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From
Able to Disabled: The Seasons Keep Rolling On
By
Steven W. Baines
It’s strange the things you think about in an emergency. My first
thoughts when I severed my thumb from my hand on a table saw on
September 11th were that I had pretty well ruined my bow hunting
season for the year and dramatically changed the quality of my life.
As I stood in the driveway of our home and my wife wrapped a towel
around the gapping wound, all I kept repeating was, “I ruined my
hunting season! I ruined my hunting season!” Doctors at Rhode Island
Hospital were unable to reattach my thumb, as it was too badly
damaged, but they did what they could to form a partial thumb out of
what was left. It wasn’t until I returned home later that day that I
realized what I had actually done and the long road I had before me.
In the days that followed I thought about the writings of
Paleontologist Steven J. Gould, who wrote extensively on the human
thumb and how the use of that single digit separated us from other
species. It’s the thumb that gave man the ability to manipulate his
environment, to grasp and use tools. No other species has the degree
of capability that humans have, and that truth became very clear to
me in the days that followed my accident. Simple things like
buttoning my pants or shirt or holding a knife and fork were now
difficult.
While managing the pain and relearning to do simple things, I was
losing sight of the things I held close. Hunting season was a few
weeks away, but I was no more ready to hunt then I was to do many of
the other simple things I had lost the ability to do.
While I still had a portion of my thumb, the pain in my hand and
its limited functionality made holding a bow nearly impossible. The
nerves that run along each side of my thumb and are usually buried
were now exposed just under the skin so that every time I made
contact with anything, a sharp pain shot up through my hand. I
couldn’t hold a glass let alone a six-pound bow. I did, however,
have an option.
Last year, the Rhode Island Department of Environmental
Management's Division of Fish and Wildlife passed regulations
permitting the use of crossbows or adaptive aids for disabled
archery hunters. With the passage of that legislation, Rhode Island
joined 42 other states in permitting crossbows for deer hunting by
disabled hunters (Twenty-four of those states permit crossbows for
deer hunting by any licensed hunter).
The new state law allowed DEM to issue crossbow permits to
licensed hunters with a permanent physical impairment that prevents
them from using a conventional bow and arrow device. The permit also
allows disabled hunters to use adaptive aids on conventional bows.
Adaptive aids include any mechanical device to help pull, hold, or
release the string.
To qualify for a permit, applicants must include copies of their
hunter safety and bow hunter safety cards and a physician's
statement confirming the applicant meets the disability
requirements. Another provision allows that all bow-hunters age 65
and older may use adaptive aids for archery deer hunting without
having to apply for the permit, but this does not permit the use of
crossbows.
After I received a crossbow permit from the state, I contacted
David P. Robb, Director of Marketing for Ten Point Crossbows of
Suffield, OH and ordered a QX-4 Crossbow package, which gave me
everything from quiver to sight to crossbow bolts (arrows) in a nice
package.
The QX-4 is a well thought out bow. It has a trigger that is set
at 3 ½ pounds and is as smooth as most good rifle triggers. It also
has two safeties installed on the bow, one primary push button
safety set above the trigger and one secondary grip safety at the
front of the handle of the bow. The secondary safety in the front
handle forces the user to depress a button to fire the bow. This
ensures that the hand is out of the way of the string when the bow
is fired. For disabled hunters, a rubber insert automatically
depresses the lever of the front secondary safety, so that the
disabled hunter only has to contend with the rear safety. Because I
no longer had the ability to depress the front safety, I used the
rubber insert.
After I got use to shooting it, the bow produced great groups.
Actually, the groups were so tight at 20 yards that I had to shoot
at various targets to keep from damaging my arrows. My three-blade,
75-grain Muzzy broadheads flew as accurately as the field points,
and after a few weeks of steady shooting, I felt confident enough to
take the crossbow hunting, although I still had problems physically
grasping the bow.
I missed all of the October season by the time I finally got into
my tree stand on November 4th but the rut was heating up and I saw
some good rutting (breeding) sign on my way through the woods.
Because I use detachable tree steps and they take some maneuvering
to use, I had a tough time climbing into my tree stand, but I took
my time and used my climbing belt to climb slowly but steadily.
I settle into the stand and relaxed. It felt good to be in the
woods and I was happy just to be out in the open air. Plenty of
leaves remained on the maples and oaks and were a crimson and gold
color. The smell of autumn was in the air; seeing any game would be
a bonus.
Just as the sun was settling over the horizon at around 4:20, I
heard moment behind me but was afraid to move and give away my
location. When I did turn my head slightly, I saw a mature buck
moving rapidly by me and into the surrounding bush. I brought the
bow up but had trouble holding the front portion of it and it
momentarily slipped from my hand. As the deer started into the thick
brush around my stand, I rushed the shot and the arrow flew over his
back.
He sensed something was wrong when he heard the arrow fly by and
sink into the ground beyond him, and he stopped and looked my way,
stamping his foot into the ground as a challenge. I started grunting
softly with a deer grunt call and this seemed to calm him. He moved
out from the thick brush and out of my sight, but I could hear him
in the distance laying down a fresh scrap. I stayed in the tree
until I heard him move off before I got down, as I didn’t want to
spook him. If he knew he was being hunted, he would just move his
rutting pattern to the nighttime hours.
