Tag Archives: Oregon Hunts Archery

Antelope – Pronghorn Habits & Scouting

I thought I would do some updating on this post since I did write it in 2011.  I am a firm believer in having the correct equipment and knowledge to keep legal while hunting.  The other benefit of having the following tool, is that you might be able to find a landowner that let you hunt. Most farmers have great feeling about Lopes when they grow grasses…

Everyone should have @onxhunt in Mobile and or Garmin Colored GPS with the #onxhunt chip.

The tool know where you are at all times, boundaries are important to know…

In my time I have done a great deal of scouting and researching of Pronghorn or Antelope as most call this great animal from the past in Oregon and the rest of the Western States, where they roam in hunt-able numbers.

I have been fortunate to have harvest 2 Booners.  Should have 2 more, but things happen. I have guide a few in the past and had them on Booners.  One fellow that I was really upset was told me he could shoot out to a 1000 yards, no he did not shoot at 1000 yards, but has rested shot at 200 yards on the famous Rye Grass Buck.  He missed him, hunt over and we parted ways…

2019 Thoughts: If you have time to scout even 1 day prior, get a game plan of glassing and glassing. Everyone should have at least an A, B and C plan. Glass from afar  and if possible from a rise. Lopes are habit creatures and will work the same water holes and areas.

The best part of having a successful hunt is having experience with you.   On my first Antelope hunt I was very fortunate to have my a Navy buddy guiding me in an area that I have never been in.  My Navy buddy and I met when I was station at the Naval Security Activity in Imperial Beach, CA.   I was a young enlisted guy and he came in as a LTJG from Portland, OR.   I took him on his first duck hunt in the area of Imperial Beach and Tijuana.   We later got reconnected when I got off active duty and joined the Naval Reserve.   Rod retired as a CMDR from the Navy!

Grizzly Unit – Archery Lope

Cutting to the chase, my first Antelope hunt was a great learning experience for me.   I became a quick learner and listen to everything Rod had to say and show me.   He had a friend that worked for BLM in the area that knew the habits of the local Lopes.   My First Lope Hunt

After that I became quite hooked on Antelope and spent the next 20 years plus scouting, chasing and free guiding on Antelope in Oregon and a little in Wyoming.

I have found that Antelope are very habit forming in their movement.   I have seen the same buck or bucks working an area even after pressure.   I know that most people do not realize that Antelope any other animal that marks their territory.   One may not notice other animals doing so, but with Lopes the area that they live is a bit more arid and their marks show up.   I always found it particular that they would mark a dirt road.  I would catch them squatting in the middle of a road on scouting trips.  

Link: Grizzly Lope

Many times I hear that a hunter hasn’t seen an Antelope at all on a scouting trip or hunting trip.  I often ask them how much glassing had they done.   Glassing you will find the the sage brush moves and the colors aren’t green.   One has to have an eye when driving in or just looking for game.  If what you think you see is not rock, dirt, junipers, or sage brush, it is usually some sort of game.

Spotted from 1/2 mile away during rifle season!

Over the many years of chasing Lopes, I have found the same buck in an area from year to year, which includes the same feeding areas.   Years ago I chased the same buck for more than three (3) years in the same 5 X 5 square miles that I would locate him.  I do believe that he lived to be a ripe old age.

Don’t ever overlook the fringe area of timber in an arid location, especially in Oregon.   We have many units that the Antelope use the timber as would a Mule Deer buck.   We have areas like the Maury, Gerber Res, Paulina and many more that the successful hunters have found big bucks in the timber.

If you want to find the big boys you need to take out the Coy Dogs!

My words are to those that hunt for Pronghorn is to carry a great pair of Bino’s, water, Mapping GPS (Garmin), a rifle cartridge that can carry the distance in wind, and maybe someone that can spot game.

Osbon’s 2010 Oregon Elk Archery Hunt

Having just recieved the story fresh off the press from Doug, it seems Doug has found the honey spot in Oregon for Coastal Elk.   Two years in a row he has gotten his bull and they seem to be getting bigger each year.  I am putting the story out for all you to enjoy, plus his pictures.  Even the Bwana does not know his secret spot, should have loaned him one of my GPS’s.  Hmm!

