Myers bags 8-point in Alabama

Published 3:38 pm Monday, July 16, 2012

Jeremy Myers’ third, fourth and fifth deer killed this season came at the end of a two-week hunting trip and included the biggest buck of his career, a 165-pound, eight-pointer he shot Jan. 27.

That big deer shared the spotlight with the two deer the New Iberia outdoorsman killed two days later while continuing his

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deer hunting trip in Wilcox County, Alabama, where Brad Pisani of New Iberia and his Performance Air and Performance Winch coowners have a lease.

Pisani, Myers, a salesman for the company, and his father, Kelly Myers, another salesman, joined him on the trip.

“He’s had a streak of luck this year. I think he’s got five this year. I’ve got one. I haven’t had a streak of luck this year,” Pisani said, ruefully and with a chuckle, about his season and that of his salesman.

Jeremy Myers, 32, has enjoyed every minute of the season, a season that is over.

“I guess it’s just the good luck. Last year I didn’t get nothing out of there. This year they were there for me,” he said.

The eight-point buck moved within 30 yards of his deer stand that Friday morning at 6:50 a.m.

“Well, I kept looking and kept looking. I turned to my left and there he was. He kind of heard me when I turned, put his head straight up and started looking at me,” the younger Myers said. “As he turned around, I grabbed my gun, put it through the window and pulled the trigger. A matter of seconds is all it took. The minute I put the bullet in him he dropped right there.”

On Sunday, his trip, which he uses to take customers out for a deer hunt, turned even more exciting.

At 10:35 a.m., a few minutes after he exited his deer stand, he was walking along a trail and jumped a doe and buck in

the clearcut. He shouldered his rifle and shot the doe 35 yards away.

“The buck jumped up and ran a good ways. It circled back and I heard a noise,” Myers said.

“When I looked up there he was, 25, 35 yards away and running at me. I shot him with my last bullet. That was kind of frightening.”

That buck was a 6-pointer, he said. It was making a beeline back to the doe during the height of the rut, he said.

Myers said he was glad to get home to his family after two weeks of out-ofstate deer hunting. He and his wife, Dana Smith

Myers, have two children, son Bryson, 9, who attends North Street Elementary, and daughter Amber, 14, a student at Belle Place Middle School.

It looks like they are following in the family footsteps, or about to.

“We’re all outdoorsmen. We hunt. We fish. We ride four-wheelers,” he said about his family heritage. “I’ve got my son hunting with me now. My daughter wants to.”

Pisani, 32, said he was happy for him … and South Louisiana.

“Alabama kicked our butt in the BCS game but we went to ’Bama and took some of their deer back with us,” Pisani said.