Hunter: Corey Kalinowski
Season: 2025 MN Firearm Season Zone 224 (shotgun only)
Date: Nov. 10, 2025
Score: 206” (gross)
There were just five shells in a box when my dad passed away 10 years ago in September. When my mom handed me his gun case, I opened it up and noticed a box of Federal 12-gauge slugs waiting to be used.
Hunting has long been a part of the Kalinowski family, and I am forever grateful for all it’s taught us and provided for us. We called my dad by a nickname, “One Shot Ski.” For every bullet he shot, there was always some sort of game to show for it. He was an incredible marksman, hunter, subsistence gatherer and butcher.
To honor him with his final box of slugs, I vowed that first season without him to make all five bullets count. My goal was to spend them only on unique, special and memorable hunts.
This year, a pretty special deer showed up at a place I like to hunt. I have used two of the five slugs from my dad’s gun on two other deer over the last decade. Monday morning as I prayed before the hunt I grabbed slug No. 3 from my pouch and chambered it with a feeling. “Today’s the day.” Now, over the last four years, I’ve chambered this round many times only to take it out after a hunt, or quickly reload a different one to shoot a freezer filler (doe) and other deer for meat and sausage.
As my wife, Katie, reminds me, “You’re an optimistic hunter and fisherman. Every day is a good day, every spot is a good spot, and every cast could be the best cast.”
However, Monday was different. I had been in the stand since 6 a.m., but at 12:25 p.m. my heart raced as this deer came by 100 yards upwind of me on his feet and looking for a doe. I’ve never seen anything quite like it. I thought to myself, “This is the BIGGEST deer I’ve ever seen in my life.” He was walking directly away from me, but now is my chance. I gave a few soft tending grunts and waited … nothing! Just his shadow slipping off to the west and into a doe bedding area.
Twenty minutes passed, and there was nothing but rival squirrels battling and sounding like a herd of elephants everywhere around me. My heart raced and sank all at the same time. That was so cool, but was that my only chance?

Five more minutes passed, and my head was on a swivel. Every crack of a leaf, branch, bird, and squirrel grabbed my attention. “Where you at?” I said quietly under my breath.
Minutes in, this moment felt like an eternity.
Then, I heard a crack. I looked into the thickest brush approaching my downwind side, and I saw the flash of what looked like an antler and a body. “IT’S HIM!” I thought to myself.
Heart racing, I scanned to confirm my ears and eyes. Is this the buck? Is this the same buck I just saw?
To my amazement, it was. I caught just enough of his movement to know it was him, but this was thick, and the ol’ monarch knew what he was doing. He’s heard this before, approaching downwind to smell his way to what he heard as a grunt. Slowly but surely, he made his way closer, but everything was so thick.
Then he stopped.
He went from 75, 65 to 60 yards and in the thickest cover imaginable, he stopped! I have no shot. The deer was sniffing and checking his potential rival, and he was locked up.
He saw nothing, smelt nothing, and the wise ol’ buck was done. He didn’t like it and knew something was up. With his nose in the air scent checking everything, he didn’t move anything but his head and ears to decipher his next move.

As he stepped to turn around, I had a 55-yard shot quartering away at his vitals — a small window of opportunity. The safety came off. I took aim and made the shot, doing the best I could with the nerves I had. BOOM! The moment was done, and “shell three” was spent.
A moment I played back in my head for the next nearly 24 hours.
I climbed down my tree, investigated the shot, replayed the scenario, and it wasn’t ideal. There are times you shoot and feel good, and times you shoot and don’t. I doubted the moment and backed out. “When in doubt, just back out.” — Dad
My gut was sick. Did I blow it? Did I miss? Did I mess this up for everyone? Not just me, but every hunter I owe the mutual respect of doing my best to make the shot count.
I called a few close hunting friends and asked for advice based on what we had, and decided a tracking dog the next morning was our only best option.
I called my brother Kyle, and he told me he prayed for me that morning at work. “Corey, I literally stopped working and just prayed. Lord, send Corey the biggest buck today.” A moment I’ll never forget. With complete faith and confidence he told me, “Corey, that deer is dead. Get some sleep and FaceTime me tomorrow when you find him.”
I fell asleep in my son CJ’s bed at 8 p.m. I got a decent sleep, and the tracking dog was scheduled to be on the property I shot the deer at, at 8 a.m.
The track began shortly after 8 a.m. with a group prayer for wisdom, guidance and gratitude, and we were off. Some of the previous day’s sign at the spot where I shot the buck got eaten overnight by a little critter of some sort. The tracker burst my bubble and said, “Well, this is not quite what I thought, but let’s get this deer.” The dog took off with his nose to the ground, and away we went.
One hour turned to two, and two to three, and my hopes were slowly sinking. “This deer is gone. I didn’t make the shot I needed, and he’s gone.” Five hundred yards into the track and feeling sick, I prayed again. “God, help us find this deer.”
The trail picked back up at hour three. We were 800 yards in, and the deer seemed to have changed his direction. He was heading south and then headed into a thick log jam to the east. My heart began to race.
“He has to be in here, I know he’s close,” I told the tracker.
Shouldering my gun, anticipating a possible second shot needed, we walked slowly. The dog was slowly working through the timber, and my eyes were checking every piece of deadfall for tips of antlers or a deer in the thick.
As we walked north around a nasty pile of trees, I glanced to my south and saw a deer lying with its head down. I grabbed the tracker, whispering with excitement, “THERE HE IS! THAT’S HIM! Is he dead? Should I shoot him?”
We confirmed he was expired, and I set my gun against the nearest tree, took off my hat, reached my hand into my pocket and grabbed the shell I had been saving.
Clinching the shell, I began to cry.
I felt gratitude. I felt sorrow. I felt happiness. I felt pain. I felt close to my dad, and yet so far away. I did my best to take in the moment. I did my best to make a shot. My shot was not perfect, but the process was.
It was humbling. I had to ask for help, and lots of it. We prayed, and we were prayed for. We relied on the Lord and put into practice everything we had been taught over the years. We did it together.
The process is always the point. For ten years, I have been saving these shells to honor my dad’s legacy, but also cherish the new ones being made. I can’t take credit for anything except having people around me helping me out, praying for me, supporting me, and showing up in the highs and lows.

Fins, fur, antlers and feathers come and go, but who we hunt with and how we hunt is what we pass down.
I called Katie and gave her the news that the hunt was over. Three and a half hours of tracking, and this hunting chapter came to a close. We picked up the kids from school, and we reflected together on the memories made this year.
I’ve gone lots of seasons without, and will again someday, but this year we get to reflect on what will most likely be a once-in-a-lifetime deer.
Excited to make Polish sausage, venison backstraps, and tonight we will fry up them tenderloins!
As a friend told me, “There’s a lot of meat on them bones, and a lot of bone on that meat.”
Thank you, Lord, for a hunt like this.

