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2013 Pronghorn Hunt – Juniper Unit – Oregon

ACE’s 2013 Pronghorn Hunt

on the

Westside in the Juniper Unit

This is an interesting hunt that turned out to be a successful hunt for Ace who was hunting with his father.  This is not the first time I have had similar accounts on hunting Lopes.  Lopes can be crafty and escape a great stalk.  A hunter can misjudge the distance as Antelope – Pronghorns are smaller than deer, so it can be difficult to judge the distance.    WELL DONE ACE!

Ace with his 2013 Pronghorn from the Juniper Hunt Unit in Oregon.  A well earned dandy Lope!
Ace with his 2013 Pronghorn from the Juniper Hunt Unit in Oregon. A well earned dandy Lope!

Dear – Frank

We got there on Friday and scouted til dark.  We made the big loop and only saw 5 animals. Got up the next morning just before light and went out.  It was too dark to see when we left camp so we waited on one of the roads leading to a water hole.  I looked over and saw two bucks about 400 yards to our left and Ace shot at one that had a good size rack.  Ace missed with 3 shots and they ran off.

The GPS was a Magellan and I couldn’t figure out the software or the unit and so I don’t have the coordinates and we ended up using the BLM maps we got in Burns on Friday.  I have always used Garmin’s but a friend lent me this Magellan.  The range finder was kind of useless because laying on your belly it gave bad readings and if you stand up the antelope can see you for a long ways.

We went down the road a ways more and saw some of to the right.  He crawled out to get a shot and got a shot in a sitting position but also missed.  He thinks he was shooting under the animals because the range finder was not accurate in the sagebrush.  Then we saw at least one hundred (100) Antelope come over the ridge, but saw three (3) hunters and away they went from us.

As Ace was coming back to the rig we saw one male and six does about eight hundred (800) yards out but no way to get to them.  We drove out the main road and headed North we went out another road and saw two groups out on a ridge.  Ace crawled out to the gully and come down into it till he thought he was under them.  I was watching at the rig with the spotting scope and he came up right under them with my guidance (hand signals).  When he got to the top of the ridge they spooked and he got of a shot but missed again.

He decided that he needed to fire his gun when he was in the prone position because offhand and sitting he shook too much.  We went out to the main road again and headed North and took a road East.  He saw some out at a distance and crawled out to a point where he could get a shot and not be seen by the antelope.  He took a shot and dropped this antelope.  I drove out in the sagebrush to where the buck dropped, about 3/4 mile from the road.  We field dressed it and quarterd it out right there and put the meat in the huge cooler on ice.

A few things we learned.  Its hard to sneak up on Antelope on flat ground.  Range finders are useless in flat ground with sagebrush.  Knee pads are essential for crawling up on Antelope on your belly.  You need to be able to cool the meat down fast.  Walkie talkies are a great thing to have for communication. Its hard work to get a good shot at an Antelope.  Thanks for the GPS points but we hunted on the west side of the unit and your points were for the east side mostly.

We appreciate your thoughtfulness. – Dennis and Ace Clark