Neal, I’m going to let the coyotes eat you!

As the evening sun fell behind the towering pine trees, quiteness gently enveloped the Mississippi hardwood creek bottom where Neal and I were set up about a hundred yards apart on opposite ends of a ridge that sloped downward toward the creek. Both in tree stands, silently we waited for the chance to take a deer, buck or doe, it didn’t really matter.

Neal, a high school boy from my neighborhood, was already a genuinely hooked deer hunter, accomplished deer hunter with bow, rifle and muzzleloader. He was the type of guy that would have all his gear out, polished, lined up, double checked and ready for a hunt weeks before the season started. He practiced his already well tuned bow skills year round and went through boxes of ammo to make sure his rife hit just the right spot. His room was clothed in camo, Field and Stream, Bowhunter, and posters of deer. Every chance he got he was picking the brain of another deer hunter looking for that next tactic or trick that would enhance his odds. I learned from him to take a few small rocks to the woods with me during early bow in Mississippi to use to imitate falling white oak acorns, the equivalent of cocaine to Mississippi whitetails. Find white oak acorns, kill deer. Simple. My wife called Neal the youngest deer ‘addict’ she’d ever known besides me. I enjoyed hunting with Neal due to his pleasant nature and his enthusiasm for deer hunting.

On this particular evening, since I didn’t have a truck and Neal was riding with me, in my Honda Civic we followed a narrow road across the pasture behind my mother’s house, through a narrowing in the woods into the hay meadow and parked. From there we walked another 500 yards, crossed the small, white sand, crystal clear water creek. I took a spot in pin oaks near the creek and Neal went on up the ridge. I climbed my tree with a climbing tree stand and settled in. Neal, who used line crew spurs and a lock on stand, settled in as well. Our wait began.

Just before dark a rather large doe made her way to me picking up acorns and munching them. I waited as long as I could in hopes of a buck showing, but it wasn’t to be. With an empty freezer, I decided to take the doe and with one shot from my 7mm-mag she dropped in her tracks. When the disturbance from the shot settled in the woods, a pack of coyotes opened up just across the creek on the next hill. Packed coyotes howling will lead one to believe there are hundreds in the pack just due to the chaotic sounds they make. In all likelihood, there was only a couple to half dozen, but enough to make the hair stand on end on the back of your neck. By the time they stopped howling it was pitch dark and both Neal and I were still in the stands. In a few minutes I could hear the coyotes crossing the creek and yipping as they came towards the downed deer, smelling the blood, ready to feast until only the carcass was left. I shot towards them in the creek and yelled “Get out of here!”, then started climbing down. As I gathered my stand, I listened to hear if Neal was coming down the trail and I heard nothing. I yelled to him “Neal, come on! Let’s get this deer out before the coyotes take it!”. He yelled back with fear in his voice,…”Mr. Carey, I’m not coming down! They’re not getting me!” I couldn’t help but laugh and yelled back “OK,…stay where you are and I’ll see you tomorrow!”

Well,…a few minutes later as I field dressed the doe in the dark I could hear him clattering down the trail, lock-on stand, rifle, clinging spurs and all. Sounded like a runaway old plow mule in trace chains. He ran up to me just about the time I finished the field dress job, grabbed the doe by one leg and took off pulling it towards the creek. I worked to catch up with him and help. In between laughs at him and struggling with getting a deer across a creek and to the back of my car in the dark, those coyotes decided to lay low and stay out of range.

Needless to say, we made it out safely and another deer hunting memory was written seared in our minds. Neal finished high school, went on to pitch college baseball at Ole Miss, married and is now my insurance agent. He’s a fantastic man, a great hunter and a pleasure to know. Good thing the coyotes didn’t get him!

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