At long last- the video I promised! Enjoy the live footage from our Argentina trip a few weeks ago, and let The Band serenade you all the way to South America!
Category: Travel
Argentina 2013
Well hellooooo USA! We are back from our South American adventures, and it was such an amazing trip. We hunted 2 full days and 2 half days, for a total of 6 hunts. As I mentioned before, the amount of doves was absolutely insane, and the first full day I reached my goal of 1000 doves in one day. I was able to do the same thing on the second full day as well… Wooo boy was I excited. When I knew I was getting close to the goal, I found myself doing little dances in the blind or the field, only to be greeting with laughter from my dad and Pep, our bird boy, along with some of the others on the trip. I found myself in constant awe at the quantity of doves constantly flying around us. You really need to see it for yourself to understand and appreciate it. You’ll get a taste of it in the pictures below! In total, my dad and I shot 5000 doves in 300 boxes of shells. No exaggeration- legitimate numbers. That’s some serious shooting!
Greetings from Argentina!
Well Hello!
This will be a short post, but I just wanted to give a little update on our Argentina adventure! We are half way through our hunting for the week, and boy what a week it has been. There are thousands more birds than when we came in 2010. It really is unbelievable. Unbelievable to the point where I killed 1000. TODAY. In 2 HUNTS. Seriously! That was my goal, and it has been completed! Between the two of us (me along with my dad), we shot 60 boxes of shells this morning, and around 45 this afternoon. I am so sore, but it is such a good feeling. We have hunted 3 different spots, and literally did not put the slightest dent in the birds at any location. Just as a preview, I will leave you with this few photo. Every single bird you see is a dove. And that’s just what I could get in the camera frame! Stay tuned for the big trip post! Miss you, USA!
Argentina 2010
not so boaring hunts
I promise that’s not a typo… Well, it is, but it was on purpose. A few years ago, my dad and I were able to go on an awesome hog hunt in Estill, SC. {I know what you’re thinking- we always hunt in the most obscure little towns. Yes, yes we do. Sometimes it’s the places you’ve never heard of that have the best hunts!}. This hog hunt was a two day adventure with 3 hunts total, allowing us one hog per hunt. We have been hog hunting plenty of times at our place, and while my dad has had several great successes, I had yet to bag one. You better believe I was ready for it.
We arrived in the early afternoon, just in time to get our bags into the lodge, throw on our camo, and head to the stand. Once there, we settled in for the long haul (about 4 hours in the stand… talk about fanny-fatigue). Now, as long as I am seeing/hearing things, I don’t mind being still for so long. If not, then I tend to get a little bit antsy after the first hour or two. Thankfully, after about an hour, I started hearing a strange crunching sound. It sounded almost like a deer or other large animal walking through the woods, but something was a little off with the timing of it. I could hear it loud and clear for a few minutes, then it would stop for a few beats, and it never got much closer. After nearly 15 minutes of this, I thought I was going to lose it. Dad, being a little on the aged side (love you! :)), and after years and years of shooting, had yet to hear what I kept trying to point out. In fact, he still hasn’t heard it! Finally, I came to the conclusion that it wasn’t an animal walking, but a chomping of multiple mouths. Sure enough, about 10 seconds later, my dad saw movement up ahead. “Hollis! LOOK!” Sure enough, there were 8 small hogs going to town rooting around the edge of a path looking for grub. “I TOLD YOU! I knew it,” I said to him. Aha! I’m not going crazy! After a few minutes of watching them, I got my rifle up, put one in the cross-hairs, and pulled the trigger. I could already taste his delicious little self after a long roast in my oven :). And that’s exactly what I did.
The adventure didn’t stop there. The next morning’s hunt proved to be a futile effort, but that’s how hunting goes. All we ended up seeing were turkeys- still enjoyable to watch, but my trigger finger was getting itchy. I was not going home without Mr. Big, and I could feel it in my bones that the third and final hunt was going to be a good one. In another stand bordering thick woods and an open field, we settled in that afternoon and waited. And waited. And waited. And watched close to 20 of the biggest bucks and does I have ever seen lazily munch on the grass, blissfully unaware of our existence. If only it were deer season, I could have emptied my bank account paying for the mounts of those beasts. At long last, a huge group of hogs came through the woods, and I set my sights on the biggest one. At the time, I thought it was just a huge sow since I couldn’t see any tusks, but at that point I didn’t care. She was huge, and size was what I was after. Once we did some scrambling to rearrange ourselves in the stand so I could take the shot, I lowered the boom once again. That big old thing went right down, and didn’t move again. I was so excited, I practically flew out of the stand to admire my work. That’s when we saw them. I could see my dad’s wheels turning in his mind at the very same time. There were tusks. I had gotten Mr. Big, after all! It is such a good feeling when hard hunting and patience finally pays off. Six months later, Mr. Big was up on my wall.
a quail of a tale
In anticipation of an upcoming hunt that I am super pumped about, today’s throwback thursday is from a quail hunt in 2011 in Denmark, SC. Which happens to be near Norway, SC. I kid you not. But both are close to Bamberg, in case you needed a point of reference. SO! Back to the quail hunt. We are fortunate enough to be going to the same place in a few short weeks, and I have found myself looking back through the photos and videos of the first hunt, getting more and more excited as the weekend nears.
We started the morning out bright and early in a buggy drawn by two huge mules named Adam and Steve.. (I think. Maybe giant donkeys? Or thick-coated horses?) Then it was off to the various locations of the quail throughout the property, where we would hop of out the buggy, grab/load our guns, and let the bird dogs get to pointing. Once the covey was flushed, we took our shots. And man, can those things scoot. Sporty shooting is always a lot of fun.
The cutest outhouse ever. |
Our fine steeds Adam and Steve |
After lunch, and once the bird dogs were loaded up, we went back out for round 2- this time in an awesome old jeep with bench seats built up on it. {Side note- pretty sure I need one of those jeeps… hint hint…} Canvasing the second half of the property, we went to chasing down the quail again and taking our shots.
Quite a successful hunt, I must say! It was such a beautiful day, and I really was sad when it was over. Can’t wait for round 2 in a few weeks!