Over the course of some 50 years of shooting bows, from the first re-curve to my latest bow, which is the fastest that I have ever had the privilege to shoot, I’ve also had a number of bow sights during this time span.
This article will be about the new bow sight that is now mounted to my new bow!
I now decide to go to more modern fiber optic 5 pin bow sight. I had it dialed in from 10 yards to 80 yards, using the 60 yard pin based on holding approximately a foot above an animal’s back to make the hit at 80 yards.
Ironic that during the 2012 deer season when I did a spot and stalk shot and estimated the yardage and did not use the pin for 60+ yards, but used the 40 yard pin as it was a different color and became the focal point on the animal which was later measured at 63 yards. I instinctively judge the yardage to be more than 50 yards and put the 40 yard pin above the deer’s back at approximately 4-5 inches over his back.
The point being I was able to focus on one pin as it stood out, I knew what it was set for, making it easy for me to make the shot.
As some of use get older it can be difficult to always make the right call on pins as they blend in with low light. In the State of Oregon lighted bow sights or pins are not allowed.
Another thing that happens when hunters get older the eyesight does change on most. Some have to have bi-focal, tri-focal, reading glasses, wear glasses for correction near and far. Then there are those that have to take off their glasses to see up close, causing with rifle sight and bow sights some conflicts when using.
I would have to say I have found an answer that will help many with the problem caused by the aging of the eyes.
At the first of the year I contacted HHA Sports Inc.,on the recommendation of an old hunting partner who the year before had decided he needed a change. I sent a letter to HHA Sports and asked them about their movable sight. At first I thought I still wanted multiple pins on the movable sight. I am very thankful that a left handed multiple pin sight was not available. I thought to myself of the hunt that I had in 2012, said to C.H. “a single pin is what I really want.”
Thus a new HHA Sports Optimizer Single Pin Movable Sight shows up at my home. The sight is very easy to set-up on the bow with two (2) screws holding it on the bow and two (2) screws holding the fiber optic surround scope on the bracket. Another big deal with the Optimizer is that the quiver bracket attaches to the sight bracket and the screws were in the Optimizer packaging. Outstanding! One more thing to think about is the fact that only two (2) different Allen Wrenches attached the Optimizer to the Martin Onza 3.
Many of my GPS hunters are very technical and would have a great day setting up a new Optimizer sight on their bow.
After getting the first sight-in done at 20 yards it is very easy to understand the advantage to the single pin movable sight. First advantage is that you focus on one pin, without thought. It allows the perafel part of our eyesight to take in the object you are shooting at, yet stay focus at the point of impact aim.
Once the sight is dialed in, there are so many advantages to using the single pin movable sight for me that I will make the shots that I take count. If using a tree stand and have the target area sighted in for set-up of taking your game, you can set the single pin for the yardage. Thus you will be focused on a single pin and single animal, leaving nothing to distract the eye.
Now if I am going to do the spot and stalk method which I prefer, I will have the sight set at 30 or 40 yards, knowing what my bow will do from that yardage in or out on the target. Practicing at different distances with either yardage pin will give confidence on the shots that I might not be able to range finder in. Another words I will be back to being able to shoot instinctive when needed. Being able to be in combat mode without great thought one can get the job done. It is no different with the Optimizer sight than it is with a rifle scope with a duplex or mil-dot reticule. The eye focuses to the center of the reticule, with the Optimizer the eye centers to the pin.
Even with the younger generation, it is a plus to learn how to shoot instinctive for conditions that don’t allow the time to range find in your target. The Optimizer for bow hunters is just the solution to success in the field!
The HHA Sports Optimizer Bow Sight have been rated the Number 1 movable bow sight in the world for 9 years from the readers of Bow Hunting World. I fully understand why it is rated the Number 1 in just the ease of set-up and construction of the Optimizer.
HHA Sports does build the Optimizer with multiple pins for those that what to shoot with multiple pins. I suggest that everyone that is an archer or bow hunter to check out the HHA Sports web-page and take the Optimizer challenger and increase your success in the field. The Optimizer has a 100% Lifetime Warranty!
Whatever your needs are, HHA Sports has the sight that will fit your needs in the field!
In closing when using the Optimizer Bow Sight and having a great bow, if we miss it will always be operator error, as the equipment is without flaw in my option.
Another Technical Hunter Scores in the S. Wagontire Unit
This is the third (3rd) hunter to hunt in the S. Wagontire Unit in Oregon for Antelope that has written a great story about the hunt in manner of being technical. It is put in this post as I received it and a well done piece by: Brandon. Pictures will be placed at the end of the article!
I hadn’t been applying for the South Wagontire Pronghorn tag for very long. This spring when my brother Derek and I applied as a party we averaged 4 points. We know some people who apply for the same tag and watch the numbers so we know it takes about thirteen Preference Points for a resident to get a tag. So as you can imagine, the last thing I expected was for my brother to call and rouse me out of bed for something “very important” and inform me of the luck we’d both just received. Two Pronghorn tags after only four years of applying; we could only hope for such wonderful luck when it came to killing bucks come August. How could this be? Oregon uses a percentage of the total allotted tags for a hunt to give all applicants a chance at a tag before they draw numbers for those with Preference Points. I for one am glad they do.
As you can imagine we had some work cut out for ourselves if we were going to be ready for this hunt as we didn’t expect tags for at least eight more years. We needed to figure out our options for rifles and loads, transportation, camping arrangements, transport of game, and many other smaller but no less important aspects of this exciting hunt. I read all the books I could find on the animals and spent some time looking at photo and video of Antelope bucks in order to familiarize myself with a “shooter.”
If you think you might want to shoot a Pronghorn, you are going to need to do some homework. You will want to have some hunting experience and you will need to be patient, prepared, and flexible. It helps to know some people who know some people and remember to make friends as you go. I owe a debt of gratitude to several people for their contributions to my hastily prepared, surprise Pronghorn hunt.
The first step was to start asking around. We had never even been on an Antelope hunt before. I personally had never even seen one. I work in the Sporting Goods department at a major Northwest membership store and was able to glean a lot of information from some of my more experienced customers. My brother and I both had good conversations with Craig Foster, a Wildlife Biologist in the Lakeview office. He gave us some good information in regards to herd density in specific areas of the unit as well as what class of bucks we might expect in those areas. He did let us know the overall population in the unit was a little lower than he had hoped for but not significantly so. In a later conversation he told us the major contributing factor to the low populations is due to poor fawn recruitment. If you’ve ever been to this unit this would come as no surprise as the leading predator of Pronghorn fawns, the coyote, are as thick as flies around a sorghum mill. As an aside we have plans to return with dog guns and a FoxPro to give the coyotes a dose of hell for what they’ve done to the young Pronghorns in the area. Overall Foster supplied us with a good understanding of what is going on in the unit.
Being members of an Oregon hunting forum my brother started a thread asking for some help. We got a lot of responses on the thread and after sorting through all the information we had a couple of pieces of good information. The best advice we got on the forum was to try and get ahold of Bwanabubba. Now Bwanabubba isn’t his given name and Cobra isn’t either. I contacted him via email through his site Bwana Bubba and learned he is a fine gentleman known to his friends as Frank. Frank was a big help to me and my brother. He gave us sound information to get our heads wrapped around Pronghorn hunting in South Wagontire. He even sent us GPS waypoints to good areas to look into when we scouted the area and eventually hunted it. One thing Frank did which was a great help to us, was to put us in contact with David K who had hunted the unit two years previous and killed a nice buck. You can read David’s story on the Bwanabubba site too; look for “The Average Joe.” If you have read Franks Guide to Successful Big Game Hunts you know that a successful hunter “listen[s] to people that have been successful in hunting.” That is exactly what I did. I had a real nice conversation with David on the phone and we exchanged several follow up emails. David was able to make time for us and actually came out to scout for us and show us around the unit some on opening day. David gave very generously of his time and even lent me some equipment that I don’t own. I like to think we have made a new friend in David and look forward to spending some more days in the field with him.
Pronghorn Antelope live in wide open spaces on the desert plains of Oregon so it is a good idea to leave the 45-70 at home and bring your flat shooter that chisels bullet holes one after the other. Derek opted to bring a Remington 25-06 borrowed from a friend and I brought my Remington chambered in 280 Remington. One aspect of this hunt I had been looking forward to was the chance to develop a 120 grain load that was hopefully accurate as well as fast. I knew I wanted to use a 120 grain because of the potential for speed. So I looked at the available bullets and compared them across the board from ballistic coefficients to projectile integrity once inside the game. I narrowed it down to either the Nosler Ballistic Tip hunting or the Barnes Tipped Triple Shock X bullet. Both of these bullets are known for their devastating effects on game. I want to eat as much of the meat as possible when I kill a game animal. I have known the Ballistic Tip Hunting bullet to over fragment in game and leave too much behind so I chose the Barnes. The Barnes bullets are a bit more money but if I have to wait 13 years for my next South Wagontire Antelope tag I am not going to worry about a few more cents per round this season. Bullets being chosen It was time to settle on a powder. My rifle likes IMR 4831, a lot. Shooting the 140 grain Accubonds I have gotten groups just a touch under a half inch at 100 yards. They weren’t particularly speedy compared to the Hornady Light Magnum stuff but they shot pretty well. I chose Remington cases because they have always been the most consistent brass in my collection. Barnes says their TTSX bullets like to be set .030-.070 inches off the rifling so I loaded a few groups of increasing grains of 4831 with the TTSX set .050 off the rifling. The next week Derek and I were able to get out and do a little shooting. Derek sighted in the Hornady Superformance loads first and, after a little trouble with the Bi-pod affecting his zero, was eventually able to get a satisfactory group shooting off my sand bag. The first group I shot had 58 grains of powder and was pretty respectable at barely over one minute of angle. The next group was a little tighter just under an inch with 59 grains. The third group was the winner though. At 60 grains the case was completely filled with powder and one grain under maximum. It shot like a dream ¾ of an inch including one that I knew I had pulled. I loaded up a box worth of this load in the next few days and headed off to the range with my chronograph to see just what I had exactly. The results of the range work? Three hole group in 0.323 inches with an average velocity of 3240 feet per second. If that isn’t an antelope load I don’t know what is. Happy with my load and optimistic with the info I had gotten from several fine gentleman it was time to scout the country and see what a Pronghorn looked like in person.
