Thirty-five years of bowhunting have taught Bill Ullrich a few things about chasing whitetails. After a few years of making a lot of mistakes, you reach a level of knowledge that moves you as a hunter to a level of wanting to challenge the oldest and smartest buck in the woods.
There is another factor, however, that even experienced hunters all too often overlook—luck. If you haven’t said it yourself, chances are you’ve heard a hunter say, “I’ll take luck anytime,” or “the harder I work, the luckier I get.” Sometimes what we call “luck” is simply slowing down long enough to listen to that small voice in the back of your head that says “turn right” or “turn left.”
On October 26, 2012, Bill had made up his mind to take off work early to spend an afternoon in the woods, and he knew exactly which tree he was headed for that afternoon. He was almost to the tree when something told him he needed to turn around and, instead, opt for a tried and true setup he had long-ago named the “good luck tree.”
“I had already walked past the tree,” Bill said, “and normally the last thing a hunter should do is backtrack. This just puts more scent on the ground past your stand. But it was just one of those feelings you get as a hunter sometimes.”
One hour and ten minutes later, he realized that was the best decision he had ever made, as he watched his arrow bury to the nock in the largest whitetail buck he had ever shot at.
The 2011 archery season had been a good one for Bill, and he had managed to harvest two respectable bucks. One of the bucks was a 9-pointer that scored in the 140s, and the other buck, taken later in the season, was a 12-pointer that scored in the 130s. After using both of his buck tags, Bill had resigned the late-season for doe management.
During one particular doe hunt, he just happened to look over his shoulder at the right time and saw a giant buck 50 yards away. He only got a glimpse of the buck as it disappeared into heavy brush, but he immediately knew two things. First, the buck was the biggest deer he had ever seen in the woods, and second, he knew where he would be hunting next season.
When the 2012 archery season arrived, Bill set out a couple of trail cameras on the relatively small piece of property he hunts in Peoria County, Ill. He makes it a habit to stay out of the woods until just before Halloween, and therefore, he had not checked the trail cameras for a couple of weeks. Since Bill hunts a small area, he does not want to spook deer early in the season.
Experience has taught him that on this particular piece of property, the last week of October seems to flip the switch and a lot of the bucks on adjacent properties suddenly start showing up on his hunting area in search of does. By the third week of October, he did not have any “shooter” bucks on his cameras. This did not really bother Bill, since he knew that the older bucks probably wouldn’t start showing up until the rut kicked in.
On Friday, October 26, Bill took off work at 2 p.m. He immediately drove to his hunting property and proceeded to go through his normal routine of getting
ready to hunt. He knew that the wind was perfect for the area he hunted, and he changed into his hunting clothes, which had been recently washed with scent-free soap. He sprayed everything down with scent-free spray, grabbed his climber treestand and headed for the woods.
Placed strategically within the timber was a small food plot in which Bill had planted turnips in mid-summer. Even though there had been a drought during the summer of 2012, late summer rain had somehow resulted in a pretty good stand of turnips. On this particular day, Bill walked past the food plot and past the “good luck tree” where he had taken other bucks and headed for the back of the property. When he was about halfway to the other tree, he suddenly got the feeling that he needed to return to the “good luck tree.”
Paying credence to his instinct, Bill turned around and backtracked to the setup. By about 2:30 p.m., Bill had situated his Lone Wolf climber in the tree and was situated approximately 24 feet off the ground. Needless to say, after walking all that way and ascending the tree, he was soaked with sweat. Bill was so overheated by the time he was set up in the tree that he proceeded to remove a layer of clothing, trying to cool down before prime time arrived that evening.
Even though Bill was set up at the bottom of a ridge, a consistent breeze was blowing that evening, and just as he was considering putting his jacket back on, three does arrived on the scene. They proceeded to bed down 50 yards away, near the foot plot. Bill slowly and quietly managed to put his outer layer of clothing back on without spooking the bedded does. Ten minutes later, another doe appeared about halfway between his stand and the first trio of does. Bill ranged the doe at 35 yards, just for a point of reference. The doe moved away totally unaware of his presence.
It had only been 10-15 minutes since he spotted the last doe when movement caught Bill’s eye. A deer was approaching along the same trail the doe had been on, and Bill could barely make out antlers. By the time he had picked up his bow, the buck was close enough that Bill got a good look at him. In a split second, Bill could tell the buck was mature. He immediately reminded himself to ignore the antlers and focus on the shot.
