Missing the opening of deer season isn't that painful to me, as I hunt all year long from time to time. I have an arsenal on the ranch and when I spend the night on the ranch I often take one of my long guns, (Sometimes the long gun is a Shiloh Sharps or C. Sharps 1885 drop block BPCR.) and ease off into the brush. I pick a nice place to sit and wait for the "changing of the guards." The changing of the guards is a magical time when the night time animals, large and small, go back into their lairs to sit out the day light hours and the day creatures come forward to claim their time. Often times I hear the owls hooting and some times there are coyotes making their last howl of the night and then it is usually very still and deathly quite. (When it is deathly quite, I only hear the incessant ringing in my ears from my tinnitus. A note to the young on this forum, wear hearing protection.) After a few minutes of quite there will be rustling in the brush as the squirrels and rabbits come forward. That will be followed by birds whizzing around with the sound of flapping wings. Soon the morning birds will be chirping and singing. In my world the mocking birds are usually the first to be heard. To me the changing of the guard is a magical and mystical moment.
Often times a deer or pig is seen during this transition time. I often shoot the pig and seldom shoot the deer. The pig is a nuisance and deer is food for an old lady friend of mine, and she only requires two of our small deer per year.
To me, hunting isn't about the shooting, it's about the first paragraph.
lazy