In which the Pine Marten picks on Asiatic deer species.

Part 1: Chinese water deer

After eight months of anticipation, during which quite a lot of important things happened, I have a Chinese water deer in my sights, and they’re weaving all over the place. Thirty seconds before, I had been chatting with Sikamalc, having set forth from the B&B five minutes earlier, we’d just turned the corner of a field near a large haystack, when he stopped and urgently whispered “There! Use the haystack!”. It was like being awoken suddenly, I hadn’t really mentally started stalking yet, but I put up my rifle, put the deer about 100 metres away in the crosshairs. Unfortunately the sudden adrenaline rush meant that my reticule was doing figures-of-eight all over the deer’s body. I couldn’t stabilise it, and I didn’t want to risk injuring it, and then it moved off, so I stood down. This turned out to be a mistake, because it only sauntered off a few metres. “It’s stopped again” says Malc. What? But I haven’t come down from the previous excitement yet! OK, back up on the haystack. This time I try to control my breathing, it’s better than last time, I hold the crosshairs on the chest, squeeze the trigger, squeeze, squeeze, and the deer’s off again, before I had time to squeeze hard enough to let the shot off. Perhaps a case of exercising a little too much trigger control there. All of that took about a minute and a half. “You’re going to have to be faster than that, mate. That could be your chance for the morning”. Yes, I know, damn it. Now in my mind I’m falling back on my usual silver linings: I’ve seen my first Chinese water deer. I didn’t risk wounding it. And then I think that it’s not even 8am, the sun’s very low in the sky, and we haven’t finished yet.

We move off to another area. At the crest of a hill we stop to glass the area to the right. After a few minutes, from about a kilometre away, we (I mean Malc of course, but I’m going to say “we” for stylistic purposes) spot four deer grazing on a field near the end a hedge that stops halfway through it. They’re just under the top of a ridge, presumably a little sheltered from the wind, so we head off around the area to arrive downwind of them, with a possible hidden approach path. This is different from before, there are no surprises here. We know exactly where the deer are, that they’re out in the open with little cover, and that we will stick out like sore thumbs if we peep over a ridge. We walk to the edge of the first field, stop to glass, but can’t see them. We can see the hedge though, on the other side of which they should be. They probably can’t see us, so he move, increasingly stooped, across the next field until we enter a shallow dip. Now we can’t see them, we think they’re over the crest of the ridge, through the hedge, but we don’t know, so we’re low, slow, quiet. My pulse is racing now, but it’s not panic like before. This is just alertness, concentrating on not ruining this opportunity. Near the end of the gully, we can just peep over the ridge to glass the next field. There’s one deer a long way off, in a totally different place, and we think they’ve moved since we first saw them. We move up the slope towards the hedge, and suddenly we’re proved wrong: there they are, still grazing peacefully, through the hedge, down the other side of the slope. We pull back, back up the gully, meaning to approach them upslope from our side of the hedge. At this point, Malc says “I’ll leave you to it”. I’ve never done this before, but I’m not particularly worried about my ability to move stealthily. So off I go, slower and slower, lower and lower, keeping below the skyline. I can glimpse the deer as they move in and out of holes in the hedge. Then I’m on all fours. Just before the ditch in front of the hedge, I bring my binoculars up, but I realise that I can’t tell whether these are bucks or does, and that my selection criterion now is whether I can find a clear line of sight through the hedge. So I ditch the binoculars and start to move sideways towards a likely-looking hole in the hedge. There are a couple of twigs across the left-hand hole, but the right-hand one is clear, so the deer in that window is the target. I’m lying on my front, rifle shouldered, I control my breathing, this should be a straightforward shot, perhaps eighty metres away. This time, it’s a relaxed shot from a good rest, so I set the trigger to avoid a repeat of earlier events. Then I just sort of imagine firing and bang! The deer goes down on the spot. I reload, watch for signs of movement through the scope, there are a few twitches. “It’s not going anywhere! You can go and see what you got” says Malc.

The feeling of relief is immense, then pride starts to creep in. It’s last year’s doe, a beautiful little animal. I look around for something to give it a “last bite”, but there’s just nothing around yet in February. Malc gives me a hug, which can’t be part of the usual service. My first Chinese water deer. But with hindsight, that’s not the point: I owe Malc my first real stalk on my own. I have photos, a deer, and I’ll look at the pictures, and eat the deer. But what will remain will be the knowledge that I know I can do this. So Malc, my heartfelt thanks for that, because that's something that I can keep.

View attachment 38417

(Part 2 to follow)
 
Well done PM that’s a lovely doe and a nicely placed shot that demonstrates perfect breathing and trigger control.

I reckon you deliberately let that first beast go so you wouldn’t be back on the Tube before full sun up!

Cheers

K
 
Well done PM and thank you for sharing with the write-up. Yum!

You're welcome. I'm not done yet either! As regards cooking, the CWD meat looks very much like veal both in colour and texture, I'm going to attempt a "blanquette de veau a l'ancienne", except that it will be a "blanquette d'hydropote a l'ancienne" instead. If that turns out as good as I think it will, I shall share the recipe with the hungry Masses. It will need some extra fat in it though so maybe a pig's trotter, something like that.
 