As Bill came to full draw, the buck was quartering towards him and he picked up on the movement. The buck turned to look up at Bill but did not move. Bill lined the sight pin tight against the buck’s shoulder and released the arrow. The buck was standing in the exact spot where he had ranged the doe—35 yards.
The Carbon Express arrow, tipped with a Rocket broadhead, buried to the nock, penetrating the full length of the shaft. The buck turned and ran, then stopped about 30 yards away. Bill tried to find a hole through the brush for a follow-up shot at the buck, but there was too much brush in the way. He quietly watched the buck stand in one spot for 10-15 minutes. Then the buck turned and slowly walked out of sight.
The shot took place around 3:40 p.m., and Bill had made up his mind that he was not getting down from the tree until 5 p.m. As 5 p.m. approached, Bill couldn’t stand it any longer. He slowly and quietly got down from the tree and proceeded to where the buck had been standing at the shot. Thirty yards away, he found good blood pooled in the spot where the buck had stood for 10-15 minutes.
At this point it had been approximately an hour and a half since the shot. Bill eased over the crest of the hill where he had last seen the buck and saw a blow-down just below him. Suddenly, he saw movement in the big blow-down. The buck had stood up and was walking uphill very slowly.
With no shot opportunity, Bill watched as the buck crested the top of the hill, stopped and bedded down. Earlier, Bill had called his son, Matt, and as Bill sat quietly watching the bedded buck, Matt arrived. They both sat and watched the bedded buck, determined not to jump him again. After several minutes, the buck got to his feet and slowly moved over the crest of the hill, just out of sight.
Bill and Matt watched the area for another half-hour, then slowly climbed the hill, trying to be as quiet as possible. When they had crested the hill, they saw the buck bedded, and immediately it stood up and slowly moved off. At this point, Bill and his son very quickly backed down the hill and left the woods.
Thus began a long, sleepless night for Bill. By daylight on Saturday morning, Bill and his son were headed back to the spot where they had last seen the buck. They knew the exact spot where they had seen the buck get up just before they left the timber. When they arrived at that spot there was no blood. They slowly began to move down the ridge in the direction the buck had headed. Suddenly, only 60 yards from where they had last seen the buck, they both saw antlers.
Bill eased toward the buck very quietly, with another arrow nocked, but it rapidly became obvious that the buck was down for good this time. “I was in shock,” Bill said. “I couldn’t believe the size of the antlers.”
Not only were the antlers huge, the buck’s body was also very large. “By the time we dragged the deer to the base of the hill, and then to the truck, it was amazing how much weight that buck gained,” Bill joked.
The buck was officially measured at the Illinois Deer Classic by Boone and Crockett measurer Matt Staser. With 31 measurable points, Bill’s buck tallied a net non-typical score of 220 1/8 inches.
“I knew it was a good buck when I shot him,” Bill said, “but I had no idea that it would be my buck of a lifetime.”
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Aaron Joliff
As a winter front pushed through northwest Arkansas on Dec. 12, 2011, the gray and ominous clouds hung low in the winter sky, drizzling rain. Days like this are exactly what Aaron Jolliff, of Bella Vista, Arkansas, has always loved to hunt—and for good reason. So began Joliff's 2011 hunt, which ended with a lifetime 170-inch buck. Read more at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Aaron Milliken
Aaron Milliken caught up with this massive Kansas whitetail after repeated attempts to track down the 194-inch trophy. For the details, make sure to check out NAW's Deer of the Day entry..
Barry Turner
After an off-season spent drooling over trail cam pics of the deer he'd come to know as "Big Show," Barry Turner came face to face with a Missouri giant. The rest of his story—and his 217-inch trophy—are enshrined in NAW's Deer of the Day.
Bill Winke
Bill Winke has earned himself a spot as one of the best Midwestern whitetail hunters of all time, with a recent buck to prove it. To read more about this massive double G4 Iowa giant, check out NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Bo Cocannouer
Two years ago Bo Cocannouer fell from a treestand fracturing his back. Most hunters aren’t lucky enough to walk away from a twenty-foot fall, and the ones that do don’t normally get to hunt from one ever again. But Cocannouer did just that, and he came home with this 194 gross non-typical Oklahoma buck.
For more, read the rest of the story in this Deer of the Day entry.
