Great Trip! The Land is amazing, muskox are very interesting critters, and the people are some of the friendliest I've ever met.
To begin at the beginning....
Travel is a major part of any hunt in the Far North. I flew from Indianapolis to Minneapolis, Edmonton and Yellowknife the first day. Overnight in Yellowknife and off to Ulukhaktok via Kugluktuk after a meeting with the outfitter. He told me he was putting me in a separate camp from the other two hunters (rifle hunters), which was good news as far as I was concerned. After arriving in Ulukhaktok and meeting my guide Ross Klenkenberg and his helper Donald Notaina we drove out to camp by quad, a cabin on the shore of the Arctic Ocean approx 15 miles from town.
I had a talk with the guides after putting my recurve together about distances and hunting strategy. Ross felt confident we could get close if we could find animals in broken terrain (which did not turn out to be a problem). I made it clear I didn't want any chasing going on (illegal, but still quite common). They had never had experience with a traditional bowhunter before and couldn't keep away from my bow. We spent quite a bit of time shooting around camp and they had a ball. Very good natural shots too.
Hunting consisted of covering country on the machines and glassing from high spots. There is no shortage of muskoxen on Victoria Island and we spotted around 30 animals the first day. The country is OPEN, but rolling. There are no trees on the island (Ulukhaktok is approx 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle), but lots of drainages with green sedges that the muskoxen feed on. Animals in these drainages were very stalkable. If the muskox saw a quad, though, they got the heck out of Dodge...and they can really cover ground when they want to.
Muskox country....
Fortunately the days are long up there this time of year, and later in the afternoon we located a herd of muskoxen in a drainage that looked to be a good opportunity to get close...