  
Tod & Doug with Doug's Coastal Bull

“The day had started off like most game days. Driving into hunting area, we were really hoping that no one would want to hunt our favorite elk area. We had gotten through the gate and had not seen anyone; I was hoping we would still have it all to ourselves, in that no one walked into the area. For unknown reasons my lucky star was shining on Tod and me. We got to the first clear cut that we wanted to look at. It was about 10 minutes before daylight. My hunting partner Tod and I went to the edge of the rim to listen for elk talking. We had only been standing there for about two minutes when we could hear elk below us and they were really talking. After daylight we spotted six cows and one dandy bull. We thought that they were going to feed out to the right to the timber. There was a road that came into the bottom on the cut. So we decided that I would go down the timber line on the right, and Tod would get in the bottom on the road so if they ran out he might get a shot. I got down to the first bench, and was in front of all the elk. I had great cover and it look like they were going to feed right across a bench below me. I got to the stump that I thought would give me the best shot and setup to wait. I had only been there for about 5 min when one of the cows must have seen something because she was on the alert. She wanted to go out to the middle of the cut, but she was not the LEAD COW. So they all started looking around, trying to figure out what was going on with the cow being on alert. The LEAD COW decided that she was going to lead them all to the timber. She stared coming just as I had hoped they would. When they were almost straight down the hill from me, she then started to climb the hill a little toward me. Finally they turned broadside again and the bull was the 6th in line. So I pick my spot that I was going to try to get him stopped for the shot. At this time I thought that the shot was going to be about 35 yards. He went behind a stump and I drew my Mathews back and waited for him to move into my lane of shooting. When he was where I wanted him I Cow Called and he stopped just right! I pull in right behind the shoulder and let it fly. The bull took off down the hill. I got my glasses on him and my arrow was sticking high in the shoulder. I watch him go to the timber line and stand for about five minutes. The mortally wound bull than just walk into the trees out of our line of sight. Tod and I decided that we had better give him two hours before we start looking. That was the longest two hours of my life. We went to the road that went into the bottom of the draw. We checked the banks to make sure the bull had not crossed on us. We found the trail that he had went in on with a good blood trail. We had just got in the trees about 30 yards when he jumped up. He ran about 40 yards and that was all he had left in him. My G5s went clear threw the front shoulder and got into the lungs. The best part he was only 40 yards above the road and we got him out whole.”

 
Dandy 5 X 5 Bull Side Profile!

Ruppel Owyhee Unit Archery Antelope Hunt

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Scott Ruppel’s 2009 Oregon Owyhee Unit Pronghorn 

I had gotten an email from Scott asking about Archery Antelope hunting in the Owyhee Unit for 2009, he had been successful in drawing the tag.   I asked him what he had done already to prep for the hunt.

Scott is a great success story; he had already talked with the local biologist for the area and had mapped out the area.  He also did a scouting trip for two (2) days just after the rifle season.

Scott also would dedicated if he had too the whole season which is 9 days to get his buck.  He gave the spot he was going to work and I told him a previous trip that that area looked really good and to trust the biologist.

Here is the short version that I have on the hunt from Scott.   Hopefully I will get a little more detail about the hunt.

“Frank, I killed a nice goat 14 1/4 and 14 3/4 just short of 70 inches.  I sat at a water pond for 10 hours and made a 30 yard shot.”

Scott.

Pine Grove, Oregon Archery Deer Hunt

It is now always the size of the harvest, but the hunt and story!

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 Pine Grove, Oregon Blacktail on Opening Day

It is not always about hunting for the largest rack of antler on a deer.  For the most part having harvest a number of dandy Mule & Blacktail bucks of the years, I have become pretty picky.  Finding it easy to past up on smaller deer and sometimes just take a picture.  Maybe I just don’t want the work afterwards that means a pack out.

Now that is not to say that I haven’t harvested some small bucks over the years, I have done so.  A couple of them have been Blacktail bucks in more recent years than the past.

On one such hunt I had my son Frankie and another old hunting partner with me.   We had gain access to a section of land up out of the town of Pine Grove on the way to Maupin, OR.
Now the rancher/farmer was a tough old bird and pretty picky who he would let on his place.  He raised wheat, alfalfa, cattle and of course lots of deer.

My equipment was of course my Martin Pro Series Scepter II,  Easton Arrows XX-75’s, Thunder Head 120gr.  Broadheads, Mel Stanislawski’s Sight and Superb Arrow Rest.  Ya!  Know a bit of olds school on shoot aluminum arrows, sight and rest.   I had been a shooter for Martin in the past on the word of Mel that I could get the job done.

Martin Scepter II Bow in the field 2011!

Having been in the area before during scouting trips, it was pretty easy to get a lay of the land.   On this hunt there where only two (2) people hunting, Frankie and myself, with MM coming in later from a scouting trip for a future rifle hunt in the Grizzly Unit.   Frankie and I would hunt slightly different areas, as I wanted to explore and he could work the gravel pit on the property.   In remembrance, I should have stayed with him, as he got close to a number of good bucks (No Blood, just rocks).  I saw my share of bucks, but could never close the distance on the morning hunt.  It had to be about 90 degrees from first light to late into the evening! 

It was extremely hot on this hunt and even though I would use the trucks going by and the running canal water used for irrigation, I could not be that quite and there were a lot of deer in the area making close stalking difficult.

Frankie and I regrouped in the afternoon and the old hunting partner came by for the evening hunt.   We only had one day to hunt on this opening weekend of deer, as I had to be back to Valley RV in McMinnville on Sunday.

We had about 1 ½ of light left and we started to work a spur road on the property.   Frankie and I got glimpse of the buck at the same time to our left; I was already up at full draw and heard the call from MM that he was at fift———y yards as the arrow left my Martin\ Scepter.  The arrow hit the buck right in the boiler room, even though he flinched a bit and he went straight up in the air and came down in where he had been bedded.  The arrow went completely through the deer and never to be found again.

Not sure if Frankie and MM could believe the shot, as I had released as the range came out of MM’s mouth.   We did have to Hawaiian field dress the deer out and make a short pack, the owner of the ranch did not want any kind of vehicles on the place due to fire hazard.

