Tag Archives: Oregon Hunts Rifle

Grauf Family – 2009 Paulina Unit Oregon Antelope Hunt

About a month back Tracy Grauf contacted me about hunting Antelope in the oregon Paulina Hunt Unit!  He and his dad were both fortunate to draw tags.  Tracy also planned to have his 9 year old son accompany them on the hunt.  This is the best part of the hunt, just think that there are three (3) generations on this on big hunt. 

“After a 12 year wait we finally received the good news that we had drawn antelope tags.  Given our busy schedules there wasn’t time to scout so we were going to have to wing it.  I found this web page the weekend before we were to leave and figured what the heck nothing to loose.  In no-time I had received a response from Frank and a good starting spot.  We spent opening day checking out the county for water and sign without much luck so we decided to move a little to the south on Sunday.  Within an hour of daylight we were in the lopes…..by two we had found a couple of what we considered shooters, but managed to miss them both.  After trying to burn our truck to the ground with sage in the skid pan we decided to head for the main road.  We were just about out when we spotted a lone buck running across a big sage flat.  We quickly found a spot to set up and for some crazy reason he turned and ran straight to us, stopping at 125 yards.  One shot from my .284 and he was on the ground.  I have him green scoring 67 with 6” bases and being 13-1/2” tall.  With the way his horns curved back he must have liked to run fast, a lot.

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Tracy Grauf’s 2009 Paulina Unit – Oregon Antelope

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 Sr. Grauf’s 2009 Paulina Unit – Oregon Antelope

Tuesday of our first lope adventure, found us working the same ground we had found plenty of bucks roaming on Sunday, problem was they weren’t there today.  After six hours of nothing we decided to move to the agricultural ground on the south end of the unit.  Hopefully we could spot some lopes roaming the BLM ground around the alfalfa pivots.  The first pivot we drove by had 17 does and one good buck, one problem, the farmer was working the field right next to them and we didn’t think he would appreciate stopping to talk.  We turned down another road and spotted some does coming out of the sage into a pivot.  We could see the owner coming down the road from his barn so we waited for him to arrive.  He stopped to talk and in a short while he had given us permission to try to take the buck that he said was with them.  Long story short we made a mistake or two and succeeded only in running the heard out of this guy’s field, the last we saw them they were headed for the next county.  We stopped at the ranch house to let them know that we had blown our opportunity and checked to see if we could return in the morning.  He asked where they had gone and when we told him he said that he would bet they had stopped on the back side of his farthest pivot and that we should check there before moving on for the day.  We did, he was right, they were there.  It was getting late, we needed to decide to make a stock or leave them until morning.  The decision was made to leave them until morning so we headed out only to find an interesting road a couple of miles away.  It lead us to a small rim rock that headed all the way back to the area we had left the heard.  Plans changed, I got out and started my stalk back along the depression while my son went back to hold their attention and watch things unfold.  After about 45 minutes I found myself within 200 yards of the heard peaking over the sage brush.  They saw me!!  I quickly got in a sitting position, wrapped the sling around my arm and settled the cross airs on the buck’s vitals; he turned his head to go as I squeezed the trigger.  The 220 Swift barked, the bullet slapped him and they were off.  I put another round in and looked up only to see he wasn’t with the heard of does running off to the east.  Now the hard part, figuring out where he had gone down on this huge sage brush flat, it didn’t take long to find the trail left by the fleeing does and within minutes we found him laying in their trail.  This buck green scores 76 with 6” bases, 5” cutters and 14-1/2” of length.”

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Tracy Grauf

Gene Richman’s 2009 Oregon Silvies Antelope

It is always great when one of your hunters are successfull on their first Antelope Hunt.                                                      Gene was lucky enough to draw a Silvies #1 Lope Tag for 2009.

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Gene R. with his 2009 Oregon Silvies Unit Pronghorn 

Hi! Frank aka Bwana Bubba
 
“We enjoyed a successful hunt in the Silvies unit.  It is tough to get closer than 400 yards of the herds in the flat lands without spooking them so we put the sneak on them and dialed in around 200 yards.  Attached is my first lope ever.
 
