Well, morning arrived much too early as it has for the last couple of days. In good spirits, I none the less knew that the odds were stacked against me.
Gulping down a hot cup of Joe, I packed the travel Thermos away in my Bison Gear and headed for the blind before the new day was even a hint of light in the east.
It was brisk. Too brisk for the clothing I had on, but I knew that before long the day would warm and anyway I'd have the warmth of my down bag to stave off the chill.
I'd figured my mistake the day before was my undisciplined arrival at the blind after it was light enough to see. The antelope were waiting for me... I'd not let that happen again.
It was hard telling how long I'd have to wait before I could see anything in the meadow and I stayed wrapped in my bag until the first gray hint of light drew me out.
High clouds blocked the rising sun, promising a slow dawn and persisting cold. I scanned the meadow and surrounding hills with my binoculars... NOTHING.
I knew the goats would show up. They had too! Slowly the time ticked away...one minute, two minutes, an hour. It was obvious I was going to go without an antelope for the freezer this year.
Finally, an hour before I'd scheduled the end of the hunt, I spotted a flash of white on the distant hills. They were coming.
It took a long time for the trio of antelope to reach the meadow and I soon saw that they were all young bucks and no game for me.
I sat back and only took occasional peeks to confirm the bucks presence. During one of my "peeks" I was surprised to see that there were now eight animals in the field.
Now that was a surprise! They were all down at the other end of the meadow grazing contentedly and that didn't do me much good, but I was happy just to have their company on this last day... even if they were way off.
Vance's horses had been the first thing visible in the meadow and now they'd come to investigate the blind.
They fed merrily between me and the goats. For a moment I thought about getting out and leading one of them toward the antelope.... "elk don't know how many legs a horse has, pilgrim."
Figuring that would turn into a rodeo for sure, I let the idea pass.
With my vision totally blocked by equine bodies, I fretted over the presence of the beasts. If I spooked them away it would raise suspicion with the goats. I dealt with the limited visibility.
When the closest horse had fed off to my side, I was shocked to see that the antelope were now mobile and heading my way.... fast.
With only moments to spare I repositioned my chair and opened the appropriate window.
The first doe in the bunch fed by just a little farther than I liked, but with more coming, I'd just wait it out.
I'm new to this Double Bull thing and I can tell you right now it takes a little brain conditioning to be completely comfortable shooting out of one.