So, last day to hunt together. We get up and do all the same things. Only this time we go to yet another drainage. Onward and upward, and even though I've been doing this for a couple weeks now, it's killing me. I'm slowing the kid down. Finally we pop out on a small open hump where we can stop and glass the open south slope. And there they are, 2 bulls banging their heads together about a mile away, "There's your bull Jim, let's go get 'em." He flashes that big smile, "I love this game."
Now, there's a small tributary drainage between us and the main one, and it forms a point right out in front of us, same elevation as us, maybe 150 yards away. We go 20 or 30 yards and Jim notices elk walking around the end of the point, feeding up the drainage we're on. Small bunch of cows and calves. He comments that he's surprised there's no bull behind them. They go out of sight, but I keep glassing. There he his, head back, main beams as long as his body, lots of long tines, monster bull,(the kid has become a pretty good judge of antlers and he says it was a 310-320), biggest bull I've ever seen.
We cow call to him a bit and drop down into the small ravine, right into a calf. In hindsight, we should have cut the calf off from the herd and maybe momma would have come back looking for him, which in turn might have brought big boy back... who knows. We let him re-join the herd, and fell in behind, trying to sound like a couple cows that need a good spanking from the herd bull. He remained silent, so it was hard to tell if he even knew we were there. We went slipping silently up the bottom of the ravine and finally spotted him about 70 yards away up the slope, looking right at us, but not spooking. Finally he turned those massive antlers and walked slowly out of sight. I sent Jim towards him and backed myself down the ravine, hit the cow call a few times, then the bugle. He bugled back and started coming. He got to about 50 yards from the kid ,but wouldn't come any closer, he knew something wasn't right. He kept bugling every 15 minutes or so as he rounded the point and headed into the timber on the north facing slope of the main ravine.
We got up on the top of the spine now that seperates the small trib and the main drainage and glassed the hillside where we saw the first 2 bulls. We could only find 1 of them and he was traveling as if on a mission, down the slope and down the drainage, away from us. That's where we'll end the day, maybe we'll find him.
Up the ridge we go, leaving the big bull behind, but, we're going to change the diaphrams in our mouthes, get above and ahead of him, and drop down in front of him. As we're making our way down the hillside through some real thick small aspens, one hears us and bugles straight down in front of us, maybe 200 yards away. There's a bench right below us and it opens up a bit, couple more steps and we almost fall into a big waterhole/wallow, perfect. He bugles again and we can tell he's closer, he's coming. Jim scrambles to get around the bog and up on the top of the bench, 40 yards in front of me.
Then he shuts up. I cow call a couple times, nothing. Jim and the bugling bull are north of me. The big bull we left is east of me. 75 yards to the west I see legs coming, big 6X, coming in silent. He gets about 35 yards from the kid, doesn't like what he doesn't see, turns and ghosts away without ever giving the kid a shot. Dang.
When we get back together, Jim tells me he doesn't think that, that was the bull that was bugling. At first I disagreed, but after walking 40 yards out on the bench, I came to the realization that he was probably right. I whispered to him to get ready, the bugling bull was probably close. We kept softly cow calling while moving in the direction of the last bugle. Jim was easing out ahead and to my left about 25 yards as we approached the edge of the ravine, when I saw a pair of sticks come into focus AS A PAIR OF ANTLERS! AAAAH. I panicked. I should have just sat down. He was only 25-30 yards from me, couldn't see me, but his attention was on me, Jim would have looked that direction eventually.Anyhow, I did a couple high pitched silly squeals to get the kid's attention, Jim said as soon as he heard it he knew what was going on, turned and saw him run away. Another 6X6 not as big as the one we just called in to the waterhole. Double dang!