A white-tailed buck,Ā nearly dead from exhaustion after being entangled with a dead buck, caught a lucky break and was freed, but only after havingĀ half an antlerĀ shot off in the process.
OutdoorsmanĀ BarrettĀ Liquori told Cowboy State Daily that when he and his friend found theĀ helplessĀ bucks on Dec. 7 in the Texas Panhandle country, there wasnāt enough time to hike all the way back home to retrieve a hacksaw.
So he turned to plan B, blasting off one of the dead buckās antlers with the Springfield Hellcat 9mm pistol he always carries with him in the field.
When that didnāt work, it was time for plan C; blast off roughly half of one of the live buckās antlers.
That did the trick and the befuddled buck stumbled toĀ itsĀ feet. Liquoriās friendĀ caught videoĀ of the incident, which blew up on social media. Ā Ā
Reactions have been mostly positive, Liquori told Cowboy State Daily. It seems hunters across theĀ countryĀ appreciate efforts to help out animals, regardless of the means used.
Spotted From The Air
Liquori lives and hunts in Texas, but heās been on hunts all over the country. That includesĀ a trip to Wyoming, to hunt mule deer and antelope in the Kaycee area.
Wyomingites could identify with the Texas panhandle country, he said.
āItās rough country. Weāre not at the same elevation as the mountain country, but itās rough with lots of deep canyons, draws and rocks,ā he said.
He and his friend werenāt hunting on Dec. 7. Instead, they were on a vast ranch, using a drone to do aerial surveys of the deer and elk population there.
Elk arenāt native to Texas and are considered āan exotic speciesā there, he said.
Though it was daytime, he was using the droneās thermal imaging.
āI found a hot spot with the thermal and switched to the daytime camera, and thatās when I found the two deer. I initially thought they were both still alive,ā he said.
Even from the air, it was clear that the bucksā antlers were helplessly entangled with one another.
The deer were about a quarter of a mile away, in a small wash and behind a pile of mesquite and cedar that had been plowed up by the rancher.
Ranchers try to rid their property of mesquite and cedar, which are invasive plant species there.
āOnce we got to them (the bucks) I realized that one of them had already passed, and the other one wasnāt doing well,ā he said.
Just as deer, elk and antelope in Wyoming do, Texas white-tailed bucks will fight with each other for access to female deer during theĀ rut, or mating season.
When animals'Ā antlers or horns get entangled, itās frequently a death sentence, they might die from exhaustion or thirst.
āIāve been around deer that were locked up before. Most of the time, we find them dead,ā Liquori said.
The dead buck āwas in a state of decay,ā indicating that the bucks had probably been trapped there for days, he added.
Third Shotās The Charm
The live deer was in such a sorry state, Liquori was worried it would die if he took the time to goĀ retrieveĀ a hacksaw.
So, he reached for his pistol, which was loaded with hollow-point rounds, which Liquori favors for shooting feral hogs, which are considered a destructive invasive species in Texas.
At first, he tried a couple of shots at the dead buckās antlers, but that failed.
He couldnāt bust the antlers at the bases, and given the angle, shooting higher up on theĀ deadĀ buckās antlers presented ātoo much of a risk of hitting the live deerā in the head, he said.
So, he found a good aim point on one of the live deerās antlers, took careful aim and fired his third shot, which blew the antler in half and allowed the poor buck to finally pull free.
The buck was dazed and disoriented, so the men decided to leave, rather than hang around and stress it out even more.
They came back a couple of hours later, and the buck was gone. It apparently managed to find a nearby water source, got aĀ drink and then took off.
āI have not seen that buck since,ā Liquori said, but he hopes itās OK.
Pig Blast
In another recent incident, Liquori used his pistol to instantly drop a feral hog that came through the ranchās fence and started toward him.
Feral hogs are hated in Texas, he said. They destroy fences, dig up farmland, and can destroy an entire crop of corn overnight.
Texans kill hogs āby any means possible,ā including hunting them after dark with thermal imaging scopes on their rifles.
Liquori is part of theĀ Night Crew, hunting media content creators, with a YouTube channel featuring their nighttime hunts for hogs and predators. Ā
So far, Wyoming has been spared a feral hog infestation. However,Ā hogs have been movingĀ north into Colorado, and south into Montana from Canada ā raising concerns over how far they might eventually spread in the Mountain West.
Mark Heinz can be reached at mark@cowboystatedaily.com.