Thanks for the waypoints.  We spotted pronghorns in the area before we got to the marked locations and started sneaking and spooking the lopes.  Found out we only you get one chance and then the lopes vanished for the day.” 
Gene

Oregon Hawaiian Black Corsican

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 Hawiian Black Corsican taken near Ashwood, OR – Little Trout Creek

I was lacking a Hawaiian Black Sheep in my quest for the Grand Slam of Exotic Sheep.

One needed a Mouflon, Corsican (Pure Breed), Texas Dall (Pure White-Long Hair) and the Hawaiian Black in order to have a Grand Slam.

I had already taken a Corsican early on once I found exotics running loose in Oregon.

The Mouflon came a bit later and I took a Texas Dall in Oregon near Ashwood, Oregon.

 

During my hunt for the Texas Dall, I had the opportunity to harvest a Hawaiian Black and larger a Corsican than I already had, but past them up in quest for the Texas Dall.   I do remember that hunt as there were so many rams, I was overwhelmed.   I had concentrated on getting the Texas Dall.

 

Ok!  Getting to the hunt for the Hawaiian Black, I again was going to hunt outside of Ashwood, Oregon.    The sheep had not been in the area for a while, as their range of roaming freely was probably a 20 mile circuit.

 

I knew that when the sheep were in the area, that they would most definitely be located in the draws above Little Trout Creek, I could get in on them easily from above.   Most of the cover would be Juniper, light sagebrush and rimrock.

 

I believe that I had Chuck Megeske with me on this hunt and we headed up good old White Knuckle Road, leading up on top of the plateau.   It is the same area in which Chief Paulina is buried and terrorized the NW in the 1800’s.

 

I was fortunate to be able to find a nice ram running with a couple of other rams.

I do believe that the Hawaiian Black was the most difficult to find while hunting the canyons around Ashwood, Willowdale, Donnybrook, Madras and Clarno.

 

I was able to make a dandy 450 yard shot on the ram with my 257 Weatherby, loaded with a 120gr. Sierra Grand Slam.  

On this hunt, I was the only person to be able to connect on a ram.

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A winter Hawaiian Black taken by LT.

2008 Grizzly Unit Deer Hunt – Story

I would like to say that this is a success story, but it could have been for a few guys.

I have always said one should listen and learn about hunting and gain knowledge.

I had a fellow sales person draw a Grizzly Unit Deer tag for 2008 and when I heard that he and his couple of buddies had done the same, I told him that I would help dial him and his buddies into an area that I have hunted a great number of times.  I also had all the BLM Coordinates, fence lines, past kill spots on large maps and loaded on Garmin GPS’s.

I told him I would share it all just to see how the hunt would go for them in the area, since the BLM has closed it off to quads.  I had given TJ the maps and also had him get some other paper maps.  

TJ left the company and I just heard from him on October 24th after I called TJ on his cell.

 This is how the hunt when for TJ & Buddies:

The guys decided that on opening day they would hunt the area around Gateway, just north of Madras between Hwy 26 and Hwy 97.  They had heard that there might be some good hunting down there.  Well that didn’t turn out very well, a lot of private land.  That area has been greatly overgrazed, which I have known for a long time of scouting and my Ranch Forman buddy Ben who has worked on one of those ranches in the area.

The second day hunting off of my directions and the maps, the guys were parked along Hwy 218 waiting until day light to venture into the unknown sage, rimrock, draws and Junipers.   As they sat in the truck waiting for light, another hunter stopped by and told them they were wasting their time hunting the spot they were glassing at first light.   “Three big bucks were killed in that drainage yesterday at first light”.  

The hunter also told them “I have killed a good buck every year in this area”  The hunter then parked at the spot along the road to drop down to the old quad trails leading up into the canyons.   They had waited to long to move out of the truck and head into the draw leading up to the ridge.   By the time they got oranized one of TJ’s partners saw the guy kill a dandy 4X4 buck.

As the day wore on as TJ told me, one of his partners up near a spring and had a good buck in his sights for more than 10 minutes.   He thought that the buck was to far and watch the buck just mill around.   I know the spot well, as I myself and other partners used it as landmark while using Quads in the days of past to get out late in the evenings.

Anyway the buck moved on and over the hill, he followed the bucks but could not get any closer.  As TJ tells me of the story, the walked off the distance.   The buck had stood there for some 10 minutes feeding at 150 yards.