He was a small 3X3 blacktail buck, not much to hang in the garage, but a great shot made on the buck, reassuring my son that the old man can still judge distance and make the shot happen.  It was a good hunt with lots of game seen and it was the second time that I have harvested a Blacktail with him along.

Osbon’s 2009 Oregon Elk Archery Hunt

Doug had drawn a 2009 Gerber Archery Pronghorn-Antelope tag this past year and emailed for some information.  The information was good and Doug had a dandy Lope come to the waterhole that he was on.  The distance was about 50 yards and he thought the buck would come in closer, but opportunity changed and he did not get the shot.   The Gerber Unit had a lot of water this year and the Lopes were scattered far and wide. 
I recently got this email from about his success story on an Oregon Archery Coastal Bull this year.  I really appreciate Doug sharing his story with me and my website hunters.

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2009 Osbon Successful Oregon Archery Hunt

“I thought that you might want to see the bull I got this year. Maybe I will get my Antelope next year!”

“My Brother, Nephew and I went out bright and early on a coastal elk hunt.  We started the morning finding the herd bull and his cows.  After a few set ups we finally got him to come in to about 24 yards, I drew on him but it was not to be. My peep had water in it and that was the first time that had happened to me. By the time I got things back together he had moved on.
So I was bummed because I though I had just blown my shot.  We had some other clear cuts to look at so we went to look at them.  About mid afternoon we decide we were going to go back after him because he was all wound up.  So we got to the road that we needed to take and stared up to where we were going to take off walking.  We had just started walking on a gated road when a Cow and a Calf stepped out into the road.  We could hear other elk coming so I got out an arrow.  Just as I had knocked my arrow here came this bull, he step out just far enough that I could see his front shoulder and back about 10 inches.  I centered on him and let it fly. The bull went back down into the creek and started up the other side then we heard him go down.
The shot was 34 yards and I got both lungs.”

Doug Osbon

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Doug Osbon and his nephew with Doug’s 2009 Roosevelt Bull

Ruppel’s 2009 Oregon Archery Antelope

Scott is a great success story; he had talked with the local biologist for the area and had mapped out the area.  He also did a scouting trip for two (2) days just after the rifle season.  In this case, I looked over his area, which was a good area to hunt.   Scott did all the work on this hunt and he should be very pleased with the P & Y Pronghorn that he harvested.  This is a beautiful buck with great horns!

Scott also dedicated if he had too, the whole season which is 9 days to get his buck.

Here is the short version that I have on the hunt from Scott.   Hopefully I will get a little more detail about the hunt.

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 Scott Ruppel’s 2009 Oregon Archery Qwyhee Unit Antelope 

 Frank,

“I killed a nice goat 14 1/4 and 14 3/4 just short of 70 inches.  I sat at a water pond for 10 hours-30 yard shot.”

Scott.

2010 Oregon Antelope – Pronghorn Hunting Consultant

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So you have drawn an Oregon 2010 Antelope – Pronghorn Rifle tag!   Would like to know where to go in Oregon and harvest a buck?

You just drew a tag for the 2010 Oregon Antelope – Pronghorn Buck hunt this year.   Do you need a spot to hunt in the the Silvies, Juniper, Steen’s, S. Wagontire, N. Wagontire, Paulina, Owyhee,Grizzly Unit and other units.   I can help you!   I am offering my services with GPS Coordinates put on your GPS or using paper maps.    

I have been hunting Antelope’s in Oregon for 30 years and know the hide-outs of the big ones.  Check out a few of my sucsessful hunter pages on this web-site.   I have help many hunters harvest their Lope with my knowledge of Antelope hunting. 

I can help you, just email me and I would be happy to let you know what I offer and fees. 

With the use of maps or a GPS.

Contact me at:  bwanabubba@hotmail.combwanabubba@gmail.com

Artistic Taxidermy, Portland, Oregon will have Receiveing Stations for Antelope Trophies taken during the 2008 season at Hampton, OR and Burns, OR.   Garret Heying             503-771-DEER   http://artistictaxidermy.net/

Frank

Antelope – Pronghorn Oregon Harvest Pictures

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Many of these harvest pictures and the success of many of these hunters are due to the fact of them utilizing a GPS and preset coordinates that I had given them prior to the hunt.  With the gas and fuel prices up, one wants to get in the field and not spend their time scouting before the season a couple of times.   Using my GPS mapping system of key hotspots, you can get in the field the day before and be setup for the opening day of hunting.  I have yet to have a hunter not be successful with my contacts or mapping of spots.   My old running partner told me when he got back with the kill pictures “You were right on the dot with the where I found the bucks Frank.”   They took a number of shots at different bucks and finally harvested a dandy.   On that hunt Frank P. had a number of chances on big bucks.

Artistic Taxidermy, Portland, Oregon will have Receiveing Stations for Antelope Trophies taken during the 2008 season at Hampton, OR and Burns, OR.   Garret Heying             503-771-DEER   http://artistictaxidermy.net/

Bwana Bubba “Cobra”   bwanabubba@hotmail.com