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History of Deer and Turkey in Tennessee
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<blockquote data-quote="Iglow" data-source="post: 5768719" data-attributes="member: 22496"><p>Opening day 1975 we went to Big Sandy and stayed in a fleabag room behind a diner there, that morning hunters were eating and drinking coffee, the cigarette smoke was thick from the brown ceiling to about shoulder level in there. Billy Swan and Freddie Fender was on the radio.</p><p>My dad left me on a low ridge top with a silver rayovac flashlight, some pop tarts and a marlin 30/30 and told me "don't shoot a doe and stay here till I come back to get you".</p><p>The sun came up and man it sounded like the battle for Berlin!!! I hunkered down after I heard a bullet make that fluttering sound as it ricocheted by. About 8 3 does came running up to within 30 yards and froze, then bolted off the ridge, those were the first deer I ever saw.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Iglow, post: 5768719, member: 22496"] Opening day 1975 we went to Big Sandy and stayed in a fleabag room behind a diner there, that morning hunters were eating and drinking coffee, the cigarette smoke was thick from the brown ceiling to about shoulder level in there. Billy Swan and Freddie Fender was on the radio. My dad left me on a low ridge top with a silver rayovac flashlight, some pop tarts and a marlin 30/30 and told me “don’t shoot a doe and stay here till I come back to get you”. The sun came up and man it sounded like the battle for Berlin!!! I hunkered down after I heard a bullet make that fluttering sound as it ricocheted by. About 8 3 does came running up to within 30 yards and froze, then bolted off the ridge, those were the first deer I ever saw. [/QUOTE]
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