Brian Herron
Brian Herron fought numerous obstacles and setbacks in 2012 to bag this 184-inch bruiser. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Brian Hollands
After many years of chasing the same buck and coming up empty, Brian Hollands' luck finally turned around. On a fateful morning in 2012, Hollands not only found a lost little girl wandering the back roads of Missouri, he also found the buck of a lifetime. Check out the full story at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Carter Rice
Carter Rice is another first-time hunter that had huge success in 2012. Carter killed this buck in Pettis County Mo., with his father at his side . "I had not experienced that type of excitement since my 15-year-old son Seth was that age," wrote proud dad Rusty Rice.
This photo was submitted to NAW Editor Gordon Whittington earlier this season via e-mail.
Dorothy Shaffer
Iowa native Dorothy Shaffer has only been hunting for a couple years now, but she already has the buck of a lifetime with this 196-inch giant, her second buck ever.
At about 5:30 p.m. Nov. 1, Shaffer arrowed this bruiser through both lungs, dropping it near one of her husband's stands.
For more info, check out Shaffer's Deer of the Day entry.
Dylan Beach-Bittner
Have you seen the (almost) Turdy-Point Buck?
Taking a cue from the popular folk rap song, 12-year-old Dylan Beach-Bittner, downed a 27-point Minnesota monster scoring 241 green.
For more info, check out Beach-Bittner's Deer of the Day entry.
Fred Swihart
You need only skim the pages of the record books to understand why the majority of hunters pick the November rut as the prime time to hunt giant whitetails. Mature bucks are never a pushover, but they are more vulnerable when their nose is glued to the ground trailing an estrus doe. Fred Swihart proved, however, that you can have success outside the rut—sometimes it's just a matter of persistence. Check out the full story at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Garry Greenwalt
Garry Greenwalt teamed up with North American Whitetail's Gordon Whittington to kill this amazing Washington buck, known to Greenwalt as "The Ghost." Greenwalt spent a good deal of time tracking down the amazing 172-inch Washington giant, but it was all worth it. Read the full story at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Garry Morris
It was mid-afternoon on Nov. 13, 2009, and Gary Morris of Winslow, Ark., was heading south out of Iowa. Driven by a haze of internal frustration, he was headed back to Arkansas six days early. The last three years of planning, anticipation and excitement for his Midwestern hunt had been stolen by an encounter with a 170-inch behemoth buck and a blown 12-yard “chip-shot.” After his miss, Morris thought about giving up bowhunting altogether. But it's a good thing he didn't. Read about his unlikely comeback—as well as his 221-inch monster—in NAW's Deer of the Day.
Jay Price
Like any bowhunter who has chased mature whitetails, Jay Price is proof dedication and tenacity are often factors to success. On a fateful day in Kansas, Price once again went through his scent-masking ritual and headed to a treestand that was positioned in the hedgerow deeper into the property. It hadn't worked until that moment, but things were about to change. Get the full story at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Jeff Danker
Jeff Danker of Major League Bowhunter is no stranger to trophy bucks, and on Oct. 3 Danker proved his prowess. He killed this 183 5/8-inch typical buck in Kansas' Rice County after following him all year.
For more, read the rest of the story in this Deer of the Day entry.
Jeff Iverson
Earlier this year, Jeff Iverson killed what might be the new non-typical record for a Minnesota whitetail. This is the third season that Iverson hunted this particular buck. Two years ago, when the buck was a six-by-six typical, he missed a shot at it with his bow.
For more, read the rest of the story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Jordan Dressler
On the first hunt of her lifetime, Jordan Dressler killed this amazingly wide whitetail in Iowa. Now all she has to do is hunt the rest of her days in search of another buck like this one.
For more, read the rest of the story in this Deer of the Day entry.
Josh Barnard
As a dedicated whitetailer, Josh Barnard has had his fair share of ups and downs. This year was a high point, as Barnard killed this monstrous 192-inch trophy buck in Ohio. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Joshua Earp
Joshua Earp's Georgia giant scored 187 inches green, weighing in at 235 pounds, and was a great October surprise.
"“I’ve hunted 25 years for this," Earp said. " I give all thanks to God and my father for teaching me and introducing me to this sport I’m addicted to.”
For more, read the rest of the story in this Deer of the Day entry.
Lindsay Groom
With the help of her husband, Kevin, Ohio resident Lindsay Groom scouted this buck for two weeks before coming across its path again on Nov. 7. Lindsay shot the buck with her crossbow at about 10 yards, but was unable to locate the buck.
After watching the kill shot again on film, the couple decided to track it the next morning, finding the deer just 30 yards away from where they stopped looking the night before.
For more info, check out Groom's Deer of the Day entry.
