Aethien wrote:
Huh, makes me think of something, Ladas. Is "buck fever" - the yips you get when you have a deer in your sights, etc. - is that mainly a function of how large a deer is? Or is it because some guys go years without shooting at a deer, much less getting one, and they get nervous, etc.? I just wonder if it would hit me, so I'm thinking of the few things (squirrels, mainly) that I have shot. No "fever" at all for me, maybe a little remorse when I put down a chipmunk by mistake. But, faced with a deer, those big brown eyes, the anticipated adulation of my peers ... I dunno, interesting question.
I don't know if my answer to that question applies to everyone or not, but from my perspective, it has to do with anticipation mixed with surprise. I have never suffered from buck fever on a drive or walking, but when sitting in a stand for a few hours, you tend to relax, and small signs will keep you constantly on edge with lots of false positives, so when that deer just magically appear in front of you (and they are so quiet, that's exactly what it can be like... you look once, glance the other direction, then look back a second later and there it is out in the open), all that anticipation can make you nervous, getting your heart rate up, and people with less experience start to think if it appeared that quickly, it can just disappear that fast too, so they need to hurry up and get the shot off, sometimes taking bad shots due to distance, angle, or just not taking the time to calm down and aim.
Add in the sense of elation/release/relief if you put in the effort to scout the area, set up, etc and its easy to get a bit worked up.
I don't believe, at least for me, its because of any association with bambi/rudolf or anything so romantic, because I can get that same tinge when a big boar walks out into my hunting area as well, and they are ugly, dangerous beats with no singing kumabata (sp?) in the background.
Squirrels are complete different because frankly, they are stupid easy to get... you can just sit on the ground in just about any hardwood stand with a decent .22 or .17 and get your limit (if you state has one). Plus, you hear them coming from a mile away with all the chatter, foraging, running up and down the bark.