The "Hokah Legend"--Big Buck Story

Rick Kyte

Well-known member
00lead.jpg

Legendary buck from SE Minnesota went down last week. Story below from today's La Crosse Tribune:


Spanjers bags the ‘Hokah Legend’
By Bob Lamb
October 16, 2008

Do legends live forever? Just ask Ben Spanjers of Hokah, Minn., who shot what has become the “Hokah Legend,” in early October.

Spanjers, husband, father of three children and assistant manager at Kohl’s Department Store in Onalaska, killed what will certainly rank among the top five bucks taken by bow and arrow in the state of Minnesota.

The likeable Spanjers is not only the talk of tiny Hokah, but also among deer hunters throughout Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa and beyond. Everyone is learning about the magnificent buck that roamed Hokah hillsides and lowlands for at least seven years, probably eight.

For the record, Spanjers’ buck weighed 310 pounds dead weight, 265 field-dressed. The massive rack had a 23½-inch inside spread. The 23-point buck was green-scored at 230 5/8 points by Chris Fechner, a certified Pope and Young scorer. Two other Pope and Young scorers verified Fechner’s score within one inch.

Jerry Pilger, who also lives in Hokah, has been one of many local residents who has watched, fed and photographed the buck for several winters. Pilger, in fact, found the pair of shed antlers from the buck in his backyard last December. He sold the sheds, but realized the legendary buck would eventually be killed by a hunter or vehicle, or die of disease or old age.

Pilger was one of the first townsfolk to praise Spanjers for his prized trophy buck.

“Ben certainly did his homework. He was well prepared to do the right thing when he made the kill,” Pilger said. “You don’t stumble onto 8-year-old bucks and they don’t stumble onto you. It was indeed man against nature.”

Spanjers, the youngest of nine children, grew up in Genoa, another tiny town across the Mississippi River. Maybe it was his upbringing that taught him about patience and discipline when hunting.

While Spanjers’ brothers taught him how to hunt deer, it was his father who bought him his first compound bow when he was 13 years old. His father also bought him his first shotgun, a .410, and a beagle.

“My dad gave me one shell and told me that when I brought back a rabbit, he would give me two shells,” Spanjers said, laughing. “It took me about 10 times before I finally got that first rabbit. I’m glad he didn’t give me a .22 rifle or I’d probably still be trying.”

Spanjers learned the significance of making the first shot the most important. At 6:35 p.m. on Oct. 3, it paid off.

While the “Hokah Legend” was observed by many hunters, no one could ever get a good shot at it during the archery or gun-deer hunting seasons.

Enter Spanjers’ father-in-law, George Walther, who owns a 12-acre parcel, including only two acres of wooded area.

“He saw the buck in his field in broad daylight. I found the tracks and knew it was the big one,” Spanjers said.

Spanjers borrowed a trail camera from hunting buddy Josh Swenson, who owns a popular hunting Web site at www.midwesthunter.com. Over the next several weeks, Spanjers captured more than 500 photos of the buck on the trail camera. He learned that every seven or eight days the deer would show up near the camera at 6:30 p.m. Otherwise it frequented the field between 8 p.m. and 4 a.m. each day.

“Patterning” the deer paid off in a big way.

It was a “no wind day” on Oct. 3, when Spanjers climbed into his tree stand about 15 feet above ground.

Lo and behold, the majestic animal showed up just after 6:30 p.m. It came within five yards of Spanjers’ tree stand before he drew back and released the arrow.

“I just picked a shooting lane,” Spanjers said. “He bolted right when I shot and I hit him a little far back. I saw the arrow hit. I watched him for about 20 yards. It was exactly 6:35 p.m.”

Spanjers didn’t trail the deer, rather seeking help from Swenson and his brother-in-law, Kevin Walther, three hours later. However, finding only a few specks of blood, the three men decided to wait until the next day.

Another search party was formed early the next morning. Spanjers’ father-in-law found the dead deer near the Root River just before 8 a.m.

“George had a gut feeling the deer would be along the river,” Spanjers said.

“I didn’t sleep at all Friday night because I thought there was a chance of not finding it,” he said. “To tell you the truth, I wasn’t nervous during or after the shot, but I sure was nervous when my father-in-law hollered out that he found it.”

Before Spanjers knew it, there was a car caravan following him into Hokah. Townsfolk were as excited as he was for getting the “Hokah Legend.”

Spanjers, a 1989 graduate of De Soto High School and a self-taught butcher, said despite a hard frost on the night of Oct. 3, he was able to salvage only about 50 percent of the venison.

While Spanjers has been contacted by outdoors magazines and company outlets, he is simply happy to be the one who shot the big buck.

“Some people around here are calling it the ‘Hokah Legend.’ Others call it ‘Ben’s Buck.’ I prefer ‘Hokah Legend,’” said the affable Spanjers, adding that Travis Fishel of Prairie Ridge Taxidermy in Caledonia, Minn., is making the mount of the monster buck.

“To me, it’s a sporting thing. It was a matter of knowing I was lucky enough to have access to my father-in-law’s land and that I was blessed enough to get close to the buck,” Spanjers said, adding that bow hunting is therapy, a release from the stress of work.

“Archery is still archery. If you’re blessed with one big deer, that doesn’t mean it’s any easier getting another one,” he said. “I have always believed that if you’re not excited about shooting a doe with your bow, you might as well quit because the passion isn’t there. It’s not all about big bucks. That’s where people make their mistakes.”