Malcs giving out hugs now eh ?!

Nice going pine marten , good result , and a personal goal for me too .
 
Part 2: Muntjac

With the pressure off following the successful morning, the plan was for me to sit up in a highseat in the evening to see if I could add a muntjac to the bag. We walked to the highseat along the edges of some fields, noting CWD and badger sign along the way and stopping to glass regularly. Plenty of hares around, but no deer. At the entrance to the last field, Sikamalc pointed me to the highseat, explained that any muntjac were likely to emerge for the undergrowth or the dried maize around to graze on the field, and highlighted that there was a road down one side of the field. Then he headed off with Todd the dog, leaving me to it. As I walked along the left hand edge of the field, I could see that this appeared to be a muntjac motorway, the ground densely patterned with tiny slots. However this would also be behind my right shoulder if I had to take a shot from the highseat, which would be awkard. It was quite a high seat, attached to big oak tree, with some scrubby wood behind me and surveying the whole field, roughly along the long side of a rectangle.

First of all, I tried to gauge the distances, to work out reasonable shot distances. To this end, I employed the services of the five hares that kept hoping into the field and out from the bordering scrub. I thought that if I could hold the sights reliably over a hare, I could hit a muntjac. I also reflected that hares are one of the most coveted game species in France, and that no-one seems that fussed about them in the UK. I took a few close-up snaps of the hares just to wind up my brother-in-law in France. For the next forty five minutes, I watched, observed, glassed, and drifted off into the odd reverie. I knew that any deer would probably just appear as if by magic with no warning signs. Sure enough, suddenly, there was a russet shape in the furthest corner of the field, in front and to my left. The adrenaline rush started as I raised my binoculars. I could see the black stripes on the face, it was definitely a muntjac, not a CWD, but I couldn’t tell whether it was a buck or a doe. Having already established that I the day had been a success, there was no pressure so I had earlier on decided to wait for a buck, as I’d never shot one before. I twisted the eyepiece on my scope up to its’ maximum of twelve to check whether this was a buck or a doe (I know that you shouldn’t use the scope instead of binoculars, but the seven magnification wasn’t cutting it), and it was a buck!

So now we had a bigger question. I’d had to crank up the magnification as far as I could to establish the deer’s sex. Was it actually at a shootable distance? I estimated the range to be something like 150-200m, as long a shot as possible in this field. I worried that I could make a mess of this, ruin the day with a wounded deer. I even considered pretending not to have seen it. After all, there’s no shame in not having seen any deer. I know my way around returning empty-handed perfectly, there’s no risk there, and no-one would think any the less of me. But that wasn’t really an option, because I HAD seen the buck. So could I shoot it? I aimed at its’ shoulder, and thanks to the crossbar on the seat, I had a stable rest. I established that I was capable of holding the crosshairs perfectly stable on the buck, and that apart from a lack of confidence, there should be every chance that I could do this. So I set the trigger (again, that set trigger that I hadn’t used before), concentrated, and bang! The muntjac was poleaxed.

After waiting to make sure it was dead, I climbed down, and paced the distance out to the little deer. Based on that, I make it about a 180m shot, which is is pretty decent. Weirdly, I couldn’t find an exit wound, but the Federal Fusion bullet had entered high on the shoulder, and the opposite front leg just hung limply. But no corresponding hole. It turned out later than the bullet had damaged the heart and lungs, but mostly it had pulverised the section of the spine between the shoulder blades. It must have stayed inside and been discarded with the gralloch.

I texted Malc to say I had a muntjac buck, slung my rifle across my back, and set off back through the fields, where he was waiting. It was the first time that I’d brought back a deer on my own. Which is a special moment.

(On one of the photos you can just about make out the seat attached the second big tree in the background, just left of centre)

View attachment 38429View attachment 38430
 
Thanks JCS. I'm afraid that I didn't exactly do as I said I would in another thread. Actually I shot the smallest deer I could find at the longest range I could manage. Could be that my rifle is fine after all!

PM. That's part of the challenge, it's not 100% predictable. I look forward to reading of your next success next Monday. Good luck. JCS
 
Could be that my rifle is fine after all!


Nothing wrong with the rifle PM but were I a member of the set trigger Jury we wouldn’t be long in returning a verdict based on:

1. Before I had time to squeeze hard enough to let the shot off.......”
2. “This time, it’s a relaxed shot from a good rest, so I set the trigger to avoid a repeat of earlier events.”

My point being that although in the context of your first opportunity it might be said your foresight in not setting the trigger demonstrates the benefit of the option when highly pressured, I continue to assert that a crisp and repeatable release pressure that you may come to know intimately is a far better option for both Novice and Professional stalker.

Cheers

K
 
Last edited:
Yes, I'm going to have a look at whether there's a screw to adjust the trigger pull. On the other hand, I've never had this problem before, and I think it's more due to being hesitant about the shot than anything else.
 
Back
Top