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Wednesday, January 7, 2026 at 2:08 AM

Opening Day success:

Opening Day success:
Gabby Tobin (right) celebrates shooting her first buck along with children from the Tobin, Moore, and Lautner families Saturday. Courtesy photo

Tobin shoots first buck

Maple City resident Gabriella Tobin, 13, shot her first buck Saturday night.

Tobin was sitting in a blind, when she looked up and saw movement. A 4-point buck was located 100 yards away.

Tobin slowly opened the window, watching the deer every time he put his head down, which is when Gabby would move.

“That’s the time I would move. The chair was way too low for me to sit down and shoot it. But I couldn’t stand up all the way and shoot it. I was in an awkward position of squatting and standing at the same time. I got out of the window. I told my sister, plug your ears and I texted my dad, saying we have a deer right in front of us,” Tobin said. “I said ‘safety off’ and I put it right on him. When he put his head up for the last time, I shot him, then as soon as the gun kicked, I could still see him in the scope. He went stiff and just fell right over, and I started screaming and crying ... I didn’t know what to believe, I was crying, I had just so much emotion, I couldn’t believe that I hit it.”

Gabby had her sister, Waylynn, 6, sitting quietly and patiently next to her.

“I said, Waylynn, if I see a deer, that means plug your ears, just plug your ears. I let her hold binoculars, and she was trying to look, and she kept moving. I’m like, Stay still .... I was whisper-yelling at her.” Gabby said.

Tobin’s father and mother came running out to check out the scene, bringing the quad with them.

“We got a picture and everything, then we put it on the quad. We put grass in the deer’s mouth ... It’s a sign of respect since the animal was there and gave us its life,” Gabby said.

Gabby wasn’t the only Tobin girl to have a successful hunt, as older sister Chloe Tobin, 25, of Ostego shot a doe on Sunday on the family property in Maple City.

Baker snags first Michigan buck

Jake Baker stepped out to hunt on opening day, Saturday, Nov. 15.

After only a few hours, he was loading up a beautiful buck in the Sleeping Bear National Lakeshore.

Baker, a Colorado resident, moved to northern Michigan only a few months ago, and struck his best deer yet on M-22, just north of Port Oneida.

“That’s the best deer I’ve ever shot,” Baker said.

Baker shot an unofficial 9-point with one point, being called into question.

“I personally have never cared because if it’s going to go on the wall, it’s just going to be on the wall. It’s going to be beautiful. I don’t care what the score is ... It adds a little character,” Baker said.

Baker paid an out-of-state tag ($140) and will have to cough up a little more if he wants another one ($190).

Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore Park Ranger Nate Mazurek stopped by and checked out the buck for himself, with all legalities being checked off. It was the first time Mazurek had seen a successful hunt during firearm season in 2025.

Baker has been hunting this area sporadically with a bow and had a spot mapped out during the preseason. He came the day or two before to make sure he had shooting lanes.

“I came there this morning in the dark and thought I was in the right spot, and I wasn’t. I had to shift down. I was nervous because if you shift, the deer might see it, but I hadn’t seen him yet. I did the shift, and about an hour and a half into daylight, I sat down for no more than five minutes in the right spot,” Baker said. “There’s a game trail that I mapped out two days ago, and I saw signs along this trail, and it was a really worn trail,” Baker said.

Baker figured that the deer were moving along that, and he was right.

“It was a 60-yard shot, right in the heart. This was great because I’ve had a couple of rough ones before, where you miss or you hit them in the butt. I’m happy he was down. It’s surprising, the deer probably ran 75 to 100 yards, even though his heart had exploded ... I’m happy that he didn’t suffer anything.”

Baker grew up hunting with his dad in Pennsylvania and admits he didn’t initially love it.

After college, there was an 8-year period during which Baker didn’t hunt at all.

“After moving to Colorado, I got back into it, and I started flying home to Pittsburgh, and then I was with my dad every year and fell in love with it again,” Baker said. “Hunting reminds me of my childhood ... I always like hunting by myself, and even if you don’t see a deer, it’s about what you do see (nature) ... Get off your phone.”

Editor’s note: We want to knowhow your hunting season is going. Contact brian@leelanaunews. com to be featured.

SBDNL Park Ranger Nate Mazurek and hunter Jake Baker pose for a photo after Baker shot a 9-point buck north of Port Oneida Saturday. Enterprise photo by Brian Freiberger
Chloe Tobin, 25, of Ostego, shot this doe on the Tobin family property in Maple City. Courtesy photo

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