Always cracks me up on those TV shows when they say, "we shot him a little back, so when in doubt, back out. we'll let him lay for 6 to 8 hours." HAHA. Not in Texas, baby. Buddy of mine shot one, went to the truck. Took 10 minutes. When he got back, buzzards were already on him.
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A couple seasons ago, I was hunting on a large ranch SW of Carrizo Springs. I shot an old cull buck, gave him about 15 minutes and tracked and found him about 40-50 yards behind the feeder. I sat around him for about ten minutes and my buddy called to tell me he was about 5 minutes out. I left my bow next to the deer and walked back to the feeder to meet them. I had not been gone from the deers side for more than 5-10 minutes and when we got back we ran off two coyotes who had eaten the rear out of the deer. Insane how fast they work and how bold they can be.
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A few years ago in Dilley I shot a deer out of one window (rifle), moved to another window to try to get another one, then looked at the first deer and it already had a Cara-Cara on it pecking out eyes. We are talking less than 30 seconds. Down there, when we bow-shoot deer we usually get out and start looking as soon as they disappear in the brush. The coyotes will be on them in just a couple minutes most of the time. Crazy.
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Ya thats why I always get a kick out of those guys saying, "we'll let him lay over night" or "we'll let him lay for a few hours and we'll go to town and eat, and come back." The other day they said, "for a gut shot deer you should always wait at least 6 to 8 hours, and even longer if you can." HAHA. In Texas they're a goner.
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At our old lease we had a resident bobcat that would find your deer within 15 minutes after you shot it (archery) if it was an evening hunt. We would blood trail the deer then start looking for the cat's eyes with our flashlights. We always left him/her a nice gut pile as its reward ha ha. More than once it already had the deer covered up with leaves and grass.
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