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Deer hunt binds generations

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It started in 1977 when Huleigh bought the land to raise cattle. Even though he didn’t hunt at the time, he recognized its potential as deer property.

“It had a lot of brush and timber,” he said. “There weren’t as many deer in Missouri back then, but we’d see them on our land.”

His family started hunting the land immediately, though Huleigh often stayed behind to keep his family’s tire business in Nevada open.

But as the years wore on, Huleigh caught the bug and joined the family. Today, he is as passionate about the deer opener as any of his family.

“This is what it’s all about,” he said as he watched his great niece, Adi, bask in the spotlight. “We’ve had a lot of kids take their first deer up here.

“It’s a great family tradition.”

Lee Wilson, Adi’s father, was once one of those young hunters.

“I told Adi that I took my first deer 30 years ago on this same farm,” he said “Our family has a lot of good memories at this place.”

The hunters arrived at deer camp Friday. Some stayed in the trailer, others slept in tents.

“I had trouble sleeping last night because I could hear mice running around in the ceiling,” Huleigh said with a laugh. “We’re kind of roughing it when we go to deer camp.”

Saturday morning, the hunters scattered in the darkness to their hunting stands, all dreaming of taking one of the bucks that roam the large tract of land.

Cattle no longer graze the 945 acres and it has become overgrown with brush. But Huleigh’s sons, Kurt, Kenny and Mark, cut lanes in the thick brush and cleared sections to make it more attractive to the deer and easier for the hunters to negotiate.

The family stresses safety, ethics and managing the deer herd on their property. “We have an eight-point rule,” Kurt Wilson said. “We don’t want adults to shoot bucks that have less than eight points.”

Huleigh saw one of those eight-point bucks not long after he settled into his favorite tree stand. He saw the deer pause in a lane where the hunter had just walked into the field.

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