Skip to content

More Photos of New PA Record

Share in the stories, pictures, tips, tactics and learn how to be a better bowhunter.

Moderator: whitetiger

More Photos of New PA Record

Postby NWPAHunter on Mon Feb 11, 2008 1:57 pm

Here are some more photos of the new pa record.

Image

Image

Image

Gerald Simkonis, 53, of Allegheny County, killed this 36-point, non-typical buck Nov. 2 while bowhunting on private property. (Gerald Simkonis, Allentown Morning Call / February 5, 2008)

By Christian Berg | Of The Morning Call
February 5, 2008

It's been 20 years since Allentown bowhunter Craig Krisher killed a 23-point buck that shattered Pennsylvania's non-typical (asymmetrical antlers) archery record.

At the time, Krisher figured his record-breaking buck would hold the title for a year or two -- maybe five if he was lucky.

''Each year, whenever you are holding a record, you have to have in the back of your mind that there's a big buck out there, and you have to expect it,'' said Krisher, 44, who owns his own tree trimming and land clearing business.

But as the years turned into decades, Krisher started to wonder if his record would ever be toppled.

Then, on Nov. 2, the inevitable happened. Gerald Simkonis, 53, from South Strabane Township, Allegheny County, was bowhunting on private property near his home in Wildlife Management Unit 2B when he arrowed a buck that sported a massive, 36-point rack that would later receive an official Boone and Crockett score of 2081/8 inches, easily surpassing Krisher's mark of 2033/8.

''We'd all like to be successful and get this, and I was fortunate enough to do it,'' Simkonis said. ''You can be as skilled as you can be, but everything has to come in place right, or you're not going to get what you're after. It took me 41 years to get there, so, to any young hunters who are out there, don't give up.''

When news of Simkonis' buck reached Krisher several weeks ago, the former record-holder said he was excited and congratulated Simkonis in a brief telephone conversation.

''To just hold the record for one week is something special, and to hold that for 20 years was an unthinkable thing,'' Krisher said. ''My hat is off to [Simkonis].''

Simkonis, who started bowhunting when he was 12, grew up in Nanticoke, Luzerne County, and moved to Allegheny County six years ago to take a job as a contractor at the U.S. Department of Energy's National Energy Technology Laboratory in Pittsburgh.

''One of the reasons I took the job out here is that Allegheny County has so many entrants in the record book,'' he said. ''There's still a lot of farms out here, believe it or not, and if you pitch in and help them bale hay, they'll let you hunt.''

Simkonis said he had been hunting his record buck for three years without ever catching a glimpse of the animal.

''I knew he existed, but I never saw him,'' Simkonis said. ''Three years ago, the landowner told me there was a nice deer on the property and it looked like it had 18 points. I certainly got interested in that, but he would only see him like one night each year, right around the breeding period.''

After two years of unsuccessfully pursuing the buck, Simkonis waited until the rut kicked in last fall and decided to press his luck by hanging a treestand in the one area of the property he hadn't before -- a dense thicket with the kind of cover likely to hold a giant buck in need of a hideout.

''... It was filled with poison oak, and I really didn't want to go in there,'' said Simkonis, who ended up with a rash on his arms and legs. ''I really paid for it, but my hunch paid off.''

On the morning of Nov. 2, Simkonis snuck into the woods two hours before dawn, put down a scent trail of estrous doe urine around his stand, climbed up the tree and waited.

Early in the morning, Simkonis had two bucks -- an 8-pointer and a 6-pointer -- come past his stand, but he knew they weren't what he was looking for. Around 8 a.m., he decided to try some aggressive calling tactics and see what happened.

''I rattled, and I made a fawn bleat and I followed up with a grunt call,'' he said.

A few minutes later, Simkonis said, he spotted the record buck moving in his direction. ''I only saw the bottom of his right beam, and that was enough to get me shaking,'' he said.

When the deer walked into a shooting lane less than 20 yards away, Simkonis drew his Hoyt ProVantage bow and released an Easton aluminum arrow tipped with a Wasp, four-blade broadhead.

''I heard a loud crack, and he ran about 10 yards and faced away from me. I wasn't even sure if I hit him,'' said Simkonis, who explained that he watched as the deer briefly lay down before getting up and walking out of sight.

''I took another shot at him and it went over his back. I waited two hours for him in the treestand, and it was probably the most agonizing time I ever had, not even knowing if I had hit him.''

When Simkonis finally climbed out of the tree and found his first arrow, he discovered it was covered with blood. And after following the blood trail, he realized the buck had circled around his stand and died just 20 yards away from his stand, but the brush was so thick he couldn't see it.

''I got within five feet of him, and seeing how big it was, I got real nervous,'' Simkonis said. ''I thought, 'This is the deer the guy has been talking about. It's not just a story.' And I felt really relieved that I had him.''