Since we are both working men with families we didn’t have much time to scout so we had to do it in a single day, no overnight, and two young sons in tow. Now since my boys were coming along we also couldn’t go in the truck and actually went scouting in a Dodge Neon. I know, I know, we must be crazy. That may be true but it was go in the car or don’t go at all. From the conversation I had with David I was expecting to see quite a few Antelope and a good portion of bucks. This didn’t happen for us because we couldn’t cover very much ground in the car. Going was slow and careful. The only Antelope we saw in the interior of the unit were so far off they were barely discernible. We did see some wild horses though and eventually saw an antelope buck on the way out. I hoofed it to a waterhole David had suggested and found it rather full of water but unfortunately it also had a rotting cow lying out in the middle of it. It was disappointing not to see very many Pronghorns but we weren’t discouraged. We saw plenty of tracks and got a good idea of what the country was like and most importantly we now knew just what a Speed Goat in the wild looks like.
When it came time to head east for the hunt we would be going in my brothers Ford Ranger and we would be packing light and camping wherever we found a spot in the unit. That little Ranger was stuffed to the gills. We brought a couple of Coleman extreme coolers for our victuals and to bring Antelope back in once successful. Derek devised a handy rack to hold the coolers off the bed of the truck giving us more room for camping essentials. We used a 5 gallon beverage cooler in the truck for our drinking water and occasionally refilled it with ice to keep it cool. We would get our fuel at the Chewaucan garage while we were there and the friendly folks there would allow us use of their hose to re-up our supply off drinking water. While refueling there during the scouting trip we learned of a local resident who operates a walk-in during the season and hangs your meat for a reasonable fee. That took care of the question of what to do once we had one killed.
Friday evening before the opener my wife was competing in a local pageant to “rain” as the Slug Queen of our home town. Obviously getting to our camp a day early was out of the question so we left early Saturday morning though not too early. We opted to sacrifice a few hours of the season to get a healthy amount of sleep before kicking things off. We met up with David in Paisley and fueled up before heading in country. He had been able to do some scouting for us Friday night and he had some bad news for us. There wasn’t any water anywhere that he had found so it would be difficult to pattern the Antelopes. We were determined to keep our thoughts positive though so we just started trucking in to see what we could come up with. It wasn’t long before we saw Prairie Goats in the numbers we had expected. They were all on private ranch land on that first day but seeing nearly 70 animals was definitely a boon to lift our spirits. We spent the rest of the day trying to spot Lopes while looking for water.
Sunday we decided to head east deeper into the interior checking every spot on the map that looked like a depression that may hold water. We weren’t having much luck when on the way to a potential waterhole we spotted some wild horses in what looked like a very small depression that we couldn’t believe would hold water with everything so dry. We watched the horses for a while then continued up the road suggesting checking for water where the horses were on the way back out. Once we had determined our original destination was as dry as the Sahara we headed back to the little waterhole the horses were at when I spotted Antelope on the slope right by the water hole. We glassed them and determined there was one buck in the band of ten and he looked like a shooter. As we were glassing and racking our brains on how to get close to these animals a small plane flew over very low and spooked the Antelope away. I don’t know who was in that plane but they were definitely not friends of ours. When we checked the hole we found water. Not much of it but it was apparently enough.
It was on the way out of the area that we experienced a flat. I strongly urge airing down out there. Some of the roads leave a lot to be desired; seemingly paved with large rocks and boulders. Passenger tires will not cut it. At least we got a chance to refill our water cooler as the able young gents at the Chewaucan Garage fixed the flat.
Monday morning started in makeshift hides within shooting distance of the little waterhole. Confession time, sitting and waiting for game is not for me. I found it excruciating trying to sit still and stay awake. Then when the coyotes came in I wanted nothing more than to let ‘em have it but I couldn’t risk firing my rifle and spooking any thirsty lopes within hearing distance. After four hours more sitting than we could stand we were off to see if we could find any more water. We encountered thirteen antelope the rest of the day in groups of 1-4 but no bucks.
Tuesday morning was a repeat of Monday morning. Another excruciating wait for nothing, I wondered how long we could keep doing this? For the afternoon we decided to head to a super secret spot Frank had been keeping in his back pocket. It was way further north than the area we were hunting in thus far. We also found that maps can’t be trusted in this country. They suggest roads exist where they don’t, or at least don’t any longer. Considering what passes for a road around there anyway, it sure adds a lot of frustration when it becomes clear the road you were headed for has been returned to boulders and sage. The super secret spot was just one of these places we couldn’t get to because “the road don’t go there no more.”
We weren’t half way to the secret waterhole when appearing out of nowhere two nice bucks that I’d say were 15 inchers are laying tracks in the draw just as fast as you could imagine. They were much too far out and moving too quick to even dream of getting a shot so we watched them to see what they’d do and they slowed down and started to browse about half a mile away. We thought since they stopped we ought to be able to make a stalk so we grabbed the essentials and headed up the back side of the ridge. We got up to where we last saw them and the terrain there was just perfect for one of us to sneak up to the edge and have a shot. It was going to be perfect. One problem though. Those speedy little buggers had gone further up the draw while we were slipping up the back side. I was really starting to get excited so wasn’t about to give up on the opportunity but Derek wasn’t feeling too well so he waited while I went ahead. I went further up the ridge in the direction they’d originally headed to see if they were over the next rise. They were there alright, but they had me pegged. I could only see their heads looking straight at me from about three hundred yards. A three hundred yard headshot on the top of a ridge in 97° heat and a swirling breeze isn’t exactly a slam dunk for me so I backed out a little and set up a flagging decoy I had made to see if it would coax them closer. It didn’t have the magnetic pull I had hoped for. They were only mildly curios until they became nervous enough to vacate the premises completely.
A rifle shot in the distance called me back to where my brother was resting. I made haste back and found my brother with a little story to tell. He had been feeling a little light headed and actually blacked out for a few seconds. Let this be a warning to those who attempt this country. It is hot here, hotter than it seems. My brother’s problem wasn’t dehydration as you may suspect, he had plenty of water, but rather nutrition. We found we had little appetite in the peaceful comfort of the desert. Luckily that was the only safety concern we had the whole trip because we recognized the problem and remedied it by tucking in the groceries.
Wednesday morning the dread of returning to the hide at the waterhole was of course mixed with the hope of returning Antelope. After three hours of trying to stay awake in the blind, the cold coffee from breakfast was wearing off and I nodded off for a while. When I opened my eyes two does were on the edge or the waterhole. I nudge Derek and whisper “They’re here.”
“They’re here?” he returns.
“They’re here.” I say.
“Who’s here?” asks Derek.
“The antelope.”
“The antelope?”
“The antelope!” I nod.
I got into firing position and waited in hopes more would come out of the sage to join these two adventurous does but none ever did. They started coming out of the waterhole. One here, one there. Eight of the ten had slipped in and down to the waterhole without alerting us, the alpha predators that we are. The old pump was really starting to bang when number six walked out sporting headgear. I was steady enough over the bi-pod I’d borrowed from David but that buck wouldn’t stand clear of his ladies. What was I to do? He went back in for another drink. Where will he come up? Will I have a shot? He came back up on the opposite side of the waterhole. Sauntered slowly broadside and took a Barnes bullet like a champ. The whole band ran a few steps at the shot and the buck circled a few yards to the near side of the waterhole and looked back where he had been standing. He apparently didn’t know he’d been shot. Then he started to falter, leaned back, and bicycled his front hooves before settling down for his last rest.
As it turned out the bullet entered between ribs and exited between ribs and left virtually no bloodshot behind. The fact that the bullet passed through so cleanly was probably what kept him from knowing he’d been shot. After a quick field dress we loaded the buck into my brother’s Ranger and made our way straight into town. We had him skinned and in the cooler little more than an hour after loading him up. The gentleman who operates the cooler has a nice electric hoist that makes skinning a breeze. He even let us use some of his tools later when we packed the Lope on ice for the trip back home. I must really stress here that the geniality Paisley showed me and my brother in our short time in their town has never been paralleled.
With my tag filled early enough in the day, we spent the afternoon trying to locate a buck for Derek. We decided it was time to check out the seeding west of Abert. We were lucky enough to run into another small band. Derek tried to make his way closer to them but the lay of the terrain in their vicinity didn’t give him much of a chance. I was able to see them make a very large circle and head down toward the lake and way off to the east.
Having seen a decent group the night before we headed to the Abert seeding again to see if we could make a go of our final day on Thursday. We eventually spotted a couple bucks as they ran away from us at a distance I estimate was in the neighborhood of a mile and a half.
We met a local guide while hunting out there and he told us this was the toughest season he had seen in forty years guiding in that country. That makes me feel good that we were able to make it happen on a nice buck this year. We will come back again when we have the points and try for a trophy. Hunting the desert of Oregon for Pronghorn was a totally new experience for us and for me was some of the most fun I’ve ever had in the field. I am going to make as many trips out there as I can to enjoy it. Coyote hunting, maybe some jackrabbits and squeaks, and I hear the fishing can be great in the local rivers. I’m hooked on desert Antelope.
It is very tough for the team to stop hunting the ranch, it is an addiction!
It is about time that I share this story with my readers and friends on how the hunt really happened and where! It happen a few years back, lets say some 25 years ago, (which feels yesterday), during an opening day bow hunt in Central Oregon in the Grizzly Hunt Unit for Mule deer. The story is of humor, comedy of errors, or just plain hunting! We would be hunting the Rancho Rajneesh again or better known to the locals as “The Big Muddy” we spent a great deal of time over there, glassing, scouting and taking pictures of the deer and elk that thrived in the area. On this hunt I would be accompanied by one of my hardcore hunting partners Dave Brill who is a very accomplish bow and rifle hunter.
