Never too old to commit a Sika 'schoolboy' error...

You will, I hope, excuse me, if I fall asleep whilst knocking out this latest drivel; I am rather sleepy - I will of course excuse you for falling asleep whilst trying to read it.

Having just arrived home from my latest Trek 'North of the Wall', the odometer on the jalopy, tells me I have driven just shy of 1,500 miles. My old bones tell me it is much further.

Three days on the Sika Stags; with another two blokes who are old enough to know better. They may be a tad older than me; it turns out they may also be wiser than me (not difficult), they flew up.

I am not new to Sika, neither am I new to the Highlands. They are (in my view) the hardest of the "Six' to stalk. They live (when not in Dorset), in the deepest darkest forests, on the hardest, shittiest, ankle-snapping, water-logged ground known to man. It short, it is a stupid way to spend any of your limited time on this earth.

Knowing all that.

Knowing all that, let me tell you what is stupid.

What is stupid is to take a rifle (.375 Sako 75 as it happens), that is wearing a scope that is manifestly unsuitable for stalking in the forest, in the gloaming, in the dark, in the dusk, in the pitch-fcuking black. Now that is stupid. Ask me how I know.😖


Doing so, makes a difficult job almost impossible. I will not bore you (too late I hear you mutter), but I missed the chance of a good Stag at the last knockings on my first outing, because I could not make it out in the scope. Stupid man. Stupid schoolboy error. No one else to blame, I just have to own it.

So why do I keep going back?




There is a sky in the Highlands that is just stunning.

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I love to be out when it is still dark, just so I can see the sun rise...

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Crashing, stumbling and falling through the forests, you will come across a 'wallow'. These are always worth the investment of a wee bit of time.



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Don't forget your 'Sika Calls'. Guaranteed to bring in the biggest Sika Stag at the gallop.🤥

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If using the 'Nordic Sika', don't forget to extend the pipe section. Failure to do so, results in the mating call of a Mallard Duck, and will only attract water fowl. Again, ask me for details!

Yomping to the highest part of the forest, leaves me heaving for breath, my calves scratched to buggery (yes I also forgot my gaiters), and my spit tasting of iron. I have just enough about me, to see that in cresting the skyline, I have 'spooked' two Sika off the top plateau. Bugger.

I console myself with a petrol station bought pastie, and settle into an 'overwatch' position with a good view of a clearing. It is a beautiful spot, but unvisited by any deer that morning.

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It is a pattern that will repeat itself over the coming days...


Stalking is not always just about the deer.

Just as well really...
 
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...in the deepest darkest forests, on the hardest, shittiest, ankle-snapping, water-logged ground know to man...
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After three days, I am asking myself, "Why bother?"

It is rhetorical. I will always 'bother'.

Then on the drive back to my lodgings, I see the most beautiful rainbow.
It gives a man hope.

And this man needs all of that he can get...


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I wholeheartedly agree with the .375 choice. Scotland is the only place I don’t smash my nose or cut my eye with mine.
I am going to in November and I have taken steps to prepare but will still be breathing through my hoop at some stage. I have Sika near home so will be putting the off with some calls at the weekend.
 
Scotland is the only place I don’t smash my nose or cut my eye with mine.
@Jagdmatch

Having not fired the damn thing on this trip, I am unable to comment...

Without sounding like your Dad; do make sure your rifle is wearing an appropriate 'light gathering' (and proper magnification) scope.

Not doing so, meant that I shot myself in the foot - which, ironically, was the only shot I got off...

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A scope with slightly less light gathering, prevents you from making the school boy error of shooting a sika stag at very last light as it will then stop you having to spent the next three hours trying to find after its crashed into a steep thick Scottish forest plantation where you can only move by crawling on your hands and knees.

It will have gone far enough in that no chance of dragging it up hill, but you have to take it down the whole hillside.

In about five years time when forest harvester comes through the will find your rifle, and your remains locked in battle with the remains of that Sika Stag.

