Welcome guest, is this your first visit? Create Account now to join.
  • Login:

Welcome to the NZ Hunting and Shooting Forums.

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed.

ZeroPak Darkness


User Tag List

+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 12 of 12
Like Tree55Likes
  • 25 Post By Ftx325
  • 17 Post By Ftx325
  • 1 Post By Trout
  • 2 Post By veitnamcam
  • 1 Post By Micky Duck
  • 1 Post By rugerman
  • 4 Post By Ftx325
  • 1 Post By Mooseman
  • 1 Post By 300wsm for life
  • 1 Post By ROKTOY
  • 1 Post By jakewire

Thread: New years wander for freezer filler

  1. #1
    Member Ftx325's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2020
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    3,121

    New years wander for freezer filler

    I took leave from work between xmas and New years and we (the family) decided to go bush for 4 days and try and find a deer for my son to bowl over as he still has had no luck. So packs full of food and usuals we walk in 4 hrs to one of our local huts.
    On arrival my lad immediately buggers off to go check his favorite spot , and the rest of us chat with a couple already at the hut and get the introductions out of the way.
    Lad arrives back couple hours later , plenty of sign although not the freshest and no animals sighted. So the missus gets taken by my daughter to her favorite spot where she got the goats last trip and they also disappear for a couple of hours , and just after they leave my son buggers off again in a different direction and I am left to babysit our gear....thanks guys....
    So come bedtime all have returned with no sightings.
    Next morning much the same.... everyone wanders off and leave me to babysit our stuff....
    Now the hut is like grand central station and by lunchtime six or seven groups and solo trampers have stopped by. Most are doing the trail from the top all the way down to the bottom of the country or just the South island section and have been on the trails for months.
    What we find most worrying is the amount of young females traveling solo . And the lack of appropriate gear being carried by some of them. There were several who we couldn't help think were rescue chopper pick-up just waiting to happen. And a large chunk of them had no plb either......
    But anyway.... so the lad and daughter dive into the bush that afternoon , I have still to go for a wander , and come back telling a story of animals sighted. They had parked up overlooking my lads favorite spot and sighted a small deer they had thought was a fallow. So the lad lines up for the shot and before he takes it a big red hind steps out .... Turns out it was her fawn that they had been lined up on. So once they realize their mistake they watch them until they disappear then returned to the hut to tell the story.
    So this is pretty much how the next few days carry on.
    At one point we are having a coffee at the hut and chatting with an older lady who is staying the night with us at the hut and I see a dark shadow moving through the bush on the hillside across from us and grab the rifle and take off in hot pursuit. Apparently the lady was cracking up as she noticed I was in my hut slippers as I took off.... unfortunately I didn't so the pursuit did not last long as I got stabbed in the foot and realized what the problem was .... Idiot springs to mind , but she said the image of me tearing off into the bush rifle in hand and fluffy grandad slippers on my feet will be with her for life and we had a good laugh over it.
    So the days go by and the only animals sighted are the hind and fawn which we ended up seeing on three separate occasions and let them be.
    On the last sighting of the pair the missus was with the lad who ended up getting seperated and the boy gets back and asks where mum is....uumm ... she's with you.
    No he says , I left her at the river on her way back here 30 minutes ago..(it's a 1min walk from river to hut) so we quickly spread out for a rescue mission and go in search of the lost mum. 10 minutes later and found her safe and happy after seeing another deer and following it but loosing it then not being able to find the river crossing point again so stopped and waited for us to come looking for her.
    So that night, new years eve, we have a couple of shots of bourbon at midnight to celebrate the new year and hit the sack.
    At 4 30 new years day I am up and out the door and into the bush alone as the family don't want to get up early.
    Ten minutes later I stalk in on a pretty little chocolate brown fallow hind. I watch her for a minute or two to make sure she is alone and take her at around 30 meters with the new tikka 308 bushpig. Yes!! Deer down on the day we were leaving, and first day of the new year and first blood for the new toy on its first trip bush. Talk about starting off the new year with a bang!!
    So gut her out and throw her on my back and start making my way out back to the hut and sleeping family and get snagged and bin it , and tear the side of my nose open on the way down.... blood pissing everywhere out of my nose back to the hut where the missus goes into panic mode and does the emergency medical thing and finally stops the bleeding. I have somehow managed to tear all the skin off the side of my nose as I fell , on a branch I guess , but luckily missed my eye . It looks really bad but not deep but takes ages for the bleeding to slow down and we actually find a blood trail from the bush to the hut and it isn't from the deer.
    So anyway....
    we hit the trail home after deciding to take the deer out whole , minus head , as when trying to bone it out got pissed off with all the sandflies and flies and wasps etc hanging around making life difficult and wanting to keep the skin. And damn that wee deer got heavy after 4 hrs travel ...
    So now we have 18 kg of fresh meat in freezer , a beautiful chocolate skin in the bucket tanning and a scab on the entire right side of my nose that will probably be a lifelong scar as a permanent reminder of the new year fallow.
    Last edited by Ftx325; 03-01-2021 at 10:51 AM.
    born to hunt - forced to work

