Shoot!
Don’t Shoot!
Speed
Scoring Bucks On The Hoof
By Brad Herndon
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Can you quickly score
this buck? Learn Wimpy's Rule. |
I had
been on stand since before 7 a.m. on a high ridge top. Because it was a windy
day and the tree I was sitting in was small, by the time 3:30 p.m. rolled around
I was exhausted and seasick – tree sick, I guess, would be a better word.
Suddenly a buck trotted into the saddle. Shoot!
Don’t Shoot! My subconscious mind wrestled with the decision of what
to do. Boom! Shoot won out. I watched as the buck died within sight of my
stand. Excitedly I climbed down out of the tree and made my way to the mature
buck. I was disappointed when I got there because it was a very standard 3
1/2-year-old 8-point grossing about 118 inches. Not anything near what I planned
on shooting.
Of
course I’m not the only hunter who has ever experienced a severe case of
ground shrinkage on a buck. Many deer hunters have and it’s not a good
feeling. In the next few paragraphs I’ll help you find a way to control your
emotions and also share methods that will enable you to speed score bucks on the
hoof.
Scoring
Basics
I’m
not going into the aging of deer with this piece since rack size is what
normally determines most of our shooting decisions. First of all, your emotions
must be controlled in order for you to make a rational decision. In my case I
had hunted for days and was exhausted by 3:30 p.m. My subconscious mind said
“Shoot!” and I did because killing a deer meant I could get some rest. Since
then I’ve learned to control my emotions enough to make a fairly accurate
decision about a buck’s rack.
I
consciously tell myself I’m both tired and excited and that I must remain
under control, evaluating just the rack. If I have time, I determine if the
buck’s inside spread is out past his ears. On a mature
If the
deer is sideways to me, I count how many points are up. In the heat of the
moment, many deer hunters forget to do this. One point up, it’s a 6-point; two
up an 8, three points up a 10, and so on. I mentally count these points,
estimate their length to the nearest inch, add them all up and multiply by two.
I then pitch in the inside spread, double the main beam lengths, estimate mass
on one side, double this figure, then add it all again. Does this sound
confusing? You bet it is. There is a better way, one I now use.
Wimpy’s
Rule
Jerry
Stafford of southern
How
accurate is Wimpy’s Rule you may wonder? Pretty darn accurate for their area.
The only thing they change is if a buck looks a little thin, they go to 95
inches, and if he looks a little bulkier than normal they go to 105 inches.
I
have taken the scores of many local bucks and developed my own formula for the
southern
For