Nebraska goat.

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RedOneFive

40 Cal
Joined
May 25, 2015
Messages
105
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232
Location
Nebraska
Here's my first speedgoat. I took him with my 54 Tryon & PRB.. Was a long poke as he was leaving, but stopped one time to look and I let him have it.
Was a unique buck, one side was really hooked and the other made a 90° both had nice ivory tips.. This was in 15 or 16 I think... Made the books for Nebraska muzzy goat too!
FB_IMG_1640352619466.jpg
 
Here's my first speedgoat. I took him with my 54 Tryon & PRB.. Was a long poke as he was leaving, but stopped one time to look and I let him have it.
Was a unique buck, one side was really hooked and the other made a 90° both had nice ivory tips.. This was in 15 or 16 I think... Made the books for Nebraska muzzy goat too!
View attachment 313321
His body looks gigantic in that photo, very fat. Very nice for a front-stuffer.

"Made the books for Nebraska muzzy goat too!"
Is the 'book' a muzzleloading state book?
 
His body looks gigantic in that photo, very fat. Very nice for a front-stuffer.

"Made the books for Nebraska muzzy goat too!"
Is the 'book' a muzzleloading state book?
Just the state records for big game.. I think Nebraska is 65" for antelope and he was 72 ish. Not a monster but not a shrimp.. And yes he had a big body.. They look even bigger because of the thick furry butts they have. Like a small/mid size whitetail is all.. But it is amazing meat.
 
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Very nice pronghorn.
They are not goats. They are not antelope. In all the world they are in a class all by themselves. But I understand the local nicknames for them.
I got one in Wyoming back in the '90's. Personally, I didn't care much for the taste. I used the tip of the horn from mine to make a powder measure. I used it for years and was really, really bummed when I finally lost it.
 
Very nice pronghorn.
They are not goats. They are not antelope. In all the world they are in a class all by themselves. But I understand the local nicknames for them.
I got one in Wyoming back in the '90's. Personally, I didn't care much for the taste. I used the tip of the horn from mine to make a powder measure. I used it for years and was really, really bummed when I finally lost it.
Speedgoat, pronghorn, antelope, goat, Prairie lobster.. A lot of names for them..But yes, they are one of a kind. More closely related to a giraffe than anything else. The rest of their kind died off long long ago
 
Stepped out this morning to put out some bird seed for our feathered friends and heard a familiar snort. I looked around and sure enough saw a buck 150 yds. away looking at me. Last year a doe "hid" her fawn 40 yards from our front door. I
I don't like the terms "goat" or especially "speed goat". But that's just me.
 
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