Your #1 source for blades and firearms news and updates…

  • Home
  • Knives
  • News
  • Hunting
  • Tactical
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
Subscribe
Font ResizerAa
Blade ShopperBlade Shopper
  • News
  • Knives
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Hunting
  • Videos
Search
  • Home
  • Knives
  • News
  • Hunting
  • Tactical
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Videos
banner
Create an Amazing Newspaper
Discover thousands of options, easy to customize layouts, one-click to import demo and much more.
Learn More

Stay Updated

Get the latest headlines, discounts for the military community, and guides to maximizing your benefits
Subscribe

Explore

  • Photo of The Day
  • Opinion
  • Today's Epaper
  • Trending News
  • Weekly Newsletter
  • Special Deals
Home » After 20 Years of Applying, 28 Days of Hunting, and 150 Miles of Hiking, I Arrowed My Bull at 8 Yards

After 20 Years of Applying, 28 Days of Hunting, and 150 Miles of Hiking, I Arrowed My Bull at 8 Yards

Adam Green By Adam Green October 10, 2025 7 Min Read
Share
After 20 Years of Applying, 28 Days of Hunting, and 150 Miles of Hiking, I Arrowed My Bull at 8 Yards

Sign up for the Outdoor Life Newsletter

Get the hottest outdoor news—plus a free month of onX Hunt Elite.

Eastern Oregon’s Blue Mountains have a legendary peak. At barely a hoof higher than 6,000 feet, Mount Emily is a landmark in Grande Ronde Valley. Mount Emily is also known as one of the state’s best areas for producing trophy Rocky Mountain bull elk in a nearly-impossible-to-draw unit. Local hunter LeAnna Robins put in for 20 years hoping to hunt Emily once in her lifetime. She drew this year.

“As soon as I found out I drew the tag, we went out every single weekend scouting,” Robins says. “We put in tons of miles and then we took the entire month off to hunt and camp up there.”

Robins scouted and hunted hard with her crew to locate this bull. Photo courtesy LeAnna Robins

The “we” was her brother Josh Robins, her dad Kevin Robins, and her boyfriend Kyle Bowen, and his dad, Rick Bown, who started putting her in the points pool when she was 12. She’s 33 now. She started hunting with a bow in 2016. She’s harvested a buck, a bear, and two bulls smaller than the seven by eight bull she arrowed this year.

Robins, a dental hygienist, got a friend to cover her shifts for a month, and began hunting Aug 30. All her pre-season prep had backfired, and her premiere spot had a herd of domestic sheep grazing across it on opening day.

“They were there for two weeks,” Robins says. “They demolished that spot. Nothing else was coming in there.”

A bowhunter stands behind a nice big bull.
The antlers from Robins bull weighed 26 pounds alone. Photo courtesy LeAnna Robins

Other hunters were in her backup spot. It was hot. The elk were quiet. While on a four wheeler, she unintentionally jumped a herd in the dark. Then another hunter pushed a herd into the herd she was on and moved them along. It was windy. The meadow grass was crunchy.

“It didn’t really feel like what you expect in a trophy hunting unit,” she says. “We had a streak of bad luck for the first three weeks.”

She hunted public land at first, saving permission she had secured on a private lot for the last week of her season. While standing on that property at season’s end, her hunting party spotted elk on public land. It had an impressive herd bull.

“All of a sudden that bull lets off this big, burly, mad bugle and then we hear horns coming together,” Robins says. “They’re fighting. We run while they’re fighting. We get down the hill and can see them fighting. Their horns are locked, and I can’t get a shot.”

Two hunters behind a bull elk.
Robins and her dad, Kevin, with her bull. Photo courtesy LeAnna Robins

When the two fighters separated, her boyfriend used a combination of cow calls and bugles to keep the herd bull interested. It worked so well, the elk didn’t notice Robins scrambling for an opening between dense deadfall, or steadying herself for a shot 8 yards away.

“Where he stopped, there was one tiny little perfect window between the branches,” she says. “He was broadside. I put my 10-yard pin on him and shot. I could tell instantly it was a good shot, but no one could believe I sent an arrow through the little opening I had.”

