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Cimarron county Antelope hunting
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<blockquote data-quote="ImTheDude" data-source="post: 2770906" data-attributes="member: 31343"><p>I went in 2007, got permission from a guy to hunt his place, when I showed up the morning of, he had given permission to 2 other people and it was worthless. Drove around the rest of the day and anything I saw, I couldn't get close or there was already another group. Next morning at the cafe the waitress told me to go to the bank and talk with the president, he took me in his office and showed me a map of all his property and to shoot as many as I want (they hate them). So, finally spot some on his property right off the highway headed to felt. I belly crawled for over 2 hours and 400 yards through a winter wheat field full of goat heads. the doe popped up when I was just over 350 yards away......dropped her, I would have cried if I missed the shot after all that work.</p><p></p><p>My advice, be prepared to work for it, good chance you'll be crawling a lot. Have a bipod and make sure you can hit something from 300 yards. Also, I had to throw away my clothes because of all the stickers in them and I was pulling thorns out of my arms for well over a week. I'd crawl 5-10' and stop and have to rip the shirt away from my arm to get the goat heads loose.</p><p></p><p>In the end, it was by far my most difficult hunt, but also my memorable. I'm headed back mid October to do a buck bow hunt. It's "semi guided", meaning the guy meets me at the gate and says here's your 2k acres to hunt on.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ImTheDude, post: 2770906, member: 31343"] I went in 2007, got permission from a guy to hunt his place, when I showed up the morning of, he had given permission to 2 other people and it was worthless. Drove around the rest of the day and anything I saw, I couldn't get close or there was already another group. Next morning at the cafe the waitress told me to go to the bank and talk with the president, he took me in his office and showed me a map of all his property and to shoot as many as I want (they hate them). So, finally spot some on his property right off the highway headed to felt. I belly crawled for over 2 hours and 400 yards through a winter wheat field full of goat heads. the doe popped up when I was just over 350 yards away......dropped her, I would have cried if I missed the shot after all that work. My advice, be prepared to work for it, good chance you'll be crawling a lot. Have a bipod and make sure you can hit something from 300 yards. Also, I had to throw away my clothes because of all the stickers in them and I was pulling thorns out of my arms for well over a week. I'd crawl 5-10' and stop and have to rip the shirt away from my arm to get the goat heads loose. In the end, it was by far my most difficult hunt, but also my memorable. I'm headed back mid October to do a buck bow hunt. It's "semi guided", meaning the guy meets me at the gate and says here's your 2k acres to hunt on. [/QUOTE]
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