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Author Topic: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)  (Read 1720 times)

Offline highPlains

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Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« on: September 06, 2011, 08:22:00 PM »
We have not really had a stellar elk season yet, but I did manage to kill a smallish 5X5 (more later). I thought I'd make a post about the season so far since we are approaching the half way mark.

My brother, Danny, and I both drew different units this year, which stinks because we are a good tag team. We know each other real well and I can always count on him making the right move at the right time. I hold him back a little bit because he is such a mountain goat, but otherwise we have the same thoughts, same strategies, and we work well together. Oh well.

Danny found a real nice bull a week before the opening weekend. He went back to this area and was in the middle of some serious elk action. Danny has killed a handful of good but not great bulls and he is holding out for something a little nicer this year. Hopefully that will pay off for him. He was calling for my cousin and his friend, who both missed small bulls.

A few small bulls playing around.
 

The big boy that Danny saw a week before the opener. A large 6X7, wide with long tines and longer beams.
 

I went in with my brother-in-law, Kelly, to a place we talked about all summer. We were packed for a three day trip.
 
 

There should have been elk all over in here! But there wasn't. And even though we invested a lot of time and effort getting in to this place we pulled out to find the elk. No use wasting time in an area that only has a few elk, IMO.
 
>>---> TC
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Offline highPlains

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #1 on: September 06, 2011, 08:28:00 PM »
I hunted this unit a long time ago, but not very much of it. The vast majority of the hunting I've done this year is in places where I have never been, or have not been for many, many years. It is kind of a fluke that we ended up hunting in the drainage that has produced the most action this year. My Mom spotted a lone bull above timberline at around 9am on opening day, quite late in the morning to be out in the sun feeding. That was enough to make her and my Dad to go check it out. They should have shot a bull in that drainage opening day, at 2pm my Dad called him to 20 yards but just couldn't get a shot.

Saturday I hunted with my parents back in that same drainage. We saw probably 30 elk above timberline, including a few real nice bulls. I'm sure there were many more that we did not see. Not bad for this small area! They were feeding above timberline and going either to the left, right, or straight over the top of the hill, none came down. We slipped in on several elk that morning and did a little bit of calling. A gangly spike came running full tilt down the hill towards us. If he was a person he would be a perfect Napoleon Dynamite - all clumsy and goofy looking when he ran. At about 30 yards he threw on the brakes, looked around, and then cut in to the trees. There was something he did not like, ah well. Since all the elk were in huntable locations we slipped out knowing that they would be back the following morning. We would have done some more calling but the wind started swirling.

That evening I went out by myself and made a five mile hike in a different place, but it was all for naught. So I ran over to a spot where I could glass our drainage the last 20 minutes before dark. I only saw a few cows but I knew the elk were still all there. I ran in to another elk hunter who was camped back there with his wife and son. He was camped on one side of the drainage so we never went near him and hunted the very far side. We left the majority of the elk we saw for him to hunt.

We made some common sense observations about the drainage before we had ever seen what the elk do up there. There is a big saddle that runs right over to a very steep and nasty north facing ridge. We figured that they probably crossed through that saddle and bedded on that nasty hill. When we finally observed elk we saw them doing exactly what we had suspected.

The following morning, since we had seen a good number of elk moving towards that saddle, we planned on still hunting our way there, and then doing some blind calling once we got there. My brother-in-law Kelly was with us, so there were four total hunters. We usually split up when there is that many of us but we wanted to cover as much of that saddle as possible, so we all went in together.

We still hunted for the first hour or so of the morning until we reached our saddle. Once we got there we hung out for 30 minutes or so hoping to catch something coming through. We split up, about 40  yards apart, in line with the wind which was coming down the hill (that was fine because we did not expect elk to come from below us). I was the furthest up the hill, my Dad was the furthest down the hill. The two of us did the most calling with Kelly and my Mom chirping in as well. We started soft. About five minutes after we started calling I noticed an elk coming down fast. He was still 100 yds out so I made a few more very soft calls and waited. I knew my Dad would keep calling 100 or so yards down the hill.

Everything worked out just perfectly. The elk kept coming fast, looking downhill for the "elk" that he was hearing. His approach kept me concealed the entire time. There were shooting openings in all directions, but I was hidden enough so that he would never see me until he was in a shootable position. I kept looking ahead of his path, picking out places where I could shoot if he held course.

When he got to 25 yards he went behind some thick trees, I drew. He stepped out in to my opening, moving, but not fast. As soon as his front leg appeared I let go of the string. My arrow flew perfect, hitting him about an inch higher than my aim. He crashed out of there, he was mortally hit. I called to try and stop him, more out of habit than necessity, but he never stopped. I knew it would be a short track.

This is a screen shot of Google Earth so you can kind of see the terrain. I marked on my GPS where I was when I shot, and where we found him. I plug my GPS in to my computer and it shows me exactly where I've been. I never used my GPS until I figured out I could do this.

 

A view from my shooting location.
 