  2. #2
    Member Ftx325's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2020
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    3,121
    Name:  IMG_20201231_064643.jpg
Views: 580
Size:  2.88 MB
    Name:  IMG_20201231_192457.jpg
Views: 550
Size:  7.42 MB
    Name:  IMG_20210101_095506.jpg
Views: 539
Size:  4.58 MB
    Name:  IMG_20210101_114538.jpg
Views: 539
Size:  4.05 MB
    born to hunt - forced to work

  3. #3
    Member
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Southern Alps
    Posts
    4,052
    Good xmas hunt,enjoy yr veni.
    Ftx325 likes this.

  4. #4
    Almost literate. veitnamcam's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    24,766
    What an awesome family adventure.
    Well done and cheers for posting.
    Steve123 and Ftx325 like this.
    "Hunting and fishing" fucking over licenced firearms owners since ages ago.

    308Win One chambering to rule them all.

  5. #5
    Member Micky Duck's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2015
    Location
    Geraldine
    Posts
    22,627
    great stuff,enjoy the venison.....dont worry about the nose scar,it will give the young pretties something to gaze at in wonder....and teenage boys trying to date your daughter something to ponder,how big was the other fella??? LOL.
    Ftx325 likes this.

  6. #6
    Member rugerman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2012
    Location
    Horowhenua
    Posts
    2,994
    Well done on the venison FTX
    I've found there is often a price to pay for success, so I'm sure the pain was eased by the venison. Well done as well on educating the walking types that us hunters are a mixed bag of normal people ( well some more "normal" than others I'm sure ). You taking off in ya slippers sounds like quite a laugh. I've done something similar, but at home and after a possum. Wet socks and a spike from a thistle was a price I was willing to pay to get that little bastard up my plum tree
    Ftx325 likes this.

  7. #7
    Member Ftx325's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2020
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    3,121
    It's definitely a mixed bag of responses when the trampers realize you are there hunting. Some of them were nice as pie until you mentioned hunting or they saw the rifles in the hut gun holder. The chatty ones would suddenly go quiet until you coaxed them into chatting again and they realized you are just a normal person and not some psycho who also enjoys the bush but with a different excuse to be there. And when asking about what animals we had shot and being told about the Hind and fawn being left I think helped them realize that most hunters aren't out to just slaughter all and sundry and they would relax. We actually started leaving a rifle on the picnic table with us so they knew there were hunters around and that also sorted the wheat from the chaff straight away as they approached the hut and was a good conversation starter too....
    And the looks on some of the faces when the missus and my daughter walked out of the bush with rifles slung on their backs was priceless....lol
    But all in all it was great to meet so many people out enjoying the bush in there own way , although after hearing how far some of them are traveling and how long they have/will be out on the trails just makes me wonder if they aren't somewhat mad/psycho themselves.....lol
    Last edited by Ftx325; 03-01-2021 at 06:40 PM.
    born to hunt - forced to work

  8. #8
    Member
    Join Date
    Jul 2014
    Location
    BOP
    Posts
    3,915
    Nice going, its good that most people accepted the fact that you were hunting. As you said we aren't all blood thirsty killers , we like them enjoy the outdoors. Enjoy the venison should be pretty good.
    Ftx325 likes this.

  9. #9
    Member
    Join Date
    Mar 2017
    Location
    Marlborough
    Posts
    1,409
    Nice job, neat little adventure.
    Ftx325 likes this.

  10. #10
    A shortish tall guy ROKTOY's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2016
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    3,284
    Hunting in slippers, brilliant.
    Its a good spot up there.
    Ftx325 likes this.

  11. #11
    Member Ftx325's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2020
    Location
    Nelson
    Posts
    3,121
    It is a nice spot there @ROKTOY. And it's getting more and more popular with hunters too. We heard at least 6 other gun shots in the time we were there , so the animal population will be starting to get jumpy I would imagine.
    We I think have been lucky as we have had success in 2 out of our last three stays there if you include the 2 goats from last stay.
    born to hunt - forced to work

  12. #12
    Caretaker - Gone But Not Forgotten jakewire's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Location
    here
    Posts
    7,477
    Great yarn mate, good to have the Family on an adventure like that.
    Ftx325 likes this.
    Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?

 

 

Similar Threads

  1. Shooting bag filler
    By bumblefoot in forum Shooting
    Replies: 19
    Last Post: 10-11-2020, 10:21 AM
  2. Freezer filler
    By piwakawaka in forum The Magazine
    Replies: 5
    Last Post: 02-08-2018, 10:42 PM
  3. Xmas freezer filler.
    By Monk in forum The Magazine
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 18-12-2017, 02:10 PM

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
Welcome to NZ Hunting and Shooting Forums! We see you're new here, or arn't logged in. Create an account, and Login for full access including our FREE BUY and SELL section Register NOW!!