8 Point Whitetail Buck Taken By Mitch Davenport

This week’s featured trophy is an 8 point buck taken by Mitch Davenport of Magnolia Texas.

Mr Davenport is a the owner of Proline AC and Heating, and an avid saltwater fisherman in his spare time. Although he is an experienced angler and outdoorsman, this is his very first season of whitetail deer hunting. Earlier in the season Mr Davenport harvested a whitetail doe, and now that he’s taken this nice buck today, I’d say he’s having a very good first hunting season.

Mitch took this deer near Junction Texas with his new Weatherby .270 mounted with Leupold glass.

Although this is just his first year hunting deer, I’m sure it won’t be his last.

Do you have a hunting story that you’d like to share? Be sure to visit out “Show Of Your Trophy” page and submit your photos and stories to the Acadiana Outfitters Outdoor Lifestyle blog.

A Delicious Venison Stir Fry

While looking for creative venison recipes I came across this stir fry recipe on Food.com. The flavors of soy, orange marmalade and ginger really compliment the venison. This recipe is a keeper.

Ingredients:

  • 1/4 cup beef stock
  • 3 teaspoons soy sauce
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 3 teaspoons orange marmalade
  • 1 teaspoon cornstarch
  • 1 lb venison
  • 2 teaspoons minced ginger
  • 3 teaspoons vegetable oil
  • 1 medium onion
  • 1/2 lb snow peas
  • 1 can cut baby corn

Directions:

  1. Combine the broth, soy sauce, sesame oil, marmalade in a bowl.
  2. In a small bowl combine cornstarch with a little bit of water.
  3. Cut meat across the grain 1/8 inch thick-ya know, thin strips.
  4. Heat oil in wok over high heat-when hot add onion-stir fry and add meat-stir fry add remaining veg-stir fry.
  5. Add the marmalade mixture, stir, then the cornstarch mixture and cook quickly until thickened.
  6. Serve over rice.
  7. This can be done with Buffalo, elk or moose.

Perfect Christmas Gifts For The Hunters, Fisherman, and Outdoor Lovers In Your Life

This year, Acadiana Outfitters has made it easy for customers to select the perfect gift for the hunter, fisherman or outdoor lover in your life.

Our holiday gift guide is packed with gift ideas that will please every outdoorsman.

From Shimano fishing reels at amazing prices, to smoking deals on Nikon range finders , Acadiana Outfitters has every outdoor item you could possibly imagine. If you have a specific price range in mind, we’ve created special gift lists under $20, under $40, and under $100. You are bound to find the perfect gift to put under the tree.

 

5 Life-Saving Survival Gear Essentials

Steven Rinella, outdoor writer and host of Television’s “The Wild Within” and “Meat Eater”, recently shared his list of 5 life saving survival gear essentials. Read the full article here.

Mother nature can be dangerous at times, and accidents can happen on any hunting or fishing trip. Rinella’s tips might just make you rethink what you pack in your hunting bag or tackle box next time you head outdoors…..

As a backpack hunter, I don’t think of my survival equipment as strictly emergency materials that might someday come in handy. Instead, I treat my survival gear as part of my usual kit. I’m constantly updating the items in my bag, replacing used materials and making minor adjustments according to where I’m headed.

For instance, if I’m hunting the North Slope of Alaska’s Brooks Range where harmful water-borne parasites are not an issue, I’ll trim out water purification tablets in exchange for extra tinder materials that will come in handy on a soggy and fuel-starved landscape. Certain things, however, stay in my kit no matter what. Here are five small essentials that I carry with me whenever I head into the woods or mountains:

1. Fire is essential for warmth, cooking, melting water from snow or ice, and psychological well-being. I keep my kit stocked with a redundant supply of fire-starting materials. In it I have: a disposable lighter for everyday use; a small waterproof cylinder containing twenty waterproof and windproof matches; a magnesium striker; and a tin full of petroleum-based fire paste. It might sound like a lot, but I can fit the whole assortment in a T-shirt pocket.

2. I carry a Leatherman on my belt at all times, but I also stock my kit with a lightweight Havalon razorblade knife and a few extra 60XT autopsy blades. In addition to countless normal applications such as skinning game, sharpening implements and cutting cord, the sterile blades are perfect for such emergency uses as removing large splinters, fixing ingrown toe nails or even boring a pressure-release hole into a crushed and blood-gorged fingernail.

3. In addition to my primary flashlight — a Surefire mounted on a homemade head strap — I always carry a simple backup light that can be powered by a single AA battery. I do not store a battery inside the light, where it might leak acid and destroy the connectors and inner workings. Instead, I keep three AA batteries taped together as a single package. That way, I know that I’ve still got hours worth of light if I happen to lose or somehow destroy my primary light.

