I was hunting during the spike-and-doe-only season in Real County, Texas, when, at last light, this big animal stepped out. I had been told that all "exotics" were fair game (Axis deer have been caught on game cameras. Aoudad as well. And, within several miles, there are some high-fenced game ranches).
My first impression had been cow elk. At the shot, she turned and trotted off, showing me her characteristic rear-end patterning, and, for me at least, confirming my first instinct.
After finding her, she was too big for three sixty-something men to move, so I skinned and quartered her in the field. One of my buddies thought she wasn't near big enough for an elk, but maybe a red deer hind. I didn't age her (pretty confident about aging white tailed deer; elk, though, are out of my wheelhouse, and I had a lot of work to do . . .). Quarters, backstraps, tenderloins, and some flank and neck meat all tipped the scale at 151# once I got her to the processor.
After finding cell-phone reception later that night, Google informed me that red deer hinds do NOT have a mane. This animal did. So, I'm still going with elk. Any other possibilities come to mind?
From the photo, it appears to be an elk! Tell your buddy that elk start out pretty small …..at birth! 😉 memtb
You should not use a rifle that will kill an animal when everything goes right; you should use one that will do the job when everything goes wrong." -Bob Hagel
I've always been schooled that one should clearly ID his target.
This. When I was a teenager the farmer we hunted with in SD had his daughter hunting, reluctantly, for the first time. He called us up one evening for some help. She had shot a cow moose. In the middle of South Dakota. We would see them every now and then and the game biologists said they had a worm in the brain and would wander aimlessly from northern MN. She thought it was a big deer. We called the game warden. He told us to skin it and butcher it. Moose aren’t protected in South Dakota and there is no season. So he didn’t really know what to do. She was tasty.
Selmer
"Daddy, can you sometime maybe please go shoot a water buffalo so we can have that for supper? Please? And can I come along? Does it taste like deer?" - my 3-year old daughter
I've always been schooled that one should clearly ID his target.
I would posit that its not so easy to clearly ID an animal when one is in an area where said animal reasonably should not be!
That said, I was hunting to fill my freezer, and I found myself staring through the scope at a large game animal that, eyes be damned, looked just like an elk!
It was only after a clean shot and recovery that the nuances of exactly which large cervid it might actually be came into question.
Also, FWIW, this was on a low-fenced, heavily treed, steep-terrained, 100 acre property surrounded on all sides by other relatively small, low-fenced properties.
~Molɔ̀ːn Labé Skýla~ As Bob Hagel would say"You should not use a rifle that will kill an animal when everything goes right; you should use one that will do the job when everything goes wrong."Good words of wisdom...............
Hinds (Red Deer females), I was led to believe, do nothave manes with their winter coats, though Red Stags do. The picture provided is consistent with what my Google search revealed.
But, both cow and bull ELK do have manes with their winter coats.
The animal I harvested absolutely had a dark mane on her. I'm still convinced she was an Elk.