We all got together and talked about the shot placement, the elk's reaction, how much arrow penetrated him, etc. We were all very confident that we would find the elk in a short amount of time.
 

About 30 yards from where the elk was standing at the shot we started seeing trees and stumps like this. Looking good!
 

To all of our surprise the heavy blood trail did not last very long. After a bit we were tracking his hoof prints and finding very little blood. It did not have me worried, but it was not what I expected.

About 100 yards or so down the trail my Mom said, "holy cow I sure can smell elk". I knew we were close. I took my eyes off of the ground and started scanning the woods ahead of us. There he is!
 
>>---> TC
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Offline highPlains

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #2 on: September 06, 2011, 08:33:00 PM »
In all the years of elk hunting with my Dad this was the first time we were actually together when either of us killed an elk. Hugs went around.
 

 

I used my 56" Hawk recurve, 59@28, and a VPA Terminator broadhead. It was the first time I carried three blades hunting elk. Penetration was okay, there was a hole on the far side in the ribs but the broadhead did not poke through the skin. It went through the whole body cavity but I sure like to see an exit hole. The blood trail was less than average even though it started strong. I think the hit was a little higher than a good blood trail producing hit would be, but obviously still low enough to produce a very quick kill. I will be adding this broadhead to my arsenal, for sure.

The first human hand to touch this magnificent creature.
 

 

 
>>---> TC
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Offline Doc Nock

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #3 on: September 06, 2011, 08:35:00 PM »
I'd call that frothy pink blood, wouldn't you?

Wow! Nice country. Neat to have experiences shared with your parents... hard to imagine but very, very cool!!!
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Offline ron w

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #4 on: September 06, 2011, 08:37:00 PM »
:thumbsup:  Nice bull...!
In the beginner's mind there are many possibilities. In the expert's there are few...So the most difficult thing is always to keep your beginner's mind...This is also the real secret of the arts: always be a beginner.  Shunryu Suzuki

Offline highPlains

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #5 on: September 06, 2011, 08:37:00 PM »
My mom had a knee replacement last year and this is the first time she has been able to walk the elk woods in quite a few years. Having her there made this hunt all the better!
 

I shot the elk at 7:35am. We had all day to take care of him, and with four of us doing the work we got the cleanest elk meat we've ever done. There was hardly a hair or speck of dust on any of it. Gonna eat good!
 

 

Kelly is a freak of a human being. He is carrying a front and a hind quarter, and he never even commented on the pack being heavy, light, uncomfortable, anything. Just smiles the whole way out, though I pretty much only saw his back the whole time.
 

 

Looks like I'm just calling for the rest of the year!
>>---> TC
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Offline highPlains

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #6 on: September 06, 2011, 08:41:00 PM »
I have more pictures on the blog on my website, rmsgear.com. I just didn't upload them all to post on here. Too many!
>>---> TC
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Offline Mudd

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #7 on: September 06, 2011, 08:43:00 PM »
How cool is this?.... Way!!...I'm saying...

Thank you for sharing your hunt.

God bless,Mudd
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Offline BOWMARKS

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #8 on: September 06, 2011, 08:44:00 PM »
Congrats thanks for the pics and story.
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Offline last arrow

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #9 on: September 06, 2011, 08:44:00 PM »
Congrats on the special hunt.  Beautiful hunting location too.
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Offline GRINCH

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #10 on: September 06, 2011, 08:47:00 PM »
Very special having your parents their to share the hunt,thanks for posting.
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Offline bolong

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #11 on: September 06, 2011, 08:54:00 PM »
:thumbsup:  Congrats! A great hunt all the way!
bolong

Offline AdamH

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #12 on: September 06, 2011, 08:56:00 PM »
Now, thats doin it the Hard Way !! Congrats !! Awesome ...

Offline Russell2

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #13 on: September 06, 2011, 09:00:00 PM »
Nice lookin bull

Online Carcajou

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #14 on: September 06, 2011, 09:02:00 PM »
Fantastic story, and even better that you were able to get the elk with your family in the vicinity..Special times and memories to last a lifetime..way to go!  :thumbsup:
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Offline centaur

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #15 on: September 06, 2011, 09:04:00 PM »
Congrats on a great hunt, even better with family , particularly someone who can pack that much meat. You need to take him along on all your hunts; looks like a great pack mule!
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Offline tradlongbow

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #16 on: September 06, 2011, 09:09:00 PM »
I like the idea that the whole family is together on the hunt.

Congrats,
Darren
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Online Orion

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #17 on: September 06, 2011, 09:17:00 PM »
Well done.  Thanks for sharing.   :thumbsup:    :thumbsup:

Online Terry Green

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #18 on: September 06, 2011, 09:27:00 PM »
Wow....great read!

And thanks for sharing with special pics.  Much appreciated!!!     :campfire:
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Offline PICKNGRIN

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Re: Elk season so far, lots of pics (more pics pg 5)
« Reply #19 on: September 06, 2011, 09:32:00 PM »
Congratulations!!  It's great you had some good help with the meat packing!

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