On this trip I actually let someone else drive their truck. This would work out greatly for me at the end of the hunt. “Dave it looks like I won the toss, so I get first shot at a Mulie buck” “Ok! Bubba, even if it is my truck and all!” “Ya! Dave, like you would let me drive your truck?” That was a great line to use, but the next day, I would have his truck while he hunted… I needed to get the deer meat into cold storage in Madras, Oregon. One of the grocery stores in town had a separate locker for game meat! Again we would be hunting one of our favorite spots in Central Oregon, which would be outside of Donnybrook, Oregon on the south side of the Rancho Rajneesh.
There was a couple of parcels we found ourselves going back too every year, as it was B.L.M., yet tied to a couple of ranches that we could pass through and sometimes hunt. Ah! You are wondering of the spot, well I will give you the spot of big bucks as near Hinkle Butte! Old man Crowley (Raymond) was a great man to know in the area! You could find him on his front porch at his home in Donnybrook along Gosner Rd. He had a number of parcels that bordered the BLM in the “Big Muddy Ranch.” This gave a save access into the BLM without being noticed. We were able to keep are secret spots to ourselves for over a 20 year time frame. This land is now owned by Young Life and a real estate broker in three separate parcels.
We had spotted a number of bucks during our trip into the area for the evening hunt. The morning hunt was a bust for both of us! I love to hunt the evening, as most everyone else has settled back down into their camps. It does not bother me to hike out in the dark when I am deep into the interior of B.L.M.; usually the evening is from about 1330 on. If I look back over the years I have probably harvest more game from 1300 until dusk! Figuring that big bulls and big bucks need to stretch a bit after their mid-day nap!
Let’s get back to the story, as I stated earlier, we had seen a number of bucks on the way in. As we were approaching the honey spot, I notice a real dandy buck up on the hill with what I figured at about a 29” outside spread and heavy racked. Hunt on, as I roll out the truck and took off with my pack, pack frame, crackers, light sweater, Leupold binoculars, camera, new Martin Onza bow, and Kershaw knives! Oh! Did I mention that I forgot water in my pack? The buck is working up the hillside and not knowing that I am behind him I figured. So quiet that I am in the stalk of this “Big Muddy” buck. He is working up in front of me through the Junipers, rocks and Sagebrush still in view at about 90 yards. I feel that I am closing the distance quickly and when I get within 40 yards I will just let him have it when I grunt at him and get him to swing broadside. As I turn the corner of the ridge I was working up he has disappeared, “what no way he is gone.” The wind was coming down the ridge into my face; I just missed seeing him turn into the draw…
Got over that little trip in the mind and decide to continue the hunt at a place we called the swamp.
As I approach the swamp, I see a lone buck standing at the edge of the water with lots of cover to work into him. The buck is not very wide, but tall and extremely heavy with abnormal points. As I get ready to drill him at 35 yards (he has no clue I am behind him), out of the corner of my left eye, I see about 25 bucks starting to get up in another part of the swamp in the cattails at about 45 yards. They were now in full line of sight. I swung onto this buck that was pushing 30” who was just standing their broadside looking me, as were all the rest. Easy shot and I took the shot, only to see it hit the only branch of Sagebrush sticking up at the boiler room. The arrow of course deflected and cut the hair off the top of the buck’s back. He gave me a smile and just walked off into the direction sun and they all stood out at 70 yards on the open hill side! “A bird in the hand is worth how many birds in the bush?” I would have say that was pretty wild and not ever going to be repeated in my lifetime of so many bucks taking a bath together at one time. I found a few empty Ivory Soap wrappers at the waters’ edge…
I am now over that experience also and moving on as I had more ground to cover and see what was out there. I move alone a Juniper tree line and spot 6 good bucks, one being swamper in a small basin at about ¼ mile away. To run the game down to within 100 or so yards, then put the final stalk on was great enjoyment for me. Mule deer with enough cover are pretty easy to sneak up on. I get to Juniper and Sagebrush along a B.L.M. cross section fence line that was next to the small barren basin which is about 50 yards from the deer. You wonder about the 50 yards and all! I used my range finder the wheel type and it said 50 yards to the big buck. I took a picture of the big boy also! You’re saying how many big bucks can this guy find? Well it was un-real, but real. The big bucks were there and everywhere around the area within a 50 mile circle. Alright being skeptical of my dial a wheel range finder (just got it), I felt the buck was no more than 40 yards as I drew back and shot through the brush, I should have believed the range finder, as the buck must have been 50 yards, as I watch arrow past under his belly.
Almost! Horseshoes anyone?
Now I am really bummed out about this whole hunt and rushing into the hunt and not believing first thoughts. Well there was still some day light left and I never give up until it is illegal to shoot.
I am now up on the plateau glassing down into another basin. All of a sudden I see a single buck at about 1000 yards out. I figure he is about 25” to 26” wide and a pretty good looking buck, plus the fact it about time to get the job done. He is feeding in the middle of the basin, but I could see that he was working towards the West. In his path of travel it would lead him past a big pile of dead Juniper trees. Hunt on, as I race to cover ground and get on the buck. Getting within a quarter mile of the spot that I would ambush the buck, I drop my pack frame. With only my Martin Onza (first run production Onza) I raced to the pile of dead junipers. I was completely invisible (another words he had not clue I was standing in the open and waiting for him) from where I was standing, yet I could see his rack as he moved along the pile. I went to full draw and had the 30 yard pin on the spot I figured he would come to once he cleared the pile. It is great that he covered the distance in a short period of time as the Onza had a draw weight of #90. It was mental thing in those days of bow hunting to have the biggest and baddest bow made! In the 21st Century my new Onza 3 with a draw weight of 72 is most likely about 100 fps faster than my first Onza and it was a hottest bow in the 20th Century! (Yes, I know believed the range finder and mentally plugged in points of yardage.) As he cleared the pile and was broadside to me, yet was still feeding, I let my fingers do the work. As the XX75 2317 26 1/2” with a 125 gr. Muzzy in flight the buck look straight at me into my sunglasses (he heard the bow, but it was too late for him). That was the last time I saw his eyes looking at me, as to my amazement the arrow hit him dead center in the mouth. “You got to be kidding me”, as the buck jumped over the side of the rim that I didn’t know was even there. I thought to myself as the light was fading, what I am going to do now? I set my bow down on the rim and started to glass in to the bottom of the canyon. It took me about 2 panic minutes to spot him hunkered up in the bottom (arrow went down this throat about 12 inches). Ok! I have found him, but I don’t have my pack frame or camera. I took off on a dead run to where I left my pack frame and ran right back to the rim. It took me another 90 seconds to remember where I left my Martin Onza. Finally I get myself down to the buck, take pictures as no one is going to believe this shot. I give the buck my “Hawaiian Cut” which puts him in quarters with the removal of backstrap and tenderloins. This is the only way I field dress big game, fast (30 minutes on a deer) and there is little blood! I get as much as I can on the pack frame along with the head and cape.
I have to climb out of the bottom and head back to the truck that would be waiting for me I hoped. It would be about 3 miles line of sight to get back and light was fading fast, real fast. There was a great deal of cheat grass and it made it possible to see for a while. I had decided to take a short cut to the road, which would be a mistake for me. It was now dark and dark, as the thunder heads over the John Day River were settling in. Thunder and Lighting now was everywhere, plus it started to rain. When the sky would light up I would move towards the direction of my pickup spot. I could see the micro wave tower light and that helped me for a while. I then lost all the grass and got into just rocks. I could no longer go forward in reaching the truck or Dave. I had lost the lighting as it would move further east towards Mitchell, Oregon. I was going to have to spend the night out in the weather with only a light sweater on. Did I mention that I had forgotten water, now I needed it for sure after eating the crackers? The crackers were pretty dry. It was a good thing that I trained in the desert on running missions with no water… The temperature had now dropped and my sweater was not enough at this point. I hate DIRT, (did I say I hate dirt?) but knew the only way I was going to make until morning, was to hunker down under a low hanging Juniper and bury myself in the dirt (dust). Though it was raining it would not last very long, as the storm had past. That is just what I did; waking up about every two hours to see if light had come finally over the John Day River. It was probably about 5:30 AM when I woke up again and could see a hint of sun coming over the hills above the John Day River. There was not a cloud in the sky now with only the sun to show up for the day!
Later in the day the temperature reaches about 98 degrees, same the first day. I was now up and getting the pack frame on with most of the buck attached. It was a good thing I did not try to venture further during the night; I surely would have found myself in the bottom of narrow rock crevice for life. There was no way that I would have seen the edge and would have fallen to the bottom. Making it out to the dirt road, out of no where, Dave and his truck appeared. Dave had driven the dirt road hitting the horn once in a while until about midnight, and then parked off the road until morning; he figured I would be ok with my military background!
I told Dave it was time for him to hunt the elk he had seen while he was coming up the road. I could get the front quarters out later in the afternoon! Dave never got on the elk again, but at the end of the season we went back to our spot and he killed a great buck! That will be another story, but I will let you see Dave’s buck from the last weekend of the archery season in 1987!
Morale of the story: Be Prepared – Have a Trusting Friend
This article will be more of requested of receiving comments from the readers. I have been watching a great deal of programs on the Outdoor Channel with both rifle hunters and archery hunters when I have the time to do so in recent years.
I have to say there are some great hunters out there both female and male that get the job done and make the shows real.
The following words, which I write in this story, represent my views on subject of recovery of big game at night.
Hunters choose various times to hunt which range from dawn to dusk, hunt the morning only, and hunt the evening only.
Today, I am going to talk about the evening hunt from around 1300 to dusk! So much game is spotted just before short minutes of ending legal shooting times. Shots are made during that time frame and there is what should be the recovery time. Recovery time includes time for the animal to exhaust from the shot and then we are into the actual recovery time which is darkness.
