An antelope hunt back in 2005.
I drew with a friend, and then got married a month before the hunt. My (then) new bride and I went up a few days early to scout, and spent the evenings lisenting to a symphany of bull elk bugling as they moved their harems past our camp into the meadows on their way to Dipping Vat Springs.
I called one almost into camp one evening, just messing around.
My buddy came up with his wife the day before the season opened, and he ended up killing his buck the next evening. I was frustrated on a few stalks by sharp eyes and too many hunters, but I finally found a decent, stalkable buck on the third morning.
We left camp that morning riding quads to our intended hunting spot, and my wife and I went ahead of Marc a bit to glass another area near a pond in the bottom of a canyon. We found noth ing near the pond, but I spotted 3 antelope about a mile and a half to the southeast in an open area.
My wife stayed with the quads, and Marc and I dropped down into a low basin between us and the antelope. Halfway across the basin, a bunch of cattle started getting nervous up above us. The antelope couldn't see us, but they could see the cattle, so we sat down and waited them out. When the cattle finally got down in the bottom, we worked our way around them and up into a shallow draw that ran parallel to where we believed the antelope to be. The grass was really short, and there was no cover to speak of, but we were standing up looking over a low ridge about 100 yards away. From the antelope's location, they could only see the tops of our heads if they noticed us.
But they didn't. We spotted them first, ducked down, and I belly crawled up into a small patch of ~10" grass on top of the ridge.
From there I could see two does laying down a couple hundred yards away. the buck was missing, so I just waited there in the grass. 20 minutes later, Marc crawled up beside me to see what was taking so long.
About another 20 minutes later, the buck finally walked up out of a low area between us the his does, and stood facing dead away from me for a bit. Finally he turned broadside to us, looked our way, and when he looked away again to survey the country, I shot him.
It was a textbook finish to one of the most enjoyable hunts I've been on.
I've shown the picture before, but I don't think I've every told the story behind it here.