This is a great opening day spot and end of the season spot.   Many deer get moved off the private ranches into the BLM.

frank

Hunter Henninger & Brian Henninger Pilot Rock – Oregon 2008

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        Hunter Henninger with his 2008 Pilot Rock Buck

I do have to share the story that I got from Brian Henninger after his 2008 Oregon Deer Hunt with his son Hunter in the Pilot Rock area of Oregon.  

Brian had set this hunt up for Hunter a couple of years back for Oregon Deer in 2008.   Hunter has taken big game before in Oregon and Texas before, proving his capabilities to shoot on the run.

I do love it when a father is able to teach their son or daughter to be able to shoot instinctive and make a great shot at a running animal. “Blink”

It was no different on this hunt for Hunter, he and his dad had spotted the deer from a distance and made a stalk on the buck, only to have him jump out of the draw on a dead run.   As you can see from the picture Hunter made the running shot and put the dandy buck down.   I can only wait to see Hunter take his first elk, which will most likely be in 2009.

Brian rounded up take a buck later in the same area.  From what I understand that these bucks were the best of the lot.

Deer numbers have been down in the area from the information I have gather from other hunters this year.

Great Shot and Hunt – Hunter Henninger.

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        Brian Henninger with his 2008 Pilot Rock Buck

2007 Silvies Unit Antelope Hunt – M. Dieringer

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Mark’s 2007 Silvies Pronghorn taken near Buck Creek

I have known Mark since the days of Burns Bros., Travel Stops in the eighties.   Mark is an avid bow hunter and rifle hunter.   These days Mark hunts elk with a bow and has been very successful in doing so.

In 2007 Mark asked me what unit he should put in for an Oregon Antelope Tag.   I gave him a couple of units to choose form and he applied for the #2 Silvies hunt.    Mark bought himself a Garmin GPS and I loaded up some waypoints for him and his wife to go by.   I do believe that Mark and JoAnn camped at Chickahominy Reservoir outside of Riley, Oregon.

On the trip Mark ran into Brian Henninger and they shared information about what they had seen so far during the course of the hunt. 

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“As for the Lope, I really apprecate the points I got from you, it gave us the right spots to be at.  I have sent a picture of the finished Lope from Artistic Taxidermy, as my lovely wife lost the camera in the Derert in Silvies and only had the cell or pictures.”

“Anyway we started off on the opener for a hike to a spot you had given us.  We hiked for about a half mile and there were 3 pronghorn bucks.   No I wasn’t going to end the season an hour into it!  So we continued to hunt, all together we saw about 40 Lopes on that hike, none of them were the ONE I wanted.”

“By Wednesday I had my crosshairs on 6 possible takers.  Then I found a nice one, not a monster but the biggest one I had seen so far.”

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 Thanks again…   Mark

2008 Oregon Gerber Res. Youth Hunt – Spencer’s Hunt

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Spencer’s 2008 Gerber Antelope Buck

I received an email from Robert Glover an old customer of mine for the days at Valley RV Center in McMinnville, OR.   Robert has been hunting in Oregon for more than 25 years and himself took a dandy Lope out of the Silvies #2 hunt a couple of years back.  I had at the time got Robert into the area around Chickahominy Reservoir PS waypoints.    Robert knew that I had hunted the Gerber Reservoir Unit a number of times and asked me if I could get him and his nephew into the area.

I have not gotten all of the details from the hunt, but it looks like Spencer had a great hunt.

According to another fellow that I sent into the area during bow season he had seen a number of bucks and missed a dandy at a waterhole during the season.  

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2008 Oregon S. Wagontire Antelope Hunt – Robison

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Mike Robison with is 2008 S. Wagontire Antelope buck at a new found waterhole! 

I have attached the pictures we each took our first Lope and had a great time.  There were more hunters than we expected and they had the lope kind of scattered.  We didn’t see any from the waypoints that you provided.  My son took his on private property and I took mine from a watering hole that we found.  A lot of the watering holes had dried up that moved the animals around as well. I plan on sending you some way points on a couple of spots that we found that had bigger animals.  We had an awesome time and we also took a few jack rabbits.  I will send more pictures later. 

                                        Thanks for the help!  Mike

robison-002.JPGMike’s son 2008 S. Wagontire Antelope Buck!