Three come to mind, all happened last weekend.
#1. Bull bugles right at daylight on Saturday morning. I bugle back to illicit a response and get it. I immediately try to cut the distance, but not just have the general direction where he is. I start working my down and about 10 minutes later he rips off right about where I was located when I called back to him. Basically he would have been in my lap if I would have stayed put. To add to it, he ended up getting pretty fired up and I was way to passive. He ended up wandering off.
#2. Also Saturday, I sneak into an elky area and was just slowly/quietly meandering across the top of a ridge. I got to the edge of a patch of dog hair thick timber and happen to look about 50 yards down into it and see a "funny looking log". Turns out it was a bull facing away. Wind is generally good. I decide to very quietly take my pack and boots off and try to sneak a bit closer. I get to about 35 yards and have an opening but the bull will need to stand up and take a couple steps to his right to clear a couple trees. There ends up being a couple cows with him that eventually start to stand up. They know something isn't right but it takes a few minutes for them to start working down slope to my left where I wont have a shot(not ideal right?). Well the bull takes notice and decides to investigate. He stand and takes one step to his right (not a couple). I have about six inches of shoulder to work with and his neck, so basically no shot. I'm pleading with the elk gods that he'll take one more step, but he decides to circle downhill and to the left. I think they may have gotten just a hint of my wind but not for certain. You know you're close when you try to get the range finder shakes. Fun either way!
#3. Day 2, Sunday. I go back to the area from #1. The woods are dead calm. So quiet you could hear a fly fart. No bugles, zip...nada. I try a few locator bugles with nothing in return. The area had a recent fire and I decide to skirt the edge of the timber to see exactly what burned and what hadn't. The area has a big finger ridge perpendicular to the main ridge and there are usually elk on both sides of the finger. I end up making a big circle along the burned edge. I decide to work back into the timber about 200 yards and I'll do a blind calling sequence. I get to a spot to "test the waters"....pretty much a terrible setup if anything comes in. Guess what? I make two cow chirps and about 10 seconds later here comes Mr. Stud Muffin (95% sure its the bull from #1). He comes in from about 10/11 o'clock and gets to about 40 yards. He stops to take inventory and decides to move in directly in front of me after not finding his cow. He comes in about another 5 yards and works from left to right. I have virtually no cover and as he passes behind a thicker clump of trees I draw back. There are about 6 trees in this clump that he has to clear and I'll have my shot. Well I got drawn back without any ill effect, but I had to adjust my left foot a bit and caught me red handed. He was gone before he even had time to think twice. Still fun, but the idiot behind the bow needs to get it together.
#1. Bull bugles right at daylight on Saturday morning. I bugle back to illicit a response and get it. I immediately try to cut the distance, but not just have the general direction where he is. I start working my down and about 10 minutes later he rips off right about where I was located when I called back to him. Basically he would have been in my lap if I would have stayed put. To add to it, he ended up getting pretty fired up and I was way to passive. He ended up wandering off.
#2. Also Saturday, I sneak into an elky area and was just slowly/quietly meandering across the top of a ridge. I got to the edge of a patch of dog hair thick timber and happen to look about 50 yards down into it and see a "funny looking log". Turns out it was a bull facing away. Wind is generally good. I decide to very quietly take my pack and boots off and try to sneak a bit closer. I get to about 35 yards and have an opening but the bull will need to stand up and take a couple steps to his right to clear a couple trees. There ends up being a couple cows with him that eventually start to stand up. They know something isn't right but it takes a few minutes for them to start working down slope to my left where I wont have a shot(not ideal right?). Well the bull takes notice and decides to investigate. He stand and takes one step to his right (not a couple). I have about six inches of shoulder to work with and his neck, so basically no shot. I'm pleading with the elk gods that he'll take one more step, but he decides to circle downhill and to the left. I think they may have gotten just a hint of my wind but not for certain. You know you're close when you try to get the range finder shakes. Fun either way!
#3. Day 2, Sunday. I go back to the area from #1. The woods are dead calm. So quiet you could hear a fly fart. No bugles, zip...nada. I try a few locator bugles with nothing in return. The area had a recent fire and I decide to skirt the edge of the timber to see exactly what burned and what hadn't. The area has a big finger ridge perpendicular to the main ridge and there are usually elk on both sides of the finger. I end up making a big circle along the burned edge. I decide to work back into the timber about 200 yards and I'll do a blind calling sequence. I get to a spot to "test the waters"....pretty much a terrible setup if anything comes in. Guess what? I make two cow chirps and about 10 seconds later here comes Mr. Stud Muffin (95% sure its the bull from #1). He comes in from about 10/11 o'clock and gets to about 40 yards. He stops to take inventory and decides to move in directly in front of me after not finding his cow. He comes in about another 5 yards and works from left to right. I have virtually no cover and as he passes behind a thicker clump of trees I draw back. There are about 6 trees in this clump that he has to clear and I'll have my shot. Well I got drawn back without any ill effect, but I had to adjust my left foot a bit and caught me red handed. He was gone before he even had time to think twice. Still fun, but the idiot behind the bow needs to get it together.