Last Antelope...Last Hunt

On August 25, 1959 I shot my first big game animal on my 12th birthday, a small Nevada high desert pronghorn antelope. On August 22, 2025 I ended my long and rewarding life as a hunter within a mile of that first antelope kill. I was fortunate to draw a resident antelope tag for the same unit. Between those hunts I took a dozen or so more, the years I drew tags. They are limited, and the demand has increased far faster than our herd increased. The State's population grew from 200,000 to 3,000,000 over the years, mostly in the Las Vegas metro area. During that time waiting periods for successful tag holders went from one year wait to become eligable to apply to five years, and now back to three years. A realistic chance to be successful in the draw requires about 5-7 preferential points. Points are accumulated by applying each season, one point for each unsuccessful draw per year. I had five and drew my "spot" in the NW corner of Nevada, an area I have guided numerous friends and family over the years and went antelope hunting on average of two out of three years as guide or sometimes as the hunter.

The country we hunt is rugged low plateau terrain at a 5,500 foot elevation, all volcanic and rocky high desert. A sturdy 4X4 truck to get there, several extra gas cans, plenty of water, enough food for a week if necessary, decent optics, an "old friend" rifle you're familiar with that shoots reasonably flat, tough boots, and a taste for alkali dust are all requirements. I love the deselation; it's my home.

My grandson, deer hunting.
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Grandson a bit younger with his first antelope at The Spot:
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It has been common that we tag-out and are back at camp by 10:00 a.m. on opening day, but there have been some long tough hunts over the years. This year I had three rifles sighted in with careful handloads developed for each. They were my a new-to-me Weatherby Vanguard KUIU Vias camo 6.5-300 Weatherby, a light and easy to carry Kimber hunter 6.5 Creedmoor, and my old friend custom LW FN 98 30-06 with a 22" light weight barrel, a tuned Timney trigger, Brown Preciaion Pound'r stock, and wearing a simple Leupold VariX II 2-7 scope. The '06 has been with me to most far west US states, Alaska, Canada, and three African countries. I know it well. It was my gun of choice opening morning.

An hour before sunrise we loaded the three of us in my two-seater Polaris RZR and headed up the butte road through 8" deep alkali and over volcanic boulders to our spot where we glass at first light. we were seeing some small herds several miles away in three directions when we spotted a decent old buck running with a doe. My son, grandson, and I looked for a way to put the sneek on the buck, but there was 700-900 yards of open valley with no cover between the speed-goats and us. We walked to the last cover, a big old juniter tree with big boulders beneith. I ranged the buck at 700 yards, a shot I am not comfortable with. But, there was no wind, the buck was feeding slowly, I had my trajectory tables in hand for the '06 and load, so I figured what the heck. I'm old, crippled, and have neuropathy that has me numb from mid-thighs on down, so I rested the rifle by holding the scope against a low juniper branch just above, estimated a 9' hold over and squeezed. The old buck folded DRT, fracturing his lower jaw. His left curl was broken off from sparring with other bucks. It gives him character. We were able to get the RZR within 1 1/2 mile from him, an easy carry. We were back in camp right at 10:00.

It was a fitting end to my lifetime of big game hunting; it ender where and how it started 65 years before.

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Where did the bullet hit?

I expect you may get some criticism, however, clearly effective on this occasion.

A good story and shame you are giving it up. Bet your grandson will remember that one :)
 
Well done sir! You have more tree's than where I take pronghorn in Wyoming.
The smattering of junipers in this area helps keep the animals around in the August heat. There is also is a long sagehen leck with open grassy muddy areas that the antelope use as a wallow in hot weather. The next trees were 700 yards away, where the two were shaded and feeding. I have surprised antelope as close as 20 yards in the more treed places, surprised us both.

The shot hit on the right side of the neck, breaking it. The animal started a turn to his right as I shot, aiming at a heart/lung shot. It was the longest shot I've ever attempted on a game animal with this rifle I have hunted with for forty years, but I have taken many coyotes with it at similar distances. I doubt I would take the shot again. I ordinarily limit my shots to around 350 yards, but conditions couldn't have been better for a longer shot that morning.

I gave the rifle to my grandson that morning; he'll let me borrow it. ;)
 
LLoyd90:

My grandson will remember the hunt for a long time for sure. He wanted to have the old goat mounted and went to a local taxidermist who is famous for pronghorn mounts. He's having a pedestal mount done for his living room.

artschool:

For a guy who never made more than a very average income and was not born wealthy I consider myself most fortunate. I managed safaris in RSA, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and in Masailand Tanzania, as well as hunts in most of the USA far west, and some mid-western states and Alaska. It's no wonder that I now live under a bridge and eat fish heads and rice. ;)

Kevin and grandson Owen are a true blessing. Owen at 21 is a far better hunter than I was at my best, and I was pretty good. Owen is the most ethical sportsman I know, also. He does the right thing, even when nobody is looking, much like the membership of this fine forum.
 
Ha, my first and last antelope hunt was near Roswell NM 1993 with a Contender pistol in .35 Rem, it is hanging on the wall in my loading room. It came back as my checked baggage mounted to a square of plywood inside a recycled tv delivery carton which was quite robust.
 
I certainly dont want an argument - but shooting at ranges like this is not hunting - That animal was very close to being lost with horrific injuries - Not the way we do it .
 
I certainly dont want an argument - but shooting at ranges like this is not hunting - That animal was very close to being lost with horrific injuries - Not the way we do it .
Same as pricking a high pheasant and not picking it.
Fortunately this fellas last hooray ended well and memories his son and grandson can cherish.
Excellent write up and we'll done.
 
I certainly dont want an argument - but shooting at ranges like this is not hunting - That animal was very close to being lost with horrific injuries - Not the way we do it .
It isn't the way we do it but we don't hunt pronghorn on wide open plains in the UK, because we have neither. I'm afraid you have to assume that a hunter of his experience made a judgement that he was happy with.
 
It isn't the way we do it but we don't hunt pronghorn on wide open plains in the UK, because we have neither. I'm afraid you have to assume that a hunter of his experience made a judgement that he was happy with.
As i say - not looking for an argument - but if you read the write up im not so sure - Then look at the picture
 
Same as pricking a high pheasant and not picking it.
Fortunately this fellas last hooray ended well and memories his son and grandson can cherish.
Excellent write up and we'll done.

High or extreme ?
No fan of extreme either tbh
 
It isn't the way we do it but we don't hunt pronghorn on wide open plains in the UK, because we have neither. I'm afraid you have to assume that a hunter of his experience made a judgement that he was happy with.

Ranged the shot at 700 - a shot not comfortable with - but thought what the heck .......

Not my idea of our way of life tbh
 
I certainly dont want an argument - but shooting at ranges like this is not hunting - That animal was very close to being lost with horrific injuries - Not the way we do it .
You have never hunted pronghorn and know little of the terrain and habits. Your little island is completely different from our vastness, and sometimes longer shots are the only shots. I'm competent out to 1,000 yards with that rifle, but I do agree with you that these long shots too often result in unrecovered wounded animals. My comfort level has lessened as I got older. I would not have made the shot again.

In the USA the new trend is in long range hunting, and I don't agree with it. Far too many less competent Nimrods watch all the tv shows touting the method and specialized equipment, as pure marketing. They have few if any shooting skills, honed over decades of practice and experience. And, BTW, at age twenty my job was to knock a Russian engineering Major off the Cuban missal platform being built at a long distance. I trained for seven months, but it became moot, as the Russians removed the almost completed structure. The Cold War was hotter than many realize.

So, in essence, I agree with you. ;)
 
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