The anticipation of the annual South Dakota hunting trip was palatable. After the disappointment that surrounded most plans in 2020, it appeared this was going to happen. The elk hunt had been a bust due to the Troublesome Creek fire, our summer vacation never materialized, but it looked like our whitetail hunt was on.
On November 10th my brother Doc called saying he was up all the previous night sick and running to the restroom. He had just returned from a pheasant hunt in eastern South Dakota. I told him his symptoms sounded like Covid. He argued back, no it’s just the flu. After calling work he was sent for a Covid test. By Thursday he had no sense of smell or taste and another of his pheasant hunting party had a positive result back and he sadly came to the realization that he was going to miss not only elk, but now deer season.
Our party of 6 was now a party of five. Col. Michael and his son Tyler, the Engineer, Smooch and myself. Col. M and I anxiously watched the dates pass and our college sons got through school without Covid. On Thursday night 11/19 Smooch was home and we were packing the truck.
We had a weather free travel forecast for Friday through Tuesday. Friday morning Smooch and I were up and at E’s apartment by 7am and on the road. The three of us were off early, Col M and Tyler would follow later in the day. Traffic was light, we went up I-25 to Cheyenne, then highway 85 through Wyoming to Lusk and then onto New Castle and finally to Lead, SD. Add a quick drive thru at the Arby’s in Torrington, WY for lunch and we were in Lead about 2:00.
Our next step was to get the tree stands placed. I had mine as well as Col M’s and Tylers. We went into the area we were going to hunt and put them up. Our tree stands are climbing stands, which means they are in two pieces. Each piece has a cable that wraps around the tree and a set of teeth that grip the tree. It requires you to remove all dead tree limbs on the trunk. We had them placed, the trees ready for climbing and it was time to check into the cabin.
The cabin was nice. It had two bedrooms up and three down. 4 of them had queen beds and one had two twins. So each of us had our own bedroom. I learned from the owner that the cabin had been in their family for years. The basement had recently been remodeled, the upstairs was still a tribute to the 80’s with its bright green carpet. But it was comfortable and clean.
The three of us had dinner and played some games until it was time to get to bed. Col M and Tyler arrived about 11:30 and hurriedly brought in their stuff and went to bed. The alarm was set for 5 and like most nights before an anticipated event I slept fitfully until 5.
Saturday morning the temperature was about 20 and we had a quick bite, a cup of coffee and were off. Sunrise was 7 am, so legal hunting hours began 30 minutes before sunrise. We separated and everyone went to their area. Everyone saw deer but me, likely because Smooch was relatively close to me and spooked a buck and two does. By 10:30 we all were sufficiently cold and we headed back to the cabin for breakfast. A big breakfast of eggs and sausage filled us up. The we played a quick couple hands of a new game we brought up called Cover Your Assets. Then we were off for the afternoon hunt. We ended our day sitting again in the area we started. At dusk I moved my tree stand about 50 yards in anticipation of the next morning. No animals were bagged on Saturday. We returned home to dinner and games.
Sunday morning started much like Saturday. However when we arrived at our spots another group of guys who were rifle hunters had organized a drive on the other side of the road. The area where we hunted in the morning was boarded on one side by a paved road. They had probably 8 guys. A drive is when you put a couple of guys at the end of the area you want to push the game out of, then other guys stand along the sides and the remaining guys are pushers and they walk through the wood making a bunch of noise. The pushers walked by making quite a ruckus. About 20 minutes later we heard some shots. They were done and our woods were quiet again.
About 8 am I had two grazing does under my stand. I had an either sex license and i wanted to wait until atleast Sunday afternoon before I took a doe. Mostly because an either sex license is about 3 times the cost of a doe license. Before the does had arrived I had eaten an apple and threw the core out in front of my stand. I thought the does might eat it, but instead when one of them found it and smelled it, they left the area very quickly. E texted me he had shot a deer about that time so I climbed down the tree to help him track it.
Walking over to where E was a welcome bit of exercise as I got some warm blood to my very cold feet. By the time we found each other he had tracked down his deer. I assisted E as he gutted his deer, then got the truck and Smooch to take it to the cabin, hang it and have breakfast.
Sunday afternoon Smooch and I hunted together while E stayed at the cabin and finished skinning and quartering his deer. Unfortunately we didn’t get any shots. I moved my tree stand to another tree for the next morning. Remember that apple core? Something ate it.
I was excited and ready for Monday. That was going to be my morning. Unfortunately the rifle hunters were back on the other side of the road. Their plans were foiled a bit because with it being a Monday, the loggers were back in that area. The drive seemed to fall apart, either way we didn’t hear much from those guys. I sat expectantly in my tree stand. When at about 9 am a group of highway workers suddenly pulled up just 150 feet from my stand. They slammed their truck doors and talked loudly. I was cold and mad. I came out of my tree stand and folded it up and took it to the truck. About the time I had it loaded up they guys left, they were just taking their morning coffee break. I found Smooch and we did some hunting through the woods and met at the truck for breakfast.
After breakfast E came with us and was our driver as we looked for deer. We saw some but no real shots. As the afternoon became evening, I put my tree stand back on the tree it was on earlier that day and we went back to the cabin. When we got to the cabin it was dark, but Col. M and Tyler were not back yet. They arrived 30 minutes later with a nice buck that Tyler had bagged.
Tuesday was our day to drive home. But with three tags to fill, Col. M, Smooch and I got up for a 90 minute hunting window with an 8 am hard stop. As I walked in that morning, I realized it was time to stop being so concerned about bagging an animal and take some time to really appreciate where we were and the beauty of the black hills. As I sat in my stand, I remembered the bald and golden eagles we saw, the beautiful golden glow the forest took in the late afternoon, and most importantly the smiles and laughs of my sons and my friends.
The hunt that morning was unsuccessful. What Smooch and I both got to see and hear was the movement of about 40 turkeys as they gobbled, squawked, pipped and raucously travelled en masse to another location. 8 am came and we were at our trucks ready to pack up and head south. It was a cool but clear morning as the five friends loaded up and drove south to prepare for Thanksgiving.