I have a story to tell. If you have read my stuff in the past you know I like to try and paint a pretty good picture. This story is about a tradbow hunt with my son. It would be his first hunt for caribou in Alaska. Many of you have hunted around my son and or have read of his hunts. He is just twenty years old but has a great deal of experience bowhunting. He took his first deer with a bow at age 8 and has taken 11 species big game species with his recurve. He is passionate about bowhunting and is one of the truest sportsmen you may ever meet. He has always wanted to hunt Alaska and this is where this story takes off. This new Tradgang format is new to me so be patient with me as I try to navigate it and get some pictures posted....
Caribou have always been an addiction for me. It all started when I read the adventures
of Fred Bear in Alaska when I was just a boy. It started a fire that still burns hot in me
today. I made my first bow hunt for caribou in 1998 and just about lost my mind in that
wild place. I would return many times over the next 15 years. After taking my dream bull
of 402 P&Y in 2006, I decided to move on to other adventures around the world. As my
son Luke got older and my stories stirred his desire for Alaska, I knew the day would come
that I would take him there for a trad bow caribou hunt.
My biggest concern was getting him to an age that he could physically handle the rough
conditions and deal with any bear threat should the need arise. As he reached
graduation from high school, we began to plan for the trip. I had hunted an area of
Alaska that was a mixture of rugged tundra that is broken by some very steep and
rugged mountains. The caribou in this region will inhabit both landscapes. Approaching
the caribou on the open tundra is difficult as there is nearly zero cover but getting to the
high mountain bulls is difficult from a physical standpoint. Before every hunt that I have
made here, I have undertaken a serious training program. Even with this training,
Alaska will break your body down. Miles of walking the spongy tundra will sap your leg
strength and the steep mountain climbing, day after day will burn up your lungs. Simply put, there
is no "easy" caribou hunt.
A year of planning came and went, and we headed to Alaska where we met up with my
friend William Newman who would join us on this hunt. He was an experienced caribou
hunter, and after a couple days of jumper flights, we boarded our final float plane to our
destination on a remote river delta. The flight would carry us over rugged mountains
and glaciers where we would see countless mountain goats and brown bears. Watching
my son looking out over this beautiful landscape made for a great start to the trip. Over
and over he would exclaim how beautiful it was.