I am amazed at the technology of the knowing the animals whereabouts and their movements at any given time with the aid of trail cameras, boundary systems and GPS systems. This will tie into my words with the recovery of big game without saying anymore…
In my young adult years, my Dad (Bill) and Uncle Dave, taught me when you harvest an animal in the hours before dusk, that you make every attempt to recover the game before leaving the field. I continue to live by that code to his day. Only one time I have not been able to locate an animal at dark, though my partner and I spent more than 4 hours trying to do so, plus my son turned around some 60 miles away to help locate the deer (the deer is alive today). This just happened to be in 2012 during the general archery season and I have been bow hunting since 1970.
I am appalled with many of the segments on the hunting channel and how game recovery is done. Many of the programs are highly sponsored and the names of the hunters are well known in the industry! The lack of not seeing recovery at night is disturbing! That is not to say I have not seen night recovery footage from the hard core hunters with segments on the Outdoor Channel.
On one particular program there was hunt in a Western State during an archery season for Antelope – Pronghorn. The hunter was hunting the afternoon prior to dusk and makes what appears to be a great and solid shot. On the video we all see the Lope go lay down and this was prior to darkness, it appeared to be about a ¼ mile away from the hunter and his crew. It almost broke my heart when the next part of the video showed the hunters going on recovery in the morning. Considering the light of the day, one would think they ate breakfast first before attempting recovery. What they found at the sight was just a skeleton of the Pronghorn that had been stripped of all meat and hide by coyotes. I was amazed it still had it horns as coyotes love the horn. This was a trophy Pronghorn that the meat went to waste, but fed the predators. I did not finish watching the program, as I could not believe the guide did not know or tell them a Pronghorn left overnight will be stripped. It is very hard for me understand why they did not go after the Pronghorn a bit later. Plus are we to assume that they continue to keep hunting and the horns went to the barn?
Years ago I lined up a hunter in the Silvies Unit of Oregon with waypoints for harvesting a Boone & Crockett Pronghorn. He found “thee buck” in the evening, shot the buck. It was not the best shot and he watched the buck head out into the sage brush and lay down outside of Riley, Oregon. It was getting dark and he decided waited until the next morning to find the buck, what he found was nothing but hair! It had been stripped by coyotes also. My comment to him later was “what were you thinking?”
This is not the first time on these programs that the hunters waited until the next morning to find their kill! Ok! We all can have a bad shot, but leaving an animal over night with the bad shot, the meat is not going to be premium quality. The animal was alive and the fluids of a bad shot still affect the overall meat quality even though it might freeze. Then again during general bow season it should swell right up from the heat. So was it just about the trophy, the kill or the amount of footage on the video? There could be the other side of the coin that they are showing what can happen with a bad shot and what to expect. I am one that doesn’t want to know or see that type of footage; it leaves a bad taste in everyone’s mouth.
Lastly there is the shot on an animal that should have never been taken, such a Mountain Goat on a pinnacle at 1000 yards cross canyon and the goat is not anchored in his tracks with the shot and free falls 6000 or so feet to the creek bottom and no recovery can be done. Heck of a shot, but the judgment of recovery was not there no matter what time it was shot!
We all have lost game over the years and the more time you spend in the field it can happen via a bad shot, miss or a non-fatal shot. In Oregon during the general seasons of rifle a bad shot can be opportunity for the next person in the canyon… Archery hunting that is not the case, which is why most of us will bow hunt for solitude!
Maybe some hunters are afraid to be in the woods after dark as they might fear a predator or even the “boogie man.” Just maybe they can’t handle darkness and lack the ability to walk in the dark. A large number of hunters have never had the opportunity to run a night mission out of country (combat). Plus in many states it is legal to carry a sidearm during archery and rifle season for protection. Hunters will pack a sidearm for protection against the 2 legged predators, so why not four legged predators? Ok! Sometimes it just feels great to carry a 1911!
In most states which, doesn’t include my home state of Oregon, bow hunters can use lighted nocks which can help a great deal with recovery of a hit the animal, you can tell if the animal was hit, direction of the animal’s travel if it sticks in the animal for a while and if the arrow passes through the animal you can check the blood content.
There are number of the seasoned hunters on these programs that will seek until they find the game at night and I applaud them. We all know these hunters and those are the one’s I am going to tune into the future!
The following story is from a new friend that I am connected with on Weatherby Rifles! He also shoots a 340 Weatherby, one of the finest Elk cartridges made!
I don’t claim to have any innate “sixth sense” or unusual knowledge or skill when it comes to elk hunting, but I’m not a tenderfoot, either. Growing up in Idaho in a hunting family, I took full advantage of the fall hunting seasons. Most of the hunts during my teen years were for mule deer, although I got a taste of elk hunting on a trip to the Selway River area in central Idaho with dad and my brother Ray, who connected on a spike bull. A few years later, as a newly married college student with a very lean budget, my hunting focus shifted to include elk on a more regular basis. Having spent a summer as a “cedar savage” (cutting Cedar trees into telephone poles) for a northern Idaho logging company, I had plenty of exposure to elk country, and took advantage of my newly gained knowledge of the area when elk season opened in the fall. With tags available over the counter and either sex areas open to the general public; I took my first elk, a big dry cow. Of course, I had to sit patiently at the fish & game checking station while they inspected the big 6-point bull another hunter had taken just over the hill from me. I was hooked. The following year, I was invited to hunt with a friend near Grangeville in north-central Idaho. His dad owned a logging operation, so we had the inside track on where the elk were. Opening morning we got into the elk, and my friend and his brother both got cows, which we packed out the next day in the snow. On the way out that next afternoon, we bumped a big bull. The bull trotted off through the timber about 150 yards, then turned broadside on a dirt bank, and looked back. I was in shooting position, and carried a brand new Winchester M70 ’06 – a gift from my dad. The rifle had arrived in the mail only a couple of days earlier, and I had only taken it out of the box, added a sling, and bought a couple boxes of ammo. When the front sight blade slipped into the notch of the rear buckhorn and paused behind his front shoulder, I touched it off. Only casually acknowledging my shot, the bull just turned and walked over the hill into the timber. The foot race that followed ended 250 yards later, with me about 10 steps behind Zura, a track star at the U of Idaho. I got there in time to see him take the bull down with a short 50 yard neck shot. I will admit I was really disappointed – this was a magnificent herd bull, and I had missed! One lesson learned the hard way – Never assume a new rifle is already sighted in! I consoled myself with the thought that it would soon be my turn to get the trophy.
And suddenly, 33 years had passed, it was 1997, and I had memories of many enjoyable hunts, of bulls that had outsmarted me, and of being on the wrong side of the hill or in the “other clearing”. Yes, I had taken several elk, but the best of them was a raghorn 5-point. Although I have always treasured the whole of the outdoor experience far more than the filling of a tag, I had unconsciously developed a nagging case of “Why not me — when will it be my turn”? When it dawned on me, it was an uncomfortable feeling – but it was there. And as much as I resisted it, I had to acknowledge that getting a good bull was becoming very important.
My opportunity came in mid – 1997, when my neighbor Rusty dropped by to tell me that a friend of his, who had a bull elk tag for the Panther River area in Alberta, couldn’t go hunting that Fall, and wanted to sell the tag. I had read about the Panther, and knew that this was the area where Clarence Brown took his record book typical bull in 1977 – a bull that still holds the number one position all – time for Alberta, with a 419 6/8 B&C score. I also knew it wasn’t a one-time aberration – the Panther holds 3 of the top 10 typical scores forAlbertato this date, and I had visited the trophy rooms of some of the hunters who had been there in the past few years. I had promised myself for years that someday I would go on a guided hunt, and this was gong to be it. I don’t have the funds available to take these guided hunts whenever I feel like it – I would be dipping into a hunting fund slowly built over the years, so I had been careful not to waste it on a “blind choice”. The retrieval of my billfold from my hip pocket would have made a lasting impression on a fast-draw artist. I owned the tag. Rusty had hunted the Panther river area 5 years earlier, and had returned from the hunt with a big heavy 6 x 7. He eagerly accepted my invitation to go with me as a “tag along”, and the hunt was on!
Arriving in Sundre, Alberta on the 1st of November, we were met by our outfitter Ken Fraser, owner / operator of Wind Valley Guiding, my Guide Clem, and Eli, Ken’s other hunter from Georgia. Over breakfast, we learned that the weather wasn’t cooperating — too warm, and not enough snow. The area we were to hunt is partially dependent on the elk migration out of Banff Park, and extreme weather was needed to move the elk down from the high country into the Panther River valley. The Panther River area has a resident herd of elk, but action picks up rapidly when the Banff bulls join the party. We hoped for a cold front, and early the next morning mounted our horses for the 3 ½ hour ride from the trail-head to camp. For the next two weeks, we hunted from “0-dark thirty in the morning to 0-dark thirty at night”. We saw a couple of good bulls, but couldn’t get to them. I left at the end of my hunt having passed up a 5×6 that was barely legal, and rode out alongside Eli, who had taken an excellent 6×6. As we headed out of camp, Ken looked at the sky and announced “Too bad you have to leave — the weather is changing, and the bulls will be here tomorrow”! But, with 4 more hunters waiting at the trail head, it was time to go home. Ken and Clem had worked hard and long for me, but Murphy’s Law was alive and well.
Back at home and settled back into my work routine for only three days, the phone rang Wednesday evening. It was Ken, calling from his radio phone in camp. His message was simple and his voice confident as he said “The bulls are here, and everyone has tagged out. If you can be back at the trail-head Sunday morning, we’ll go back in and get you a bull”. I pulled out of the driveway Friday after work, thankful for having a boss who was an elk hunter and understood. And 940 miles later, I was waiting at the trail-head Sunday morning with one other hunter. We had one week of season left. The weather was perfect when we rode into camp — 30 degrees below zero. At that temperature, Fahrenheit and Centigrade are about the same and either one is cold – very cold. We also had about 10 inches of snow on the ground, which was just right.