Lucas Cochren
Lucas Cochren killed an amazing 238-inch Kansas trophy, but it all started with a blood trail gone cold. Fortunately, Cochren stuck to it and bagged the trophy of his lifetime. Check out the full story at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Matt Ford
Abingdon, Ill., resident Matt Ford downed this monster buck in the early evening of Nov. 4; the Knox County beast scored 219 1/8 inches green.
“I still can’t believe it. I thought my 145-inch 8-point was big until this,” Ford said. “I never thought I would see a deer this big, but getting to kill one this big never crossed my mind.”
For more, check out Ford's Deer of the Day entry.
Michael Morgan
Michael Morgan killed this amazing double drop-tine giant in Kansas. After watching in agony in 2011 as the monster buck walked just out of range, Morgan found success in his second attempt at the bruiser. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Mike Giarraputo
Mike Giarraputo set a New York state record with this 210-inch non-typical bruiser. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Mike Moran
Mike Moran's Saskatchewan buck was a dream come true for the hunter who'd spent 27 years looking for a deer of that quality. He finally got his wish on Thanksgiving day, an experience he won't forget. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Paul Keller
Having chased whitetails in Wisconsin since 1978, Marion bowhunter Paul Keller is no stranger to monster bucks, but this year was decidedly different. Keller dropped a 229 2/8-inch buck that will challenge for the top of the record books when all is said and done.
For more, read the rest of the story in this Deer of the Day entry.
Payton Mireles
Payton Mireles, age 10, of Ind., killed her first buck in 2012, a 154-inch bruiser. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Pete Alfano
After a two-year quest to track down the massive deer known as "Mufasa," Pete Alfano finally struck gold with this 215-inch Kansas buck. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Randy Walk
It's pretty safe to say Randy Walk, president of Hoyt Archery, knows a thing or two about bowhunting.
Nevertheless, the 225-inch Kansas beast shared by Hoyt's Facebook page stands alone as the biggest buck he'd ever seen, he said.
“He is a giant buck. Eighteen points total with nine on each side. He has been green scored at 225 inches and some change and is clearly the largest whitetail deer I have ever seen on the hoof or on the ground for that matter."
For more info, check out Walk's Deer of the Day entry.
Rich Baugh
For years, Rich Baugh carefully managed his Iowa property to maximize whitetail trophy production. After several years at it, Baugh finally capitalized in 2011 with this monster 177-inch trophy. Read more about his process—and his amazing buck—at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Richard Buker
Richard Buker has been hunting his family's property in Vermillion County, Ind., for over 20 years, and on Oct. 28, he finally got the buck of a lifetime.
That windy evening, he spotted the massive 170-inch buck working the treeline before heading across the field toward him. At 35 yards, Buker stopped the buck with a grunt, placed his shot perfectly behind the shoulder and squeezed off a shot. After running 75 yards, the buck then dropped within sight.
For more info, check out Buker's Deer of the Day entry.
Robert Gramoll
Robert Gramoll killed his 202-inch Juneau County, Wisc., record in 2012. Having deliberated about staying for the last evening of rifle season, Gramoll doesn't regret that he did. Read the full story in NAW's Deer of the Day entry.
Ryan Dietsch
After a sleepless night and an unsuccessful afternoon tracking a blood trail, Ryan Dietsch was sure he'd squandered the opportunity of a lifetime. He and friends went back to track the deer he thought he'd hit, but couldn't find so much as a drop of blood. His luck all changed, however, and the rest—along with his 219-inch trophy—is history. Check out the full story at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Shane Frost
Whitetail fate played its hand for Arkansas’ Shane Frost on January 23, 2012. The setting was in the big-timbered, fertile ground of the Black River Bottoms in Clay County in northeast Arkansas. The ancient oaks and sloughs, in all their years, had likely never witnessed a more epic bowhunting scene. So began Frost's whitetail season, which ended with a 216-inch trophy on his wall. Read more at NAW's Deer of the Day.
Stanley Suda
Southern Ohio turned in another giant earlier this season when Stanley Suda shot this buck which is estimated between 235 and 240 inches.
"The shot was perfect," he said. "I watched my dream buck run across the field and pile-up about 20 yards inside the wood line. This was definitely my finest moment in the treestand.”
For more, read the rest of the story in this Deer of the Day entry.
Travis Trimmer
Travis Trimmer of Varina, Va., killed this monster buck on Oct. 27 with a crossbow at 15 yards. The brute weighed in around 159 lbs. and was reported to have a 27-inch wide inside spread.
For more, read the rest of the story in this NAW Community entry.
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NAW's Best Bucks of 2012