Louisiana Coughs Up Another Great Late-Season Buck

Louisiana Coughs Up Another Great Late-Season Buck Outdoor Life

Louisiana Coughs Up Another Late-Season Buck

Catahoula Parish in central Louisiana is prime Southern farm country. Flanked by Alexandria and Natchez, it’s loaded with game, and buster bucks are taken there annually. So when Bubba Wiley climbed into a box blind on Jan. 9, he planned to be selective. But that philosophy didn’t extend to wild hogs. When three stepped into the open, he dropped two boars with his .308 Savage and called it a night. But Wiley returned the next day.

“I got into the blind early, about noon, knowing deer should be moving that afternoon,” says the 26-year-old Texas oil field worker, who lives in Jonesville, Louisiana.

The blind was located in a block of woods that Wiley hadn’t hunted until this season, after he cut several shooting lanes through the tangled timber. He sat for several hours without much action, but about 4 p.m. things got interesting.

“I started seeing some does, and between 4 and 5 p.m. I saw eight different racked bucks. They were small bucks though, and we try not to shoot any under 5.5 years old. So I just sat and watched them, hoping something bigger would show.”

Wiley knew he had a great buck around via trail-cam pix.

Wiley’s patience paid off, and at 5 p.m. a much bigger buck stepped out 40 yards from the blind.

“I watched that buck for 30 minutes trying to figure out if he was old enough to shoot,” Wiley says. “I recognized him from trail camera photos in 2020, and while his body size was smaller because he was worn down from the rut, he was plenty big enough to shoot—though I just didn’t know if he was 5.5-years old.”

Louisiana Coughs Up Another Great Late-Season Buck Outdoor Life

Wiley finally convinced himself the deer was a shooter, and since the buck had disappeared from the property for over a year, there was a good chance he’d never see him again if he passed. When the buck was at 40 yards, he squeezed the trigger.

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The buck ran off, stumbling, and although it looked like he’d gone down, Wiley wasn’t quite sure.

“I have a good pack of trailing dogs, including some Catahoulas, and I almost went to get them but decided to go look for the deer first,” he says. “I went over where I shot the buck, and he was laying dead just 40 yards from where I hit him.”

The buck was younger than he’d hoped, likely a 4.5-year-old, but the main-frame 10-pointer had a scorable kicker point and measured an impressive 165 6/8 inches. The buck’s inside spread taped out at 17 3/8 inches, and the main beam bases had 5-plus-inch circumferences.

“He only weighed 190 pounds because he was so thin from chasing does during the rut,” says Wiley. “He should have weighed 230 pounds or more, and we’ve had much bigger bucks taken on our property, up to 267 pounds.

“They eat pretty good on our crops hereabouts.”

The buck is the best-scoring deer Wiley has taken, and he’s having it mounted—5.5 year old buck or not.