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Patience yields big trophy for Texas deer hunter who passed up chances as antler growth continued - The Dallas Morning News

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Joel Colston of Livingston got an early jump on the general deer season that kicked off Nov. 6, and it paid off with a remarkable whitetail wearing a magnificent crown.

Texas Big Awards Program scorer Erik Van Dorn of Huntsville taped the 18-pointer at 199 3/8 gross using the Boone and Crockett measuring system. The enormous rack nets 190 2/8 after deductions for a lack of symmetry. It’s the best free-ranging TBGA non-typical reported statewide this season.

There are plenty of good lessons ambitious deer managers can learn from Colston’s whopper.

For starters, it clearly shows what can happen when like-minded hunters keep those itchy trigger fingers in check and let the young guys walk.

The deer also illustrates the benefits of feeding protein and other nutritious goodies through the offseason to fuel new antler growth after the previous year’s antlers are cast.

Colston hunts on a 1,600-acre club he shares with six other members in Trinity County. The lease has operated under the guidelines of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department’s conservation level managed lands deer program (MLDP) for nearly two decades.

The main purposes of the program are to help promote healthier deer herds, improve habitat and ultimately produce more bucks of better quality on private lands.

MLD conservation level clubs pay an annual fee to TPWD in exchange for the opportunity to work with a state wildlife biologist, developing habitat and harvest recommendations tailored toward meeting deer management goals for specific properties.

Program participants are required to maintain accurate harvest data and to satisfy prescribed habitat management practices from one year to the next.

MLD hunters are rewarded for the good deeds with some pretty sweet perks. Among them are greater flexibility in managing their deer herds by allowing for longer seasons and lenient harvest quotas.

This year, MLD clubs statewide were allowed to begin hunting with rifles at the start the archery only season Oct. 2. That’s how Colston wound up in a box blind a week later with a 6.5 Creedmoor across his lap.

He was hoping for an afternoon date with “Triple Crown.” And he got it.

Colston said he and his hunting buddies tagged the buck with the catchy nickname because of the unique cluster of points that sprouted from its G2s.

“He’s a really cool-looking buck,” said Colston. “I don’t know that I’ll ever be able to top him — not on free range in East Texas, anyway.”

A nighttime picture of Triple Crown at 2 1/2 years of age.
A nighttime picture of Triple Crown at 2 1/2 years of age.(Courtesy of Joel Colston)

Letting him grow

Colston’s relationship with the manly-looking whitetail dates to 2019, when a promising young 10-pointer began showing up on game cameras positioned at protein stations and corn feeders at all corners of the property.

Colston said the 2 1/2-year-old buck may have scored around 125 B&C at the time. “He traveled all over the whole lease,” he recalled. “Everybody saw him. You never knew where he was going to be.”

Plenty of hunters would have shot the buck if given the opportunity, but not on Colston’s lease. Growing quality bucks is the name of the game there.

Club members are well-schooled on field judging whitetails, and they are restricted to tight guidelines when it comes to pulling the trigger, particularly on special bucks that display the potential Triple Crown did at such a young age.

Stacking on bone

Amazingly, Triple Crown’s headgear exploded ahead of the 2020 season, easily stacking on about 30 to 35 inches in mass, tine and beam length.

Colston said he watched the 3 1/2-year-old deer for an hour at one of his feeders on opening day last October. He counted 14 points and estimated the buck to score in the mid-160s.

Triple Crown, at 3 1/2 years of age, pictured at a deer feeder.
Triple Crown, at 3 1/2 years of age, pictured at a deer feeder.(Courtesy of Joel Colston)

Colston showed video of the outstanding buck to other members, and everyone agreed on the buck’s age. Likewise, they elected to give him another year to grow.

“We knew it was risky to do that, because we’ve got some neighbors around us that we’ve lost a lot of good deer to over the years,” Colston said. “All we could do was hope he didn’t leave and get shot. Luckily, he never left our club last season. If he did, it wasn’t for very long.”

Colston said the buck shed its antlers last March and didn’t show up again on camera until around mid-July, about four months into the 2021 antler-growing season.

Club members were shocked by what they saw in the massive buck that everyone believed to be no more than 4 1/2 years old.

“He really blew up this year,” Colston said. “We were all in disbelief that it was him, but there was no doubt about it. It’s spooky to think what this deer may have turned into with another year or two of age, but we all knew that we couldn’t take that chance. Everyone agreed that whoever got the opportunity should go ahead and shoot him.”

A Triple Crown date

Several club members got pictures of the buck throughout the summer, most coming under the cover of darkness. Colston said he collected one daylight photo of the deer the week before the Oct. 2 MLD season opener, but he never actually laid eyes on the animal this fall until a magical sunset fell on Trinity County on Oct. 9.

The hunter said he was watching a group of deer about 150 yards away when he turned to check an adjacent road that leads to his stand. That’s when he saw an incredible buck with tall, gnarly antlers resembling something out of a fairy tale.

“He was just standing there staring at me, about 80 yards away,” he said.

Colston didn’t have to think twice about reaching for his rifle, but it took a few seconds to ready for the shot. In the meantime, Triple Crown peeled off the road and headed into the adjacent clearcut.

Lucky for Coltson, the buck checked up before melting into the thick brush.

“I have no idea why he stopped, but it gave me just enough time to make the shot,” he said. “Everything worked out perfect.”

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