An Eye-Opening Pronghorn Hunt! #FreshTracks



#hunting #pronghorn #antelope
Randy is hunting pronghorn in Nevada near the only pronghorn refuge in the world. Follow along as he searches for a mature buck to wrap his coveted tag around and explore one of his favorite places on Earth!

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43 thoughts on “An Eye-Opening Pronghorn Hunt! #FreshTracks”

  1. This is an example of a person knowing they won’t hunt an area again, so they don’t have a problem spot-burning the place.
    The exact sort of thing that floods an area with hunters.

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  2. My very first hunt ever was a pronghorn in Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge. It was amazing and tagged out within 24 hours. I spent more time driving from Vegas than actual on the ground hunting.

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  3. Great hunt, always enjoy watching Randy hunt.
    Please don’t promote beer, I want my grandkids to watch your hunting videos, if you drink, drink, just leave it off the videos for our childrens sake, Thanks
    Randy I’m sorry you have to drive a ford , Times will get better, 😉

    Reply
  4. Lets be more honest and more outspoken about this situation….
    First of all, they are not "Non-Native" they are technically "Feral" Horses. University DNA studies prove they are not historical animals but more than 95% European Working Domestic Horse Stock… meaning they were introduced by settlers & Calvery and thus the blood lines are modern blood lines and less than 2% Spanish Barb bloodlines used as a romantic argument that they are native to the landscape. Thats factually wrong and should not be entertained at all.
    Secondly, the groups preventing the round ups are not sportsmen and have NO vested interest in the Public Lands or recreational uses of the public lands used by sportsmen. The laws clearly state there should only be 21,000 or so Feral horses allowed on public lands yet there are currently roughly 80,000! and a Horse Herd doubles every 4 years. Numerous States are facing these invasive feral horses that activists who are misinformed, under educated, with no scientific basis to their arguments and yet well-funded who are a radical and very loudly outspoken and they intimidate and sue the government every time a round up is scheduled.
    MORE sportsmen NEED to get involved, get their money involved, get their voices involved and start pushing for these feral horses to be removed… the laws designating the wilderness areas that protect the wilderness areas clearly state they are for native species…. but the public lands are in limbo and again because well-funded very loud obnoxious radical activists intimidate the process and rule by emotion on the subject and void any science at all they get the upper hand and prevent the removal of the horses that are destroying natural habitats for Wild Game and natural habitat. In extreme weather they also stomp springs out and close off the water supplies that once had been historical and critical to the landscape.

    Stop being so gentle, so politically correct and vague about it. Speak out, use your voice and your platform to help get other sportsmen involved in this issue otherwise there is no counter voice to the radical activists that are preventing management plans being enforced or enacted…. and the damage will only continue and grow. Remember, the only thing that allows this issue to prevail is that good sportsmen who remain silent. USE your platform and get involved with this issue – it's a HUGE and devastating problem in NV, AZ, UT, CO, WY, NM and several other States! Feral Horses are destroyed amazing Mule Deer and Elk habitat in CO around Rangely too in the same manner.

    Someone like you needs to take this up and help rally and educate more sportsmen who need to get involved and their voices in the fray.

    Reply
  5. My (limited) experience: antelope will stick to a 1-2 mile radius, unless pushed HARD.. find water, find tracks and they will come back 😉 i spent a whole day once, chasing prairie goats across SE Colorado, only to have the day end where we found them, that morning..

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  6. Randy, I've stayed at that cabin for many years. It is cool to recognize it! I see the same type of habitat decimation in that area and areas a little south in Nevada and in Southern Oregon. Browse turned into dust and dung heaps. It's sad to see big ole shiny uneducated city hearts regulate the wild and it's sustainability. I share your dismay man. I'm glad you could turn up a buck for the freezer

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  7. I worked at Soldier Meadows Ranch in 2015. I have seen first hand what kind of impact those horses had on the springs and the feed. Every time we went to go gather cows we would see a band of them or at least a couple studs. The damage that those horses cause is terrible.

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  8. Congratulations on getting a long awaited Nevada pronghorn from that area. Sometimes you have to take the gift that God gives you even if it has no prongs or cutters.
    Always great to see Scott Jones, even for a little bit.

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  9. As always…. Awesome video. Yes Randy, sometimes ya just got to get lucky. But here's the thing. Luck I believe is when preparation intersects with opportunity. You made the shot. Great job!

    Reply

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