Over the next 6 days, we hunted hard. The bulls were there — big bulls, and lots of them. The other hunter connected the first morning with an excellent 6×7, but Murphy had tagged along with me this time also, and every day my chance evaporated with some unexpected event. There was the grizzly that spooked the bull, the day the fog dropped in, the hunter that appeared on the ridge top above me from his camp 20 miles away and took a big 6×6, and other mishaps. And on the final day there was the bull standing broadside at 250 yards, with my crosshairs on his shoulder. I couldn’t take the shot, because I couldn’t count points due to the tree branches behind his head — this was a 6 point minimum area, and he might be an oversized 5×5. I lowered the rifle, grabbed my binoculars, and saw the big 6 point rack disappear in the timber. Clem and I tracked that bull for the next 8 hours, and he outsmarted and outran us. The odds are slim that you can get a bull in the timber that already knows you are there. I had kept a running tally during the week. In 6 days, we had seen 26 different bulls that were 6 point or better, and I went home without firing a shot! Perhaps it just wasn’t meant to be. I rationalized that it had been a great hunt (which it had), but couldn’t shake that knot of disappointment in my stomach. I wasn’t done yet – I secretly vowed to go back in the future. This country “owed” me a bull.
During the next 2 hunting seasons, I huntedIdahowith friends and family, and helped them pack out their elk — a good 5×5, a very good 6×6, and a bruiser 7×7 my brother got that went in the mid-340’s B&C. I got a spike. And, I was beginning to develop a defeatist attitude, whether I wanted one or not. When the phone rang in March of 2000, it was Ken Fraser in Alberta. There were two tags available in the Panther River. I asked him to hold them for a couple of days, while I made a phone call. I dialed Scottie in South Dakota. Scottie and I had become good friends since we met in 1992, and we had something in common. He had been chasing his big bull for 15 years, and Murphy seemed to alternate between my hunting camp and his. After having patiently listened to my tales of thePantherRiverover the previous couple of years, he was ready to join me. Thankfully, we both have understanding wives, and I returned the phone call to Ken. We took the tags. I started piling hunting gear in the living room floor in September, although the hunt wasn’t until November. It would be different this time. After all, Murphy might decide to join us on the hunt, but he couldn’t watch both of us at the same time, could he?
On Saturday evening the day before the start of the hunt, we drove to the trail head just to keep busy while waiting for the next morning. There was the outfitter’s wagon – and 10 inches of snow on the ground. Although it was unseasonably warm at about ten degrees Fahrenheit, things were looking up. The hunting party before us must have filled their tags and gone home early. This was more like it! We hardly slept that night, and were at the trail-head to meet Ken the next morning. Yes, the hunters had left early — there were no elk in the area, and they had left early, discouraged! Alberta was in the middle of a warm dry weather pattern, which had persisted for 3 years by that time. The elk were still in the high country of Banff Park. Well, we can hope for a weather change or a stray bull out looking for a late blooming cow. And then, our two weeks were gone, and so was the season. We had not seen an elk – not even a cow. We had hunted hard, had seen some spectacular country, cut a two- or three-day-old bull track that petered out in the timber, and once again were reminded of why they call it “hunting” – not “finding”. On the way out to the trail head, we stopped for coffee at another outfitters camp. We had met three years earlier, and he asked me about the hunt. He was genuinely disappointed with my report. When he asked if I was going to come back for another try, I almost automatically responded “I ain’t done yet”! I don’t know if it convinced him, but it didn’t really convince me. But Scottie had proven to be a great hunting partner and sportsman – he left the Panther having had a memorable hunt, and with no regrets. I had at least gained a good hunting partner, which is not an easy find.
By now, it was getting almost humorous. The next two years I continued to hunt Idaho, which provided me with more opportunities to help my hunting partners pack out their elk. I was genuinely pleased by their success, but……….. I had unwittingly fallen into a mental pattern. I hunted fully expecting to get nothing, and it had become a self-fulfilling prophesy. Meanwhile, Scottie had visit Colorado twice more, and was still without his bull.
2003 began uneventfully, and I was making plans in Idaho. I was really starting to hammer myself for being a poor sport, and had lost some of the enjoyment of just being outdoors in my fixation with getting “my bull”. And once again the phone rang in March, and this time it was Scottie. He had called Ken in Alberta. The Alberta Fish & Wildlife service had cut back on the number of tags in the Panther river area, and now there were only two non-resident alien tags issued. Ken had rights to both tags and would have no trouble selling them, but they were available, and he was offering them to us first. Knowing Ken, I understood he truly wanted us to connect. He is more than an outfitter doing business — he truly has a passion for elk and in having his hunters succeed. He goes by the book, but works as hard as anyone I’ve ever seen for his hunters. I subscribe heartily to both of those characteristics. Scottie wanted to give it another try. And so did I, but I knew it was “now or never” for me in Alberta. Recently retired, I had watched my 401(k) shrink to a 201(k) over the past two years, and funds for hunting were limited. All these years, both Scottie and I knew there were hunts in the US where a big bull was essentially a “sure thing”, but that somehow never appealed to either of us. I’m not judging those who take those hunts – It just isn’t my “cup of tea”. Scottie and I are both blessed with good health and physical ability born of years of hard physical work, and when we finally connected on our bulls, we wanted to know that it was earned the hard way, in a setting where the elk have the advantage. So, we would once again visit Alberta, and try to outrun “Murphy”. This time, we arranged to go in during the rut, in mid-September. If the bulls were there, we should have a good chance. If they weren’t there, we would go home after a week, and try again the last week of the season at the end of November.
Plans were pretty well in place when Scottie was on the phone again in mid-August. He had gotten run over by a cow on his farm, and had ruptured a disc in his back. He was scheduled for surgery in mid September — no hunt for him, and tags already purchased and the hunt paid for. Murphy was alive and well. After a short one-sided discussion, he made it very clear that he wasn’t going to ruin my hunt – I was going anyway. He would not have it any other way. And so it was, with my neighbor Rusty keeping me company again as a “tag along”, as he had done in 1997.
Having breakfast in Sundre with Ken and my guide Len prior to leaving for the trail head, the news was encouraging. A fire had burned through the area two years earlier, and the grass was up to a horse’s withers. It had attracted elk, and many of them had set up residency in the area. We were no longer so heavily dependent on weather and the migration out of Banff Park. Bow hunters the previous week had seen some great bulls in the Panther River valley during their hunt with Ken – a couple of big 6×6’s and a ”hog” 8 x 9 along the river below camp one evening. They came close to filling their tags, and had bugled a bull in close one evening when the wolves moved in and started howling. The elk shut up, and never bugled again the whole season! But, we knew they were there. So in to camp I went again, with high hopes. During the 3 ½ hour ride, I did a little “self talk”. Repeating over and over again “This time it will be different”, I was determined not to let pessimism interfere with the hunt. And I was finally prepared to go home without a bull – or was I?
Opening morning we were in the saddle well before first light. We would be hunting hard, and wouldn’t see camp in the daylight for the duration of the hunt. I would learn to trust my horse to find his way home in the pitch dark. After a long ride that circumnavigated the hunting area, and time spent glassing the hillsides, it was late afternoon of the first day. We tied the horses about 50 yards short of the end of timber, at the end of the ridge on top of “J-I” mountain. The “J-I” is one of the major landmarks in the area, easily distinguishable by the two streaks of timber stretching down through the high grass on the south-facing slopes, forming the letters “J – I”. Sneaking out to the rock cropping that marked the end of the ridgeline; we laid down and eased our heads and shoulders over the edge to search the hillsides beyond and below us. There was 45 minutes of shooting light left. It had snowed about 4 inches the previous night, and the grassy hillsides were slick with melting snow. Visibility was excellent. It didn’t take long to locate the 9 cows and one bull on the slope about 600 yards away. With my eyes glued on the bull through my binoculars, I heard my guide Len ask “What do you think of that bull – would you take him”? I was looking at a heavy horned mature 6×6 with long points, wide U – shaped spread, and long main beams. The ivory tips seemed luminescent in the last rays of the setting autumn sun. My instant response was “In a heartbeat”! He replied that the bull would go “at least 350 – probably better”. I’ve never been one to view hunting as competition, so I’m not big on keeping score, but the numbers provide a reference point for talking, and this was a great bull. This is what I came here hoping to find.
We watched the elk for about 15 minutes to see which direction they were grazing. If they moved toward us, they could be in range before the end of legal shooting hours. They never moved. With 30 minutes of light left, it was time to make a run at the bull. We sneaked back off the rock shelf, went down the backside of the ridge in the timber, and came out in a swale that would hide us from the elk. When I made it to the top of the next ridge line, I would be about 250 yards from the bull and straight across from him, and would have a good prone position shot. Walking on the slick snow on that slope was a challenge, and slow going. As I gingerly crossed the steep-sided swale in the gathering dusk, I spurred myself on with the phrase “this time it will be different” playing over and over in my mind. I did my best to ignore the thump of my heart, and wondered how I would be able to hold a steady sight picture when the time came to shoot. I made it to the ridge with 15 minutes of shooting light left, and slid up into shooting position. The elk were gone! A sprint of 200 yards more to the back edge of the final ridge that they had been grazing on revealed nothing but the stand of timber and Poplar that wrapped around the backside. I was too late. Returning to the saddle horses, we took a trail off the backside of the mountain, and emerged at the edge of a large meadow that was known as the airstrip. We would try to find the tracks of the bull, to get a clue on where he was headed. It was well past shooting light, and we were relying on our horses to follow the trail through the blackening timber. When we bottomed out and entered the edge of the meadow, we crossed a game trail that followed the edge of timber. Our flashlights revealed fresh elk tracks, lined out toward the wide saddle overlooking the valley at the end of the meadow. That saddle marked the edge of the hunting unit. My bull was leaving with his cows, and I would not see him again, except in my restless dreams during the nights that followed.
