June 9, 2012
Starting out with a bang
Young Elkview man’s first ‘monster’ buck likely biggest he’ll ever bag
John McCoy
Josh Crowder of Elkview had never killed a buck before last season, but he more than made up for that with the first one he got. The buck, killed on opening day of the 2012 firearm season, sported an impressive 15-point rack.
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Josh Crowder didn't have time to use his rifle's scope.

The buck of a lifetime was in full flight, sprinting straight away. Instinctively, Crowder swung the rifle up, put the front bead on the center of the buck's back, and pulled the trigger . . .

In the weeks before West Virginia's 2012 buck firearm season, Crowder, then 18, had his eye on one particular buck.

"I had a trail camera out, and it had gotten several pictures of a big, perfect six-pointer. That's the buck I was hoping to get," Crowder said.

Anyone who knows anything about deer hunting in northeastern Kanawha County might think Crowder had set his sights a mite low. After all, the area routinely produces bucks with serious trophy racks.

Big antlers were the furthest thing from Crowder's mind.

"I had never killed a buck before," he said. "I had been hunting since I was 11, and I had killed some antlerless deer, but I'd never gotten a buck."

On Nov. 21, the buck season's opening day, Crowder awoke at 4:30 a.m. and got dressed to try to bag that perfect six-pointer. Dawn hadn't yet broken when he, his brother and his stepfather walked into the woods near their Elkview home.

"My brother started hunting at the first field we came to," Crowder recalled. "I kept going toward the top of the hill. There was a spot near some cliffs where I had seen some humongous buck rubs."

By 7:30 a.m., Crowder had seen a pair of does but no bucks.

"I waited until 8:30 without seeing anything," he said. "I decided to walk around and see if I could jump something. I hunted my way down the hill until I got to the field where my brother was supposed to be hunting. He wasn't there."

As Crowder crept slowly across the field, a sudden flash of movement caught his eye.

"A doe jumped up. And right behind the doe, I could see this big rack of antlers. Apparently the doe and the buck had been bedded down and I spooked them," Crowder said.

"They were only 10 yards away. The buck started running down the hill. I knew I had to shoot fast, so I used the bead sights on the rifle instead of the scope."

The first shot hit the buck in the spine and sent it crashing to the forest floor. A point-blank follow-up shot killed the animal.

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