Been hearing about a really good buck crossing from the neighboring farm's woods onto our land chasing does around our cut cornfield before heading deep into our woods so I decided to put a pop-up blind in the field and see what turned up myself. There are a couple of power poles that run across the field around which there is a nasty tangle of briar bushes & saplings. I tucked the blind up against the briars beside the pole and had a commanding view all around the field all the way to our woodline. About 30 minutes before last light, two mature does crossed the road into our field and started feeding nervously. I watched them for a while as they kept looking back over their shoulders towards the neighbor's woods - hoping the big feller was approaching. 10 minutes later two more does cross the road, a mom and her yearling and all the looking over shoulders stops - dang it! They fed for about 5 more minutes or so and started heading for a trail entering our woods and I thought, I'd like a big tasty doe for the freezer so I picked one out that gave me a nice broadside shot at 110 yds. Settled the S-91 .451 on my shooting stick, put the Williams fire sight front bead in the middle of the Lyman SME 57 aperture right behind her front "elbow" and squeezed. At the boom, it was all white flags & smoke! I watched them enter the woods, noted the position and listened......within just a few seconds-CRASH. Sounded very promising. As I was taking a deep breath and feeling good about the shot I noticed more movement in the area they were standing. The yearling had started running in circles at the shot and never left the field. I thought for a few seconds and decided that would be some mighty fine eating too! She didn't have spots but she didn't weigh much more than 90-100 lbs. I calmly grabbed a Lane's tube of powder (70 gr Scheutzen 3f) from my buttstock shell holder, poured, grabbed another tube with a NoExcuse 460 gr. like the one that just dropped her mom and loaded up. Add a RWS primer from around my neck, settle on the shooting stick and boom-full freezer in the space of 90 seconds! The mature doe was laying about 15 yds into the woods, bullet nicked the back edge of the shoulder blade, turned right across the top of the heart and exited just in front of the off shoulder at the base of the neck. The yearling was standing at 140 yds and was hit in the center of the shoulder blade and the exit was just under the off shoulder blade. Found her laying about 20 yds from the other doe in the woods also. While tracking the two, I could hear the other two does blowing at me from deeper in the woods the whole time. Really fun evening! AND with the cold snap we've been having in KY, I decided to let them hang a couple days to age a bit before "disassembling" them to table cuts.