I never got a good look at the deer’s antlers when he slipped by,
as I learned years ago that once you identify it’s a buck and decide
to take it that looking at antlers is a sure way to miss the shot. I
was more focused on making the shot, but in my rush I simply
overshot him. The chances of me getting another chance at this deer
were slim.
It was Wednesday, November 9th when I climbed back into the stand
around 2:00 pm. The sky was overcast and the weather looked
threatening, but I just wanted to hunt.
At around 3:00, a light rain started to fall and continued off
and on for the next hour. The ground was getting wet and not
conducive for bow hunting, especially if I managed to hit a deer, as
the ability to follow a blood trail would be negated.
At 4:00 a muzzle-loading rifle boomed in the distance, not more
then 75 yards from my tree. I heard the hunter walking around in the
leaves and heard him dragging out his prize. With all the commotion
from the other hunter, I was discouraged and considered getting down
and making an early night of it. In addition, the wind was blowing
directly from me to where I thought the buck might enter, and
thought my chances of success were dwindling with the fading light.
By 4:30, however, the other hunter was out of the woods, so I
decided to hang in for another 15 minutes of the 30 minutes of legal
shooting time. The rain had started to fall more heavily and the
wind had picked up slightly, blowing strong from the southeast.
Like an apparition, the deer came in quietly from my left, but it
had some destination in mind and was moving quickly. I put my grunt
tube in my mouth and brought the bow up to my shoulder, settled into
the sight and waited. The buck stopped behind a tree and raised his
head to sniff the air, but there was no opportunity for a shot. I
think he must have caught my sent in the swirling wind and jumped
slightly forward, but I gave a short grunt and stopped him, just
long enough to get the sight on him and send my bolt on its way.
I heard that familiar sound, like an arrow going through a
pumpkin, but wasn’t exactly sure of my hit. When I found my arrow
sticking into the ground on the opposite side of where the deer was
standing, I knew I had hit it well, but with all the rain I couldn’t
find enough blood to track it. Now that I’m over 50 I find it very
hard to track a deer at night, let alone in a rainstorm. I searched
in the darkness for an hour and a half, making as close to a
semi-circle as I could before the skies opened and I had to abandon
my search.
That night it rain hard and I had a restless night. I was up at
4:00 am, dressed and ready to go. I left my house at 4:15, stopped
and got coffee, and arrived at my hunting area a short time later. I
sat in the truck for over an hour listening to the radio and
thinking about how hunting has helped me to mark the years.
I remembered the first deer I took on Prudence Island in 1973 in
the snow and the big Pennsylvania doe that came out of the pines the
season prior to my daughter’s birth, 1983, and fell to my
muzzle-loader, as well as the call from a pregnant wife that wanted
her husband home early. I thought about having to put down my
trusted companion, a 12-year old Springer spaniel that had shared
many a day in the field with me, in 1985, the year I sat in a
Wyoming antelope blind with a good friend and took a Pope and Young
antelope that came in to a water hole.

I thought about how the frozen dew shined in the morning sun as
my Montana elk guide let go with a piercing bugle in 1991. I
remember tracking Jim Willsey’s New York buck in 2001 during a star
filled night and how the deer waded out onto an island in
Manchurian’s Pond and we had to wade out in waist deep water the
next morning to get it, breaking the ice as we went. Now it was
2005, and as I sat in my truck and wondered if I would ever find
this deer after almost an inch of rain fell the previous night, I
thought that this experience, no matter how it turned out, either
good or bad, would help me to define this season.
I found the deer around 7:00 am. He had gone less then 100 yards
before piling up in a thicket. Two hours later I had him out of the
woods. His dressed weight was 201 pounds, and he wore a symmetrical
eight–point rack. He was estimated to be around eight years old.
Only two front teeth remained in his mouth, and he would have been
hard pressed to survive another winter.
I’m having the deer mounted, and 20 years from now when I look at
him on the wall of my home, I’ll know that in 2005, the deer and I
shared something. Maybe it was fate that he came out of that
particular thicket and brought a little sunshine to my gloomy year.
Or maybe it was just his bad luck and my good luck. Whatever the
reason that brought him to me-call it fate, call it divine
intervention, or call it luck, it will help me to mark this year.
And no matter what state I’m in 20 or 30 years from now, thumb or no
thumb, healthy or unhealthy, the deer will be on my wall or on
someone else’s, reminding us that whatever tragedies befall us, in
the end, the seasons keep rolling on.
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Hunt Statistics |
| Date Harvested: Wednesday November 9, 2005 |
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Town Hunted: Somewhere in RI |
| Points: 8 point typical |
| Weight: 201 pounds dressed |
| Method: Ten Point QX-4 Crossbow |
| Gear: Ten Point QX-4 tipped with Muzzy three-blade,
75-grain broadheads |
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