4. I always carry at least 25 feet of braided utility cord in my pack. I’ve used it to replace boot laces, to hoist mountain goat quarters into a tree, to anchor a tent in high wind, to secure loads to my pack, to get food out of reach of grizzlies, to replace drawstrings on packs and garments, and to repel down minor cliff faces and lower loads down major cliff faces. In fact, the only thing better than 25 feet of cord is 50 feet.

5. You can kid yourself into believing that you to have the luck and skill necessary to catch birds and small game with log deadfalls or snares woven from roots. In reality, though, it’s not going to happen. If you really want to be prepared to capture emergency food without the aid of a firearm, spend a little money at snareshop.com and get yourself a three-pack of self-locking cable snares. They’re lightweight, easy to use and strong enough to hold a raccoon or even a beaver. Set properly, they could even be used to capture larger game by the foot. What’s more, there are thousands of trappers in this country who use almost identical snares on their professional trap lines. Rather than learning about deadfalls from some old hippy with a beaded necklace who’s never actually needed to use them, you can study snares with a real guy who snares for a living. That’ll give you confidence you need to make a snare work when it counts.

Seafood and Crab Bisque

Ingredients

1/2 cup Unsalted Butter (1 stick)
2 cup Chopped Onion
2 tablespoon Minced Garlic
4 tablespoon Tony Chacheres White Gravy Mix
15 1/4 ounce Corn (Creamstyle)
10 1/2 ounce Cream of Potato Soup
2 quart Half and Half
1 pint Heavy Cream
1 pound Claw Crab Meat
1 pound Small Shrimp, Peeled and Deveined
1 pound Crawfish Tail Meat
1 tablespoon Dry Sherry
2 cup Shredded Swiss Cheese
2 tablespoon Tony Chacheres Original Creole Seasoning
1 tablespoon Chopped Green Onion
1 tablespoon Chopped Parsley

Directions

1: In a Dutch Oven, melt butter

2: Add onions and garlic

3: Saute until transparent

4: Add white gravy mix and combine to make a blond roux

5: Cook for 2 minutes

6: Add all corn, soup, halfnhalf and cream

7: Bring content up to a boil

8: Add seafood and return to a boil

9: Reduce heat to a simmer

10: Allow to cook for 5 minutes

11: Add sherry, cheese, and seasoning

12: Stir well until cheese is melted and combined

13: Add green onions and parsley

14: Remove from heat

15: Serve with French Bread

Playing the Waiting Game

I’ve heard the same report from numerous friends over the last few days. They are seeing the same young bucks they’ve been seeing for the past month. Maybe a bigger, older buck is on the camera after hours, but nothing big and old in the daylight. That’s not all bad, is it? At least they are seeing deer, right? And where there’s does, bucks will follow in time. And with the rut, maybe the old guys will show themselves in daylight.

For the whiners who think seeing the “same” young deer over and over is not exciting, how ‘bout this report from me: at one of my traditionally best whitetail spots, along a winding river bottom in big country, in the past eight days the only thing on my trail camera has been a flock of 20 turkeys in the daylight and numerous wild hogs after dark. Not a single photo of a deer of any kind, day or night! I would LOVE to say I was “only” seeing the same deer I’ve been seeing all year.

But this is a time of change. That same turkey/pig spot could produce a nice buck at any time in November. This is the time of year when new bucks show up in new places. The bucks start to wander, looking for love, and possibly crossing fences and walking past your stand. November is here and the hunting is sure to get better with every passing day. Be patient young grasshopper, the best is yet to come!

The highlight this week is a report from my friend Rusty Sims. Rusty and his eight-year-old son, Logan, participated in Texas’ youth season, October 29-30. The two day youth season allows young hunters to use a firearm during the statewide archery-only season.

The Sims were hunting a small piece of land–320 acres–that Rusty leases for hunting at a very reasonable price. It’s a small tract of land, but every year it produces at least one good buck for the Sims family.

On the afternoon of October 29, with only ten minutes of shooting light left, a fine 8-point strolled past the Sims’ well-concealed pop-up ground blind set near a corn feeder. With his single shot Rossi .223 rifle rested across the back of a folding chair, Logan put the crosshairs on the big buck standing only 25 yards away. At the shot, the buck jumped straight up into the air–heart shot. Rusty found the deer dead as a stone 50 yards away. Logan’s well-placed 55 grain soft point bullet had shredded the big buck’s heart.

“I don’t know how he made it that far,” Rusty told me. “Logan’s shot was perfect.”

The big-bodied Texas whitetail field-dressed 160 pounds. He was estimated to be 4 ½-years-old or older. His wide 8-point rack scored 126-inches. It was the only deer the father/son team saw from the blind that afternoon.

That’s a stud buck for any hunter, but for an 8-year-old boy? Wow. (By the way, Logan shot an equally impressive buck at the same spot last year during youth season! Rusty is not saying exactly where the 320 acre lease is, for obvious reasons!)