Tuesday, then Wednesday, and so on into the week, and we had seen elk every day – but the best bull was a 5×5. This was still a 6 point minimum area. I was hanging on tenuously to the belief that “this time it will be different”. We knew there were at least three more good bulls in the area that we hadn’t seen, having cut their tracks on Tuesday and Wednesday. A light snow fall Tuesday night and again Wednesday night had revealed a bull track that definitely put him in the “keeper” class. We crossed it Wednesday evening, headed away from the ridge where I’d seen the 6×6 the first evening. Checking the ridge again late Thursday afternoon, the track was there again, but this time it was headed in the opposite direction – toward the hillside below the rock cropping. We sneaked out for a look. Four cows and a bull were bedded on a saddle 600 yards away. The spotting scope revealed it as the 5×5 we had seen the previous two days. Try as we might, we just couldn’t put another point on him. A close study of the head movements of the cows did not reveal any hint that there might be another bull hidden nearby and it was unlikely that a 5×5 would be allowed to bed with the cows during the rut if a bigger bull was nearby. We returned to camp in the dark. Tomorrow was Friday, and the last day of the hunt. If I didn’t connect, I would go home and wait for November for a final try.
Two hours before sun up we were on our way to the upper end of the hunt area, to an area called the “dog ribs”. Rusty had been fighting some health issues, and was wearing down. After a long day in the saddle and a couple of steep hillsides where we had to lead the horses down, we were both tiring. Len was still going strong, but I consoled myself with the knowledge that I had at least 25 years on him. We rode to the lower Dog Rib canyon, tied the horses, and took a hike. Rusty stayed at the horses – he was done for the day, and I was close to it. After about ½ mile, the wind had shifted to our backs and picked up to about 15 miles per hour, and it was obvious we were scattering our scent in front of us for miles down the canyon. It was time to head for camp. Back at the horses at about5 pm, we mounted up for the trip down the mountain. With Len in front, we made the ridge top above camp at about5:30, and he reined in his horse at the point where the trail to the rock cropping on J-I mountain teed off to our left. He swung his horse broadside, looked me in the eyes, and asked “Well, is it camp, or do you want to check the J-I again”? I sneaked a look at Rusty, and it was obvious he was bone tired. I couldn’t believe what came out of my mouth next – “If I leave this country without a bull, it will be because the country beat me – not because I beat myself. Let’s take another look”. Rusty grinned knowingly and turned his horse down the trail to camp, which was a tempting short ride away. I cursed my stubbornness; silently blaming some genetic defect inherited from dad, and muttered “This time, it’s going to be different”. The rock cropping was a good 2 hours away, and we made it there with 30 minutes of shooting light to go. With our horses tied securely in the timber, we gingerly covered the last 50 yards to the end of the ridge, carefully avoiding the patches of crunchy snow that lingered in the trees. I was following Len closely, stepping in his footprints. Sneaking out onto the rocks, Len suddenly flattened and slipped back toward me. He whispered “We’ve got elk below the rocks, about 150 yards down”. We both slid slowly down onto our bellies, and snaked our way forward onto the flat slab at the edge of the rock cropping. Peeking over the edge, we counted nine cows – and no bull. My eyes scanned the hillside below the cows and swept the adjoining ridges, coming to a dead stop on a rack of horns behind a thin row of burned trees, about 250 yards away and slightly downhill. I whispered to Len “The bull’s down there to the left — is that the same five-point we saw yesterday”? I was laying on my binoculars, and had no chance to get them out. Len rolled onto his side to get a look, and his reply was “No, that’s a legal bull”. With 15 minutes of hunting left, my response was instantaneous – “I’m going to take him”!
The evening breeze was drifting over our shoulders down slope toward the cows, and they were getting nervous. The bull suddenly threw his head up, and disappeared down the draw below the cows on a dead run. I considered leaping up and trying to outrun him to the timber, but knew that would be futile. Then I caught a flash of movement below the cows — horn tips! He had turned our way, and was making a run at the cows. The next 10 seconds played out in slow motion, like it was choreographed for a movie. The horn tips turned into a rack, and then into head and shoulders, and finally but suddenly he was there – behind a cow, and stopped at 125 yards. I slid forward on the rock slab until I was hanging over nearly to my waist, and managed to get my rifle tilted down far enough to get a sight picture. He was clear of the cow and stood quartering toward me slightly. I vaguely recalled the advice that Ken had given the first night in camp. – “Don’t shoot a bull below the rocks on J-I mountain. There won’t be any horns left when he gets to the bottom”. And there the bull was – below the rocks at the point of J-I mountain. The crosshairs on my .340 Weatherby settled on the point of his shoulder, and with the squeeze of the trigger my rifle seemed to respond as an extension of myself. The bull was down, and I had instinctively and automatically worked the bolt and chambered another cartridge, in case the first 225 grain Nosler partition bullet needed help. It didn’t – he hit the ground instantly and started tumbling and sliding, rapidly disappearing behind the convex slope below. It was a long, steep, slick hillside to the bottom. I wondered if there would be any horns left when he stopped.
I sat up on the rocks, and Len calmly replied “Well, that one isn’t going to get back up!” He extended his hand and congratulated me on my shot. And then it hit me. “Len that bull looked like he might have a 7th point on one side”. Len’s answer was “I think you’re right – it looked like that to me too. Let’s go take a look. I think he’s gonna score pretty well”. I sucked in a deep breath, held it a moment to try to relax, and finally exhaled. As I looked out over the magnificent Panther River valley below me, memories of forty years of elk hunting came crashing together in my mind, and suddenly I was no longer in control of my emotions. Struggling to regain some composure, I told Len “It doesn’t matter how he scores — It just doesn’t matter. You may have hunts where you take bigger bulls, but you will never hunt with a man who appreciates his bull more than I do”. Eye contact confirmed that he understood, and with that, we returned to the saddle horses. It was a 20 minute ride to get to the bull, in the growing darkness of evening and in steep country. I held my breath as we approached the bull, hoping his rack had survived. What I saw set me back more than a little. Lying in the bottom of the V-bottom draw was my bull. MY bull — that phrase still has a special and somehow unfamiliar ring to it! Arcing above the tall grass was his left main beam, with not seven, but eight typical points showing – all perfectly aligned on the beam! Dismounting, I grabbed the beam to roll the other out of the deep grass. And there it was, and it showed nine points – all on the main beam, with one of them a non-typical between the dagger and the 5th. There wasn’t a chip in either horn, except for the ones on the tips of his eyeguards. And he had earned those in earlier fights. This was the big 8×9 the bow hunters had seen along the river. I took a quick reading with the rangefinder, back up the mountain to where he had originally fallen. It was just over 600 yards, and his path was well marked by flattened and torn clumps of grass and dirt where his horns had dug in. How he made it to the bottom with the rack intact will remain a mystery — Perhaps Murphy had vacated the country at the sound of my shot?
We field dressed and quartered the bull, and removed the cape and horns. I shed my jacket and shirt, and stripped off my tee shirt. It would remain draped over the hind quarters overnight, to try to discourage the wolves and grizzly bears from intruding. I smiled when Len commented that “Your shirt will keep the wolves off the meat, but a grizzly will just eat the shirt”! We mounted up and headed back for camp in the dark, with the time approaching 9:30 pm when we started, and with two hours of riding ahead of us. Somehow the stars were brighter that evening, the air crystal clear and pure, and the mountains more majestic than ever. My mind wandered to my three previous hunts in this area, and I began tallying up the time I had spent here. As we approached the lights of camp and a welcome late supper, I rode up alongside Len, and announced “Len, I’m naming this bull — Since I first came here in 1997, this is the 40th day and 40th night I’ve spent hunting in the Panther River valley. I’m naming him NOAH”. Just for reference, NOAH green-scored 366+ non-typical, and 362+ typical, B&C.
My odyssey was complete, but I couldn’t help feeling sad for Scottie. He was just out of surgery, and I had my bull. I wish he had been here, and could have taken this one, or the “first night” bull. We will never know how that would have played out. I wasted no time when I got back home, and called him to see how he was. It was 3 days after his surgery for the ruptured disc, and he was still on pain killers. He was truly happy for me, but I knew he was hurting more than just physically. This was supposed to have been his dream hunt too, and he had been waiting since that hunt in 2000 to go back. His quest for a big bull was now at 25 years, and I understood what he was feeling inside.
Some stories do end on a happy note, however. The phone rang in early November, and it was Scottie. “My back is feeling better, and the doctor is getting tired of me whining, so let’s go back and get me a bull”! It had only been two months since his surgery, but if he was game, I sure wasn’t going to say no. After a call to Ken in Alberta, we met at the trail head at the start of the last week of the season. The weather was cold, and there was snow. This time, it would be different – again!
After an adventurous trip to camp, across the Panther River 12 times with treacherous ice shelves on both banks of the river, we settled into our bunks to try to get some sleep. Morning came early, and we were in the saddle in pitch dark, headed for the Dog Rib canyon. Scottie had taken his morning dose of pain pills on top of a big breakfast, and was tolerating the horseback ride with only his eyes revealing his discomfort. We made the ridge top above camp, and then into the bottom of the canyon at the start of legal shooting light. Scottie’s guide Paul was in the lead, then Scottie, then me. I carried my rifle and both a mule deer and a wolf tag. But I wasn’t about to shoot at anything until Scottie had his bull. I was essentially a “tag along”, and happily so.
Rounding a bend in the trail, a high grassy slope started to reveal itself on the right as the canyon widened to allow a narrow meadow to appear between the opposing ridges. We were paralleling a small stream that crossed the foot of the meadow in front of us. For some unknown reason this area was dubbed “the swamp”. Paul suddenly reined his horse up short, dropped off to the ground, and signaled us to dismount. As he slid back along side Scottie and me, we heard him half-whisper “We’ve got bulls, and they’re crankers”! I hadn’t heard that expression before, but the meaning was clear. Settling in behind some trees, we glassed the far hillside about half way up, and saw two big bulls bedded in the snow below the timber. The sun had not yet touched the top of the ridge above them, and they were just loafing. As I scanned the hillside, I caught a glimpse of antler below and to the right of the two bulls, and tucked back on a small shelf below a patch of mountain poplars. Close study with the spotting scope revealed the head and shoulders of a third bull, and he was a “cranker” also. I stayed with the horses while Paul and Scottie disappeared in the timber to get closer. With a convex slope below the bulls, they would not be able to see to shoot if they approached on the same side of the valley as the elk, so they would have to approach from the opposite hillside, and shoot cross-canyon. It would be a long shot.
