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14 year old girl may have shot state record Elk in Nebraska
Posted on 10/2/16 at 10:41 pm
Posted on 10/2/16 at 10:41 pm
Pretty incredible stuff, good for this girl.
It was shot out in western Nebraska in Sioux county on a ranch.
https://www.omaha.com/outdoors/an-impressive-prize-and-a-big-relief--year-old/article_e3076683-bb76-5e95-b6d9-bff1f230c93f.html



https://www.omaha.com/outdoors/an-impressive-prize-and-a-big-relief--year-old/article_e3076683-bb76-5e95-b6d9-bff1f230c93f.html



Posted on 10/2/16 at 10:58 pm to TigersHuskers
I don't know much about elk. But that thing appears to be a giant.
Posted on 10/2/16 at 10:59 pm to TigersHuskers
That thing would take up an entire wall. Id get it mounted.
Posted on 10/2/16 at 11:38 pm to saintsfan1977
Needed another year. 

Posted on 10/3/16 at 7:26 am to TigersHuskers
Is that an insulin pump on her hip?
Posted on 10/3/16 at 7:32 am to DeoreDX
And you didn't post the best picture in the article



Posted on 10/3/16 at 8:03 am to DeoreDX
Thats awesome. She will tell that story for the rest of her life.
Posted on 10/3/16 at 9:22 am to TigersHuskers
She gonna need a bigger wall
Posted on 10/3/16 at 10:30 am to DeoreDX
quote:
Is that an insulin pump on her hip?
yes
Posted on 10/3/16 at 12:29 pm to Jarlaxle
I don't understand it. Taking an animal of that caliber deserves a lot of appreciation. Not sure any 14 yr old would understand but whatever.
Posted on 10/3/16 at 12:39 pm to eyepooted
quote:
I don't understand it. Taking an animal of that caliber deserves a lot of appreciation. Not sure any 14 yr old would understand but whatever.
You sound like a former co-worker of mine that was pissed he was making the same as me despite having "17 years of additional experience", but ignored that our performance was the same.
One of my good friends and golf buddies growing up got his first hole in one around this age. He mentioned it during a story done on him after he finished runner up in the NCAA men's golf championship.
Your assumption that age is a requirement for appreciation, work-ethic, and enthusiasm for the sport is a complete fallacy.
Posted on 10/3/16 at 3:25 pm to TigersHuskers
Wow. That's incredible. I can not wait until Elk is allowed to be hunted here.
Posted on 10/3/16 at 3:36 pm to TigerOnTheMountain
DANG!!! She shot it with a 7mm-08
Posted on 10/3/16 at 7:19 pm to TigersHuskers
quote:
Hannah’s dad, Joel, is an official Boone and Crockett scorer, and he green-scored the massive rack at 428-1/8 net. The state record is 409-7/8 for a nontypical elk, killed by Dana Foster of Ogallala in 2008 in Garden County. The typical record is 390-3/8.

Posted on 10/3/16 at 8:22 pm to TigersHuskers
Here's TigersHuskers' link: An impressive prize and a big relief: 14-year-old's monster elk could be Nebraska state record
Nine more paragraphs.
quote:
Hannah Helmer was shaking as she attempted to zero in on the monster elk about 200 yards away.
“I tried not to think of how big he was,” she said, “and just getting those crosshairs right where I was supposed to.”
The elk crossed repeatedly through a gap in the trees as he chased after a cow on the Sioux County ranch. Family friend Lee Johanson bugled once more, and the elk stopped broadside, looked across the canyon and bugled back.
It was the perfect moment.
“Mid bugle, I shot him,” Hannah said.
Then the 14-year-old eighth-grader burst into tears.
“All the emotions just weighed me down,” she said. “There was so much emotion and all the adrenaline.”
Helmer had just killed what could be a state-record elk.
Hannah’s dad, Joel, is an official Boone and Crockett scorer, and he green-scored the massive rack at 428-1/8 net. The state record is 409-7/8 for a nontypical elk, killed by Dana Foster of Ogallala in 2008 in Garden County. The typical record is 390-3/8.
The Helmers took the head to taxidermist Scott Black at High Five Taxidermy in Ceresco, where it will dry out for 60 days before it will be officially scored for the state record. There will be some shrinkage before they send the signed score sheet with witnesses to the Game and Parks.
Black said he’s seen a lot of big elk in his nine years as a taxidermist, but none to match this one. Joel Helmer estimated it weighed 900 to 1,000 pounds.
“This thing easily puts them to shame and then some,” Black said. “The symmetry on this thing is just spectacular.”
The head was so huge that it didn’t fit in the back of the family’s Suburban. Instead, they strapped it to the top, drawing lots of stares and questions as they rolled down Highway 2.
“I was so nervous it was going to fall,” Hannah said. “It got a lot of strange looks.”
Hannah is no stranger to hunting. She’s been tagging along with her dad, a professor at Concordia University in Seward, and her big brothers since she was 5. She shot her first whitetail last fall after completing a hunter education course, and Helmer applied for an elk permit for her and brothers Harrison and Will.
Hannah found out in July that her name had been picked, much to the chagrin of her siblings.
“They were pretty jealous,” she said.
Kit Hams, the big game program manager for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission, said there were 6,043 applications for 111 bull and 210 cow permits.
About 3,000 elk wander the Panhandle. Once, hundreds of thousands roamed Nebraska and the rest of the country, just like buffalo. Then Europeans and their guns arrived, leaving none left in the state by the late 1880s.
Thanks to the effort of the Game and Parks, the cooperation of private landowners and money raised through permit sales, the species is back on its native soil. The cost of each tag is $160 plus an $8.50 application fee, which raises funds for such things as habitat management, fencing and crop damage.
“The odds on drawing a bull permit in the Hat Creek Unit in 2015 were 32 to 1,” Hams said.
Hannah and her dad made contact with the landowner in the unit and took a scouting trip over Labor Day weekend. She killed the elk on Saturday, opening day of the season, after she couldn’t get a good shot on a smaller bull.
“I was super nervous and shaking really bad,” Hannah said.
They saw the bigger animal a half-hour later. They scooted from the opposite ridge down to a trail to get a closer shot, which Helmer said measured 214 yards.
Hannah had done a lot of practicing with her 7mm-08 Remington rifle, and she hit the elk right where she was supposed to — in the vitals behind the front shoulder. She shot him twice more to make sure he was dead.
“He just walked a little way and laid down,” she said. “I was happy he died a quick death.” ...
Nine more paragraphs.
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