Houston Chronicle

System eases hassle of tracking fallen prey

Transmitte­r cuts down time spent finding runaway deer’s location

- By Brent Frazee

Like a scientist experiment­ing with one of his new innovation­s, Dennis Steinman scanned his wooded backyard with an electronic receiver until the back of the device lit up.

He was searching for his “guinea pig,” his cat that likes to roam the timber behind his rural home. But he wasn’t expecting to find him where he did.

“I didn’t pick up a good signal until I pointed it toward the house,” Steinman said with a hearty laugh. “He was inside the whole time.

“He likes to come out and roam the woods, and this is a way to keep track of him. I put a little transmitte­r on his collar and I can find him anywhere he wants to go.”

But Steinman didn’t invent his electronic tracking system to keep track of his pet. He came up with the idea to allow hunters to retrieve deer they have shot.

When big whitetails or feral hogs are shot with an arrow, they seldom fall dead in their tracks. They run a ways, then fall over.

For many, that’s when the real hunt begins. They try to follow blood trails until they can locate the game they have shot. But that can be a frustratin­g ordeal.

Steinman knows. He remembers the huge whitetail buck he shot with his bow in 2009. He thought he had struck the deer with a solid shot, but it ran off about 80 yards, then fell over, only to hop to its feet and keep going.

After giving the deer some time to expire, Steinman started his search. He looked for two days, a frustratin­g ordeal in which he considered giving up hunting.

“I was thinking I would never find him,” said Steinman, 63, who has been bow hunting since the late 1960s. “I just hated that feeling.”

Steinman eventually located the buck and today has its mount hanging on his wall. But that experience proved to be a life-changer for him.

“I thought, ‘There surely has to be a way to track down deer you’ve shot,’ ” he said.

Signal within two miles

And he came up with that way. After working in electronic­s for years, he devised a game retrieval system that uses high-tech methods to lead hunters to mortally wounded deer.

The Game Vector system relies on a miniature transmitte­r housed in an aerodynami­c module that attaches to the arrow. Upon impact, the transmitte­r releases from the arrow and sticks in the hide of the deer. The hunter then can use the receiver unit and follow the signal to the deer.

It sounds futuristic, but it works. Steinman and others tinkered with the system for several years until they came with what they deem the right product. The HideRider transmitte­r weighs only 65 grains, light enough that it doesn’t affect the flight of the arrow at the range most bow hunters take their shots. And the receiver will pick up signals at up to two miles away in perfect conditions.

Steinman urges hunters to use good woods sense, waiting for the hit deer to run off, bed down and die of its injuries. That way, they often will not wander more than several hundred yards before they will pass away, he said.

But if they do go farther, Steinman knows his Game Vector will help track them down.

Game-changing device

He remembers the first time he tried his device.

“We had tested our Game Vector, shooting at everything from deer hides to roasts,” Steinman said. “We figured we were ready to try it on the real thing.

“I went hunting near Chanute (Kan.) and I shot a buck and the Game Vector brought me right to it.”

Steinman started his company in 2012 and put the first Game Vectors on the market in 2013. He and his business partners have found moderate success. But Steinman is convinced his device has great potential, especially with the rising popularity of bow hunting.

“It’s mainly getting the word out,” he said. “Some hunters are old school, wanting to track deer the way they’ve always done it.

“But even a lot of those hunters who have tried this system were amazed at how easy it is to use.”

For Steinman, it’s a way to make a challengin­g sport one step easier. He has been hunting deer with his bow for 35 years and goes into each season relishing the excitement the hunt will bring.

“When I started off, there weren’t many deer in Kansas and there sure weren’t many bow hunters,” he said. “But look at it now. We have some big deer and a lot of hunters.

“I think a lot of that has to do with the challenge. When you shoot a big buck at 20 yards or less, you’ve done something.”

 ?? Kansas City Star ?? The Game Vector system, which includes a radio transmitte­r attached to an arrow and a device to track location of the transmitte­r, is designed to help bow hunters find arrowed game such as deer and feral hogs that run into heavy cover before dying.
Kansas City Star The Game Vector system, which includes a radio transmitte­r attached to an arrow and a device to track location of the transmitte­r, is designed to help bow hunters find arrowed game such as deer and feral hogs that run into heavy cover before dying.

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