It was Sept. 26 — day 28 of 30 of their hunt. Robins had covered more than 130 miles on foot. She’d lost 10 pounds. (He dad had lost 20.) They found the bull 230 yards away from where Robin hid with her quiver. It was downhill, only 15 yards from a dirt road. And it had an extra inch to its own heavy rack.

“There is a little broken antler tip in his head between his eyes,” she says. “It had to have happened during that fight we saw because there was fresh blood around it.”

A fresh antler tip embedded in the skull of her bull.
One of the bull’s hoof joints was swollen from an old injury.. Photo courtesy LeAnna Robins

Like Robins, the bull had a hard season, too. It had a swollen hoof, a crack in the skull from the embedded antler tip, and a hole in its skull just below that where another antler had pierced bone. The hide was missing patches of hair and the flesh bruised.

“I call him a warrior bull,” Robins says. “He had gone through some stuff.”

Robin and her crew for fajitas, chunks for stew, flank for carne asada, neck and rib for burger. Every ounce of good fortune replaces the rough streak that dominated a hunt that most likely only comes around every few decades.

A bowhunter sits between the antlers of her bull.
Robins’ bull collapsed just short of a road, which made for an easier packout. Photo courtesy LeAnna Robins

“It’s a once in a lifetime hunt, maybe twice if you’re real lucky,” Robins says. “I feel like I could maybe draw again, but at that point you just hope you’re still in good enough shape to go out and do it.”

Robins and her dad rough-scored the bull at 340 inches, but that isn’t what she’s been focusing on. The hunt itself has left her on “cloud nine.”

“It’s a lot of pressure holding that big tag and then having everybody there [on the hunt],” Robins says. “I felt relief, and gosh, just — all your hard work and everything finally paying off and your prayers answered — I can’t even describe the feeling.”

Read the full article here

Share This Article
Facebook X Copy Link Print
Previous Article I Carry: Smith & Wesson Model 19 .357 Magnum Revolver in a Galco Holster I Carry: Smith & Wesson Model 19 .357 Magnum Revolver in a Galco Holster
Next Article PublicSquare Renews SAF Gold-Level Corporate Partnership PublicSquare Renews SAF Gold-Level Corporate Partnership
Leave a Comment Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Wake up with our popular morning roundup of the day's top blades, firearms and survavial news and updates.

Armed 14-Year-Old Suspect and Intended Victim Shot During Botched Robbery in Missouri

October 10, 2025

Team Remington’s Dominating Skeet Performances at World Championships

October 10, 2025

Anti-Hunters Drew at Least 23 Percent of Florida’s Black Bear Tags, According to One Local Activist

October 10, 2025

Peace Talks Stall As Israel Ratifies Ceasefire Agreement

October 10, 2025

Corson Piper Tied for First Place in PRS National Rankings After 2025 KRG Windbreaker Victory

October 10, 2025

You Might Also Like

Why the Remington 870 Is Still the Greatest Pump Shotgun  

Why the Remington 870 Is Still the Greatest Pump Shotgun  

Hunting
Best Bow Sights of 2024, Tested and Reviewed

Best Bow Sights of 2024, Tested and Reviewed

Hunting
States Want to Issue Transferrable Big-Game Tags. Hunters Want to Stop Them

States Want to Issue Transferrable Big-Game Tags. Hunters Want to Stop Them

Hunting
Jack O’Connor in Old Mexico: His Luckiest Day of Deer Hunting Ever

Jack O’Connor in Old Mexico: His Luckiest Day of Deer Hunting Ever

Hunting

2025 © Blade Shopper. All rights reserved.

Helpful Links

  • News
  • Knives
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Tactical
  • Hunting
  • Videos

Resources

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Popuplar

16 Types of Military Helicopters Used By The US Military
Bournemouth Air Festival: The UK’s Largest Air Festival
Armed 14-Year-Old Suspect and Intended Victim Shot During Botched Robbery in Missouri
We provide daily defense news, benefits information, veteran employment resources, spouse and family resources.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?