Might as well make this my introductory post This is posted on a different site so my apologies to those who have seen it already.
A little background: my wife decided to take up hunting in a big way again about 3 years ago. So every year since we have done at least one fly in trip, spring bear hunts, hike in mulie hunting and usually a late November whitetail hunt. I seem to have been relegated to packer/skinner/etc for the most part but that's fine by me. I get just as big a thrill out of her taking animals as I would pulling the trigger. Her "mountain rifle" of choice is a ml Knight Revolution in .50 cal, mine is a recurve but I usually pack either an '06 for extended trips or my .375 if we're grizzly hunting.
Any way, here's this August's fly in trip:
After last year's “no tag cut” sheep hunt, Helen and I once again pointed our noses north in search of her first Stone sheep ram.
600 miles of pavement, 240 of gravel (complete with one flat tire), 80 miles in a 185 on floats, 6 miles on foot to a base camp and we were at it again!
We picked up a horse trail about 3 miles up the drainage (came in from a side valley) that made the pack in a bit easier.
We set up a camp at about 6000’ and headed out in different directions each day...
… except for this day…
We searched high and wide…
A little background: my wife decided to take up hunting in a big way again about 3 years ago. So every year since we have done at least one fly in trip, spring bear hunts, hike in mulie hunting and usually a late November whitetail hunt. I seem to have been relegated to packer/skinner/etc for the most part but that's fine by me. I get just as big a thrill out of her taking animals as I would pulling the trigger. Her "mountain rifle" of choice is a ml Knight Revolution in .50 cal, mine is a recurve but I usually pack either an '06 for extended trips or my .375 if we're grizzly hunting.
Any way, here's this August's fly in trip:
After last year's “no tag cut” sheep hunt, Helen and I once again pointed our noses north in search of her first Stone sheep ram.
600 miles of pavement, 240 of gravel (complete with one flat tire), 80 miles in a 185 on floats, 6 miles on foot to a base camp and we were at it again!
We picked up a horse trail about 3 miles up the drainage (came in from a side valley) that made the pack in a bit easier.
We set up a camp at about 6000’ and headed out in different directions each day...
… except for this day…
We searched high and wide…