That stag will remain with you in your minds eye for a very long time.
 
Taking the .375 I guess is in the hope you don't have the scenario in Heym's post.
@Dickie

That is exactly why I took it.

Sika Stags in the rut can be feisty; and they do not have to 'run' far back into the timber, to become invisible.

The error I made, was not swapping out the scope - which is perfect for Africa, but rather less so for Scotland in winter...:rolleyes:
 
@Dickie

That is exactly why I took it.

Sika Stags in the rut can be feisty; and they do not have to 'run' far back into the timber, to become invisible.

The error I made, was not swapping out the scope - which is perfect for Africa, but rather less so for Scotland in winter...:rolleyes:
I had a 2.5-10x56 zenith on mine fairly light covers everything but never got the chance of any UK stalking due to the views of .........
 
@dunwater

Saturday.

True story.
Ohh lovely.
If you’ll accept a small bit of advice from a long time sika aficionado?
Pray for a temperature drop to kick them off into full rut activity.
The stags you want generally only come out at very last knocking and they’re back in the clag by first glimmer.
You can call them in, but you’ll probably need to into the thick stuff after them or set up right on the edge of it. If he has a chance of sneaking around and cutting your wind, he’ll do it. As well as your stag call, use a buttolo to simulate a fawn getting distressed when the stag chases Its mother. If you get a responding call and then things go quiet, stand by to repel boarders. Often he’ll already have snuck in, seen or smelled you and faded away before you register that you had one.
Use google to locate small clearings in the trees, if you can get right into his bedroom do it, but it’s the rut, you can find one anywhere at anytime. A stag with a harem probably won’t leave it to pick a fight, but theres often satellite stags around and they will come in on a string. When you get your chance, pin it or neck it, for whatever reason they don’t leave much of a blood trail and they’re preprogrammed to bolt into the heaviest thicket stage Sitka they can find and die in a drain.
Best of luck, I’ll be out myself this week, calling in stags is the cream of the stalking season.
 
Friend of mine missed a cracking sika stag tonight.

Just one of those things.


I saw a sika stag hit with a .375 plumb in the chest , he took off like he was after the last bus.

They have been whistling for a while but really started last night with the frost.

The reds started shouting too.


Loved your write up.
 
@Dickie

That is exactly why I took it.

Sika Stags in the rut can be feisty; and they do not have to 'run' far back into the timber, to become invisible.

The error I made, was not swapping out the scope - which is perfect for Africa, but rather less so for Scotland in winter...:rolleyes:
what a great write up, - thank you! :) it almost feels like having been right there along with you, buggering of sikas and getting frustrated by a scope that just lacks that last bit of light ,D haha. but also in amazing nature :cool:

But what scope did you bring on your 375 ? .-)
 
But what scope did you bring on your 375 ?

@Scipio

Diavani Z 1.5-6 x 42MC

As previously mentioned, this scope is absolutely fine for other applications, just not Sika in Highland Forests.

The Sika Stag (which I could not make out in the scope) was against the tree line; just in front of him was a Hind, which was ranged at 140 yards (so I would estimate the invisible Stag to be at 160 yards).

That Hind (which I could make out because she was both 20 yards nearer, and outlined with grass) looked very small through that scope, and I would not have been comfortable taking the shot.

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Apropos that Hind.

After the Stag buggered off, the Hind kept feeding. She eventually became suspicious that something was amiss, and slowly came in to investigate.

I watched with unfettered joy, as she made her way in to about 20 yards of me; before she 'clocked' me, and bounced off and away.




Speaking of 'unfettered joy'.

On one of the outings, as I arose from a prone position and headed on out, the little voice in my head (that little voice is always speaking to me) told me something was not quite right.

I felt 'lighter'.

I felt 'unbalanced'.

I searched myself and quickly discovered something was amiss.

Retraced my route, in hope over expectation. and the Goddess of hunting smiled down on me...

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And there lying in the heather... 🤗
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