North American waterfowling. We see a ton of black ducks here. In fact, if you want to shoot a black duck, NJ and NY are basically like Texas for wigeon, California for pintails, Arkansas/Missouri for mallards, etc.

I can't say I did much other than putting in the hard work to be there and not missing on that particular shot. Took me 10 years to finally shoot a band.

It was taken in one of the most storied gunning marshes in the USA. Gunning River in Barnegat Bay NJ. It was a 10+ year old duck that was banded literally, 5 miles from where I shot it.
I’ve duck hunted for years and have never taken a banded bird. My bird holy grail here in Ky would be a banded pintail!
 

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