After 30 minutes had passed, I was certain they were in position, and the elk were starting to move. It was well past the start of legal shooting light, and the sun was starting to slide steadily down the grassy hillside toward the bulls. The bull highest on the hill was a heavy 6×7 with one broken point, and he stood and wandered into the timber when the sun hit him. The second bull, an excellent 6×6, followed shortly. Then number three – which had proven to be the best one – stood up, and was meandering slowly along the ledge toward the timber about 50 feet ahead. I wondered why Scottie didn’t shoot. I didn’t have long to wonder – the canyon reverberated with the unmistakable sound of his .340 Weatherby, but he missed! A second shot echoed through the Dog Ribs, and it found its mark. The third shot that followed about 5 seconds later would eventually prove to have been unnecessary, but it put the bull down to stay. I rode one horse and led the others to the base of the slope below the bull, and met Scottie and Paul crossing the valley. As we climbed the mountainside, Scottie told me the shots had been at 458 yards, by rangefinder. Good shooting! I got up the slope to the bull well ahead of Scottie, who was favoring his back quite a bit by this time. The back pain couldn’t mask his smile, though. Paul had already reached the bull, and was lying casually on his back in the snow, admiring the sunny morning. (I had 25 years on him, too)! I walked up beside the bull, and called down to Scottie “Hey, there isn’t any ground shrinkage on this one”! It was a heavy horned perfect 6×6, and green scored 356+ B&C. It was9:30 AM on Monday morning, and we were a very happy group! A search that started for me 40 years ago, and 25 years before for Scottie, had come full circle for both of us. Two close friends, two great bulls, and the magnificent scenery of Alberta— The cliché “It doesn’t get any better than this” somehow seemed pitifully inadequate.
Scottie has finished building his trophy room, and the shoulder mount of his bull is the centerpiece on the end wall. And Noah holds the spot of honor on the end wall in the family room of my home, and friends have come to visit. As the conversation turns to hunting, I face the inevitable question: “Where did you get that bull”?! In typical hunter fashion, I smile and say “Right behind the front shoulder”. And then I hold them captive for (at least) the next 30 minutes, while I re-tell my story, and once again re-live the memories of the Panther River.
Hunting the Rancho Rajneesh aka “The Big Muddy” Ranch #1
Before we start the story of a lifetime, there is more to the story than just the harvesting of a monster Oregon Mulie (Mule Deer) buck, but more about time period of this great hunt.
“It is 1985, a time in Oregon‘s History that will never be duplicated!”
The following story might be hard for some to fathom, but is real and unless you’ve had the opportunity to experience even a part of it, it may appear to be something from a fictional novel…
During this era of time we would be hunting on and off of the original “The Big Muddy Ranch” located in Oregon close to Madras, Donnybrook (Historical), Ashwood (Post Office), Clarno (Historical) and the Famous Town of Antelope or better know at the time as Rajnesshpuram. The Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh (later known as Osho) came to America from India to be a teacher of his faith and culture. He would take up residence on the “Big Muddy Ranch” outside of Clarno, Oregon (Historical)! The main house would be at 3 miles line of sight to Clarno’s Grange Hall which sat along the John Day River! There would be more than 2000 disciples on the ranch!
The purchase of the ranch was made through lawyers, un-be known (as the local story goes) to the Rubin Evans as to who was actually buying the 64,000 acres of land that also encompassed a great deal of BLM and some State Lands. Rubin made a great deal of money (4.3M gross) on the sale of rimrock, sage and juniper trees that could not support any sizeable amount of cattle. The City of Antelope (97001 Zip) some 12 miles away from the main ranch was later taken over the Bhagwan and his followers, thus it was incorporated and called Rajneeshpuram.
Rajneeshpram (Antelope) and the Rancho Rajneesh now had its own Peace Force that carried Uzi’s and M-16’s. Traveling into the ranch on the county road (Cold Camp Rd) and once past the boundary of the Smith Ranch (cattle guard) were Security Huts with active machine gun toting Peace Force clear down to the numerous buildings and hotel! I can remember when Burns Bros., Travel Stops sold FM handheld radios to the Ranch. They were used to monitor people driving through the ranch on the county road. How much time it would take to travel in and out of the ranch. There were back doors into the BLM via Gosner and Muddy Creek Roads to the southeast, but you still would get stopped in remote areas. Questioned of course what your intent was, which we would say was traveling to Mitchell, Oregon. Once out of sight, you would get yourself deep into the BLM, such as Horse Heaven. It is hard for most to understand what this place became and how things were done. I would have to think it was one of the largest Commune’s of its type that has ever been established in the United States. There was even a Crematorium and Machine Gun Range on the ranch. If one ventured deep enough into the interior of the ranch, you found many un-expected buildings and sights! A great deal of land use laws were broken by the leaders of Rajneeshpuram and Rancho Rajneesh!
The people of Rancho Rajneesh even damned up Current Creek (dam is still there) and made a dandy lake with a floating lodge on the lake for the followers to sunbath. As said before they broke many land use laws and even made a paved road that was built in the center of the ranch and put in an airport. The paved road was built so the Bhagwan could exit without notice to Madras, Oregon in one of his many Rolls Royce’s. The road came out on Gosner Rd. on the south side of the ranch.
The Bhagwan did some improvements to the land with the planting of wheat, alfalfa and putting in small stick dams in the creeks plus the electric fence that surrounded more than 100 square miles of BLM and Private Land. It create a atmosphere for deer, elk and antelope to multiple, live longer and move into neighboring ranches in the area up to 10 – 15 miles away line of sight.
It was not an easy tasking for anyone to hunt the public land, as the Bhagwan thought the BLM also belong to HIM, his (followers-disciples) would do everything to keep hunters out of the public land that intertwined the ranch. I probably forgot tell you that there were hundreds of No Trespassing Signs put on the parameter of the ranch, which included the posting of all the BLM, even if it was not on Rancho Rajneesh. We use to joke that if we were ever caught, that are destiny would be left at the Crematorium!
The challenge was on for myself and a few other fellows, such as “Stick”, “Baily”, “DB”, “MJ”, “Bennie” and “Bone” just to mention a few that I knew that would hunted for the monster Mule Deer bucks that harbored on the ranch! I did leave out the fact that in 1984 we discover Elk on the ranch while glassing for bucks in a basin below the tower via the county rd. I will leave that up to your imagination whether we hunt for elk, but then that is another story…
If one thought they would get away with trespassing on the private part of the ranch, they had something to look forward too, like 50 – 100 young people some with weapons in lines working down the ridges or draws where you might have been spotted from the “Tower” that had windows & maps with a 360 degrees layout! The “Tower” was put on the highest spot of the ranch that would allow the viewing of draws such as Gallagher Canyon, Fir Tree, Lyon Ridge and Vanderhoof Canyon. It was not only the Rajneesh patrollers (disciples) that could number in numbers, but the local law enforcement… I will never understand the alliance that was between the cult and government’s police forces’.
Oh! It would have been great to have my BLM mapping program and a modern day Garmin GPS, which would leave no doubt to being legal! Then again BLM had great maps and I could read and visualize the land marks!
It was once told to “MJ” by an old Oregon State Police Game Officer of the time,“Go in on BLM and Come out on BLM”.
The cult would take the State of Oregon and other people to the cleaners over the years with Debt, above the law and trying to rid Wasco County of a good people.
In 1987 the Rajneeshpuram came to an end and not without controversy, such as Ma Anand Sheela setting up a Bio-Terrorism attempt in The Dallas with Salmonella Poisoning. She would later be deported back to the United States from Germany to stand trial. The Bhagwan would be deported (allowed to leave) back to India! He died in 1991 of Aids, so you might be able figure out what else went on in the ranch besides the spiritual teachings!
I would have to say it was like those that drank the Kool-Aid at thePeoples Temple Agricultural Project of Jonestown. People gave their wealth away to follow the Bhagwan’s radical teachings! I understand their standings in the cult were based on the money!
Now let’s get one with the story!
The Oregon Archery Season was coming to a close in three days. I’s passed up many smaller bucks during the early season, trying to find a P & Y Mule Deer.
Now it was performance time!
I made a quick call to Dave Brill because I knew I could count on him to go on a mission with me at the drop of a hat. I told him we could make a Saturday afternoon hunt over on the breaks of the John Day Rive rin Central Oregon.
The final weekend of the season also happened to be my drill weekend with the U.S. Naval Reserve. Luckily, I only had to spend half of Saturday and Captain’s Call was out at 1130. I made it to Dave’s place just past noon in east Clackamas County. There was an hour drive to the BLM, leaving us about 6 hours maximum for hunting.
On the way to the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) property, we spotted a small herd of mule deer, with five bucks located on Earl’s Smith’s property. All looked pretty nice, and I decided to take a few photos. They were in the 23 to 25 inch class with one respectable four point at about 28 inches. I did not have permission to hunt Earl’s Ranch, which would come later!
At 3:00 p.m., we reached the B.L.M. land on the west side of theJohn DayRiver. There a mutual friend, MJ, met us. He wanted to show us where he had seen some big bucks. In the middle of the basin were four “swamper” Mulie bucks, two around 28” and two in the 30” neighborhood. I know, at this point you probably think I’m really pulling your leg. I did take a few pictures of these bucks also, as they were not hunt-able at this location also.
Then, it was time to put down the camera and get down to the business at hand. We split up and MJ headed over to his a ranch he would be hunting located along the John Day River to locate a Mulie he felt would easily go 36”. By the way M.J. took this buck during the rifle season and he was 36”. M.J. was a rifle hunter that we put up with as he was great with the game location logistics!
