SPORTS

Teen kills deer with parachute in its antlers

Mike Organ
morgan@tennessean.com

Brady Hempen, 15, has killed nearly 50 deer since he started hunting when he was just 5 years old, but never one like the buck he shot recently at Fort Campbell.

While hunting at Ft. Campbell Brady Hempen killed this deer, which had a parachute from a flare canister tangled in its antlers. Hempen is having the deer mounted with the parachute still in the rack.

Hempen noticed the big deer earlier in the day with something he could not identify wrapped up in its antlers.

Part of what was in the rack shined. It helped Hempen to track the deer.

“At first I thought he had a dead deer in his antlers when I saw all that stuff in his rack,” said Hempen, who first spotted the buck from 50 yards. “It was pretty neat. I finally realized there was a shiny canister in there too.”

It turned out that the deer had a parachute and canister from a military flare, which had been launched at the army base, tangled in his antlers.

Hempen, who is from Paducah, Ky., shot the deer from 25 yards using a muzzleloader during the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency youth hunt.

Hempen was only able to score 11 points in the rack. The parachute was covering some of the points.

Hempen decided not to remove the parachute and is having the head and rack mounted with it still in place.

“I think it just builds character on the hunt,” Hempen said. “The parachute was one of the main reasons why I shot him. I’d never seen anything like it. It was just neat.”

Hempen estimated the parachute had been tangled in the deer’s antlers for at least three months.

“There’s still velvet on the rack underneath the parachute where he couldn’t rub it off,” Hempen said. “That tells you it had to have been there since August or early September.”

The parachute did not appear to cause the deer any discomfort.

Hempen could not recall how much the deer weighed.

Hempen said he hunts every weekend during deer season and prefers using a bow.

Of all the deer he has killed Hempen said this one was among his most memorable.

“I’m very proud of all of them; he’s up there for sure as one of my favorite deer,” Hempen said.

The deer wasn’t the largest Hempen has killed. He took an 8-pointer with a bow in Kentucky two years ago.

Reach Mike Organ at 615-259-8021 and on Twitter @MikeOrganWriter.

Possible world record deer killed in Sumner County

Potential world record deer antlers could be worth $100,000