Meanwhile, Pilger plans to watch and photograph other deer frequenting his backyard this winter.

“This one was Grandpa Monster, but he’s got an incredible gene pool,” said Pilger, who has seen at least one large buck in the same territory.

Neighbors report there is also another big buck in the area.

“I’m sure they’re both offspring from Grandpa Monster,” Pilger said.

Who knows? The “Hokah Legend” may live on.

Just ask Ben Spanjers.



"What if the Hokah Polka's what it's really all about?"
 
WOW sounds like hes a nice enough level headed fellow its almost hard too be green with envy and spiteful to him lol if anyone actually knows this man tell him congrats from a fellow arrow flinger and i truely agree withthe comment about taking a doe
 
courtesy of the electronic trail camera........

Congrats to the guy for a great Deer but "man against nature" when all thats involved is looking at the pictures on a camera and being able to read the date stamp on them?.....

Steve
 
and it wasn't the hunter that made the silly comment "man against nature" so my shot was really at the writer and not at the hunter....

It does, at least to a non-deer hunter, show what urban deer hunting has become though....trophy deer on a 12 acre piece of ground, patterned by a camera and then shot when it showed up "on schedule".....

Again thats a "non-deer hunter" talking but other than the size of the deer it doesn't seem particularly impressive to me....and to take a shot at the writer again, definately not a "man against nature" event....

Steve
 
What I was getting at, was he had to read the time and date on the camera....I know what you were inferring. Probably 98% of the paper reading public didn't even notice that.
 
Congrats to the guy for a great Deer but "man against nature" when all thats involved is looking at the pictures on a camera and being able to read the date stamp on them?.....
Maybe he was referring to the deer ticks. Can you imagine how many there would be on a deer that size? Practically a walking lyme disease factory. Rick
 
Hell, if a deer that size was standing in my neighbors yard.....I'd put a bullet in the barrel and shoot it out the living room window.
 
squealing like a little girl, or worse yet Paul Gery, then having to wrestle it to the ground while it flogs you....oh wait that was the 5 lb Turkey that almost killed you.....so YEP if a little Turkey poult can make a man of your stature squeal like a Camp Fire Girl the I can imagine that the story of bagging a 24 pt Buck, (anyone count the actual point on the deer and notice there were about 8 missing between the photo and the written description?), would be the story or "an epic battle between man and beast".....

I'll buy the book AND go see the movie....

Steve
 
Hey,that wasn't MY story of the way that 45lb turkey met his demise....why..if I would have had a gun instead of a sharp stick while wresting it down that shear mountain cliff...it wouldn't be as exciting a story at all.
 
Arrow placement sort of belies his "I wasn't nervous at all"....that or he's one of those "take the shot its all that I'm gonna get"...I'm not a bow hunter, or a rifle hunter, so I'll leave that one at that....

If you're a deer and you've got some "feeding you through the winter", a 12 acre bedding area that no one has access to, and a field to feed in, then what more do you need? I can show you two Boone and Crockett Blacktails that have spent the last two years in a 20 acre housing development....1 acre per house and its an island in an otherwise desert of "touch your neighbors house out of your bedroom window" and strip malls.....those Deer will die of old age on those 20 acres......


Steve
 
I'm not saying it couldn't have spent most of it's life on those 12 acres, 500 pictures of him in a few weeks makes it clear it didn't move much. I'm saying jab an arrow into him that far back and he ain't staying on 12 acres with only 2 acres of woods. From what I understand about MN laws you better have permission to look for and retrieve a downed animal. That's why I said they must have nice neighbors.

Just so I'm clear it looks like a bad hit, and that is too bad, but that is not saying he was really wrong. Could have turned in that spit second it takes the mind to release an arrow. Bad hits happen and they did search until the animal was found. I'm not criticizing that.

Tim
 
I have tracked my share of bad hits over the years. In fact, that is precisely why I didn't take up bow hunting until a few years ago. Thankfully I've only had one bad shot thus far which was low and clipped the inside of his right front leg. It bled like hell but that buck survived. Based on the angle of the arrow that was a shitty shot to take on that monster. Of course, I can't imagine too many hunters that wouldn't have on something like that. Assuming they could keep their cool about it.

Last year we tracked a buck over an 80, into another 80 and then he ran across the road into a swamp on about 30 acres where nobody can go. This was on one lung. Thankfully the other farmers were cool about it but the guy from Chicago with the "house in the country" was an ass and the animal was wasted. I know he died in that swamp.

Whenever I see a hit like that it makes a little sick. That old boy had a rough night. That is an immense buck for sure. The true monsters seem to find little micro-habitats that afford them security. They don't seem to ever leave those places except at night. I doubt they even run does too often or they'd get killed.
 
and understand what you meant by your original comment......

Like I said I'm no big game hunter and only have the things I've heard people say about taking bad angle shots because "thats the only shot I had"; the things I've seen, way too many unrecovered Deer in the Grouse woods the product of either bad hits, or poor followup,(or both); and personally seeing Deer and Elk shot in the ass, or in the guts, because the desire to kill the animal overcame the thought that it should be done correctly......

No value judgement on this one though....he killed the Deer and recovered it.....good for him....

Steve
 
Back
Top