With only about three hours of hunting time left in the day, finding a big Mulie was going to be even tougher. Just before dark, I located a buck that would be about 28” to 29”, but he wouldn’t cooperate as I just couldn’t get on him in the open terrain pushing to fast before fading light.
We departed the area as Mother Nature began to drown the junipers and sagebrush. The most difficult part of the trip was yet to come. As I told you earlier, this was supposed to be a Saturday afternoon hunt-only. Now, Dave and I would have to make phone calls to our respective wives. Both ended being most understanding, which meant they knew we would be calling. So we would have one more chance to get our big bucks before the rifle hunters came out of the woodwork in about 1 week. You wonder how they were most understanding, well we did stretch the truth and told them we had a buck down and tried locate it in the dark, but would have resume in the morning!
The next morning we awoke to 39 degrees, patchy fog and overcast skies in Madras, Oregon. We were working against the clock now, so crispy bacon and eggs at the Madras Truck Stop were out so a Coke Cola and Hershey Chocolate Bar were in order. Ok! Had a large jar of Jerky!
There is one smell in Oregon that really turns me on and that is the smell of wet sage at daybreak. You have to know the feeling you get from the smell, as this is an optimum time in space to kill a buck!
It was already light when we arrived at the main access road. Strangely, we saw nothing along the road going in. When turning down into the main access road the Muddy Rd., there were fresh tire tracks in the road as it was very muddy, that was the answer to not seeing any game! The roads in the area turn to slick clay like surfaces and deep ruts. In about two miles we caught up to a Black Bronco II in front of us and the driver climbed out with bow in hand. We pulled up for a brief conversation, and soon he couldn’t hold himself back. He said he’d already had taken shots at 2 big bucks and that he saw a 30” buck feeding. In the back of the rig was a respectable three-point his partner had taken with a 50-yard heart shot. We also told him that he was now on ranch property and he better not be here hunting! Oh! Don’t get out of the truck with your bow if stopped by the patrollers! He might get a chance to visit the Crematorium…
This 30” talk was something that should be investigated, I figured since it was located on BLM by the way he described the spot. David and I headed back, hustled out of my truck and I climbed up the draw where the hunter said he’d seen the buck! The draw would lead into a small basin with volunteer wheat. It was in the BLM near Currant Creek, one the great spots to hunt. There, at 45 yards, was a massive buck, feeding and completely unaware of my presence. He was a long tined four-point, with extremely long eyeguards. I felt he would be real close to 200 Pope and Young and real Oregon Record contender. (You can tell I already had him on the wall!) I did not have my bow with me, just my camera (I didn’t even take a picture).
I watched him for a few more minutes from behind a juniper grove, and then slowly backed away. I hurried back to the rig, told Dave what happened, and quickly returned to the spot with my bow. He was gone! The shot was there if I had taken my bow instead of the camera.
I returned to my truck, more than a bit upset with myself, but Dave quickly lifted my spirits.
“Frank,” he said, “I’ve located some more dandy bucks!”
As we stood there making our game plan up, there was a group with some twenty bucks in the distance, but immediately are plans to hunt ended quickly. It was incredibly exciting to watch them through the binoculars as they departed out of the tight draw in single file. The smallest buck of the group was no less than 24 inches wide. Seeing that group of bucks only made me a firm believer in “buck pastures”. I have to tell that over the years hunting here, it was always like that. Very few does were ever seen in the area during the archery season. It should be noted that the big buck in the back was at about 38” on the roll jabbing the other bucks to move along. He was a buck that one would never forget it if seen again.
Within a few moments we on a small out cropping of rocks, Dave and I located a good buck, bedded and chewing his cud. I put the spotting scope on him-not real wide, but great long tines with super eyeguards. I felt that he would score very well, a 180-plus. The hunt was on! I dropped into the canyon, using junipers for cover. The terrain wasn’t too rough and I was able to circle around the rim quickly without making noise. In these days I was running no less than 50 miles a week! The wind was coming straight at me, and a light mist of fog hung in the area. What more could I ask for? I slipped into the junipers between the buck and myself.
At 40 yards approximately I decided it was time and drew my bow back without thought, set the 40 yard pin on the lungs just in case I miss-judged the distance of the bedded buck. The 125 grain 3 blade broadhead was delivered to him right into the lungs behind the shoulder. He was up in a hurry, but soon collapsed down the draw.
Thanks to Dave’s help, we were able to drag him to the truck fairly easily. I couldn’t wait to put the tape to him. With a quick measuring, he went 27” wide, not counting the “cheater points” on each side of the main beam of the same length. I also did a quick P & Y score for a solid 198 green score. My net score on this tremendous buck was 190 P&Y. (After some 15 years I had him officially measured at Sportsmen’s Show and he would be set at 188 2/8, to bad I waited to long to put him in the Oregon Record Book). Just think he wasn’t even one of the real monster Mulies and my taxidermist felt the buck was only about 5 years old!
While leaving the area, Dave and I saw at least six more good bucks. I went back during the general rifle season to camera guide and saw two taken that went 32” and 38” wide.
As the readers might find it hard to believe the amount of deer, I will close with this one comment.
In the mid 80’s and until about 2001, it was not uncommon to see as many as 100 plus bucks in a morning or evening drive!
The 38” buck that was mention earlier on my bow hunt was the same that one that Greg A. would take in the rifle season in 1985. The buck was 38” on the roll and would have a net score of 201 B & C. The buck was killed within a 2 miles of where he was spotted him during the archery season. He was taken on a piece of private land that bordered Rancho Rajneesh to the S.W.
You are probably wondering why I have not put down having any encounters with the disciples of Rancho Rajneesh, when you know the enemies’ habits you learn when to come and go! We did have some encounters, but then it also help to have a local rancher with you once in a while.
Whether it was to get dropped off at the BLM corner or BLM Section by someone, bike ride or run the 12 miles back to Antelope to get the pickup vehicle, it was always a rush and an outstanding Clandestine Operation in Hunting.
Camo was worn to conceal from the enemy, not the game!
John’s hunt started sometime in January of 2012, when he asked me about hunting for Mule Deer in Central Oregon. John works with me at the dealership and is from Grants Pass, Oregon. He comes from a long line of hunters and this year along the family has had to harvest 3 Black Bears and 3 Cougars that were threatening their farm. I should say I have seen in the later months of 2012 the Blacktails that his family have taken. I think I would like to retire down there to hunt Blacktails, Cougars and Bears.
John and his group decided they would put in for the Grizzly Unit Rifle Deer Tag for 2012 after John told his group that I would give him an area or two to hunt in the Grizzly Unit. They were successful as they had a few preference points between them. The hunt was now set and I would come up the with waypoints and mapping.
John bought a Garmin Oregon 300 from me with the mapping program that would show the BLM that they would have access too! I am a firm believer in the use of GPS and the correct mapping. In that area of the country where the ranchers and organizations that have property next to the BLM, have said that hunters with trespass given the opportunity from not knowing the boundaries. I wanted John if ever stopped to be able to prove with time stamped tracks and waypoints where he and his group have been! You will find fact with this later in the story!
I was giving John two different areas to hunt in the Grizzly Unit both being in the northern sector about 8 miles line of sight from each other. John had decide to camp down on the John Day River during the hunt.
Opening day he found himself in the walk-in only area that was bordered on three sides by private. I felt if he was in the couple of miles from the bottom of the creek to the interior they might be able to find a big mulie. It has always been a great sp0t in the past for opening day of rifle or even to archery hunt. In the old days before Young Life and the BLM made an agreement to keep ATV’s out of this area, it was easy to get the 3 miles in and then work the canyons and draws on foot after spotting deer, elk or antelope.
The morning proved to be a bust for the group and they decided to hunt the area a bit further south which had more land to cover and they could drive into key access and observation points to find game. John told me when he got back after the hunt, that the hunt into the opening day area was a big tough on him, since he has had two (2) hip replacements. You would think that John would have let me know about this when I explained the terrain!
During there trip into the BLM of H.H., they ran into the resident Oregon State Police Game Officer M.P., who knows that country like he knows his truck and struck up a conversation. M.P. told him when he came out of the northern sector of H.H. Area he had not seen a hunter or any deer. Now John and his group are a bit down on all of this great news from the man himself.
The Grizzly Unit has taken a toll with poaching in recent years and the fact that the Cougars in the sage brush, juniper and rimrock thrive. I have found many a good bull and buck that have been ambushed in a timbered draw in this area. The Grizzly Unit harbours some great bucks, but you really have to work for them. A number of Boone and Crockett’s bucks have come from the Grizzly Unit!
The next thing the group does is go to Madras, Oregon and have dinner and setup the next days hunt. John had given me a call while in Madras and asked what to do next. I still believed in the northern sector hunt and that they should maybe work within a mile of the access road, as there was a creek that ran next to it.
The next day which was Sunday they hunted the creek bottom and the shallow draws (brush laden) that came down into the creek. They started to see some game and had a good feeling that something was going to happen. Remember that private borders this parcel of BLM. John and his brother work the ridge next to the road as they are going to go back to John’s B Van and have lunch. As they are about to get on the access road, John spots a herd of 20 plus deer with 4 bucks in the group. Now the deer have not spotted John yet and John, pulls out his Garmin Oregon to see if the deer are on BLM or Private (there are a number of cross fences in this area). Of course the GPS has to fire up and access satellites. This must take a about minute to do so, my comment to John “What were you thinking not having the GPS on?”. John sees that the spot is BLM and as he does the deer finally spot them and start to move out. John and his brother have to move a bit with deer as they would be coming back their direction a bit to get into the draw of safety. John makes a great 250+ yard shot on buck and his brother targets another buck that broke away from the group.
John’s group of 4 hunters would run 50% on the harvest of bucks in the Grizzly Unit, so each man gets 1/2 a deer to feed the families this year. I feel that John would hunt the Grizzly Unit again though he did not shoot what he was really looking for though. John did a scouting trip about 2 weeks before the opener and did see a couple of the big bucks that the Grizzly Unit is famous for!
I have written as the story was told to me: Frank B.