Simkonis' buck weighed 181 pounds field-dressed. He gave one of the jawbones, used to estimate the age of the buck, to the Pennsylvania Game Commission. A preliminary examination of tooth wear indicated the deer was likely 41/2 years old, but the agency is sending a tooth to a laboratory where it can be cross-sectioned to reveal the exact age.

Simkonis took the rack from his buck to George Block, an official Boone and Crockett scorer from Eighty Four, Washington County. The mandatory 60-day drying period for the buck's rack expired Dec. 31, and on Jan. 1, Block led a three-person panel of certified scorers who measured Simkonis' rack and came up with a gross score of 2116/8 inches and a net score of 2081/8.

In addition to ranking as the largest non-typical buck ever taken by a Pennsylvania archer, Simkonis' buck ranks as the state's fourth-largest non-typical of all time. The largest non-typical buck in Pennsylvania history measured 2386/8 inches and was killed in 1942 in Erie County.

Simkonis said his buck had a total of 58 points, of which 36 were scoreable (measuring 1 inch or more). There were 15 scoreable points on the right antler and 21 scoreable points on the right antler.

Simkonis said he has submitted the certified score sheet from his buck to the Game Commission, which maintains the state's official big-game hunting records. Agency spokesman Jerry Feaser said the agency will recognize Simkonis' buck the next time those records are updated, which he expects will happen later this year.
NWPAHunter
 
Posts: 220
Joined: Thu Aug 02, 2007 8:03 pm

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby keystoneman on Mon Feb 11, 2008 2:13 pm

What a monster! And check out his bow, it isn't that new. Just goes to show ya that it isn't necessary to always have the newest and greatest gear!

Congrats!
Just sayin ...
User avatar
keystoneman
 
Posts: 347
Joined: Fri Feb 08, 2008 8:38 am
Location: Lititz, Pa

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby truefire06 on Mon Feb 11, 2008 5:32 pm

Def A PA Monster!!
truefire06
 
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2008 12:30 pm

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby Marshrat on Mon Feb 11, 2008 7:50 pm

Nice deer wonder what the guy thought when that walked by
Christopher Steven Neal
Don't Leave Fish to Find Fish
Fishing is a... discipline in the equality of men - for all men are equal before fish.
User avatar
Marshrat
 
Posts: 942
Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2007 9:21 am
Location: Wellsboro,PA

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby BULL_357 on Mon Feb 11, 2008 8:05 pm

From what I heard from someone that writing the story for it he had hunted it for three years, but the only time he ever saw it while hunting was the first time he shot it. That would be awesome to hunt a monster like that and finally get him.
Hunters Were Born To Survive.....Will You Make It?

Frank M. Litavish
814 244 7115
User avatar
BULL_357
 
Posts: 1082
Joined: Wed May 23, 2007 3:32 pm
Location: Northern Cambria/Blair County

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby tinker on Tue Feb 12, 2008 12:01 pm

That is a heckuva deer. :shock:

Mike
Sportsmen Portal Home Page - http://www.sportsmenportal.com

Wired Outdoors Facebook Fan Page - http://facebook.com/wiredoutdoors
Twitter - http://twitter.com/wiredoutdoors

SPONSORS
Estemerwalt Log Homes - http://www.estemerwalt.com
East Coast Guns - http://www.eastcoastgunsales.com
Shooting The X - http://www.shootingthex.com
Medalist Huntgear Clothing - http://www.medalist.com
Eastern Sports & Outdoor Show - http://www.easternsportshow.com/en/Home/?campaignid=61539744&iusercampaignid=58956234
Hunter Safety System - http://www.huntersafetysystem.com/
User avatar
tinker
 
Posts: 652
Joined: Thu Jan 11, 2007 11:10 am
Location: western pa

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby tim johnston on Tue Feb 12, 2008 2:58 pm

Every archery hunters dream. What a buck


TIMMAAA
tim johnston
 
Posts: 132
Joined: Sun Oct 21, 2007 6:48 pm
Location: rimersburg

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby slug on Thu Feb 14, 2008 11:58 pm

I've seen these pics a few times now and every time, my jaw still hits the floor.
Chris
slug
 
Posts: 6
Joined: Wed Jan 30, 2008 10:54 pm
Location: Palmyra

Re: More Photos of New PA Record

Postby Spike on Tue Feb 26, 2008 8:15 pm

Huge Deer :!: :shock:
There is a place for all God's creatures....right next to the potatoes and gravy!
User avatar
Spike
 
Posts: 216
Joined: Sun Dec 23, 2007 9:02 pm
Location: Blair County, Hollidaysburg


Return to Bowhunting

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest