No doubt!!! Freaking awesomeEnter that first pic in the photo contest! Thats bad ass man! especially with a stick bow!
My goodness that's amazing. You guys are all an inspiration for me to get one beautiful beast like that one day. Awesome work!Took my duck hunting buddies out. Both had never gotten elk with a bow, we tagged out on day 12 or 13. I’m the middle photo with the black horned 5pt. So glad we got it done early and had the full weekend for meat packaging!
Took the guy with the weird three point/spike 5 years to get one. You’ll get there! Practice your shooting more than you think you need to and save yourself the heartache of having to track a gutshot bull. Luckily he clipped the liver and we found him but blood trailing for 9hrs with no blood is no fun.My goodness that's amazing. You guys are all an inspiration for me to get one beautiful beast like that one day. Awesome work!
Thank you! I know taking one with a rifle will certainly be a challenge, but I refuse to have my first one be with a rifle lol. I really want to be up close and personal for my first one lol. Congrats again!Took the guy with the weird three point/spike 5 years to get one. You’ll get there! Practice your shooting more than you think you need to and save yourself the heartache of having to track a gutshot bull. Luckily he clipped the liver and we found him but blood trailing for 9hrs with no blood is no fun.
Tremendous, congrats!2nd elk hunt. Day 7/8, heard this guy bulging like crazy way off the side of the mountain. Was getting to be crunch time so I bailed straight down off the side after him. Crested several knobs in the basin and finally got close. He was absolutely screaming up in the trees 60 yards away and I was screaming back. After about 4 challenge bugles back and forth I cut him off, and he marched right down into a clearing. Stopped him at 40 yards broadside, squeezed, and saw him fall <20 yards later! An experience I will never ever forget.
Congrats on a great bull! How in the hell do you pull off 16.5 miles/day? I hunt the breaks dam hard every day and don't come near that close and I don't have deadfall to deal with.Hiking an average of 16.5 miles a day in the steepest, nastiest, grizzly infested, beetle killed, burned, horse country Wyoming has to offer we finally were able to fulfill what has been 3 years of the hardest most physically demanding activity I have ever done.
Gaining over 40k feet of elevation since September 1st, a few 20+ mile days, pulled hamstrings, blisters, nasty falls, sliding down scree, getting stabbed by blowdown we finally did it, in the pouring rain, soaked to the core, I killed my first ever elk. We called him in to 25 yards, bugling, chuckling and screaming in our faces.
A perfect double lung shot and a dead elk at the end of a 70 yard search. It made it all worth it.
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That’s not too hard, I often hit 12-16/day durning bow season. Hell, I hit 13 this week with a hunter I was guiding, and he was not in shape.Congrats on a great bull! How in the hell do you pull off 16.5 miles/day? I hunt the breaks dam hard every day and don't come near that close and I don't have deadfall to deal with.
Maybe I cover more ground than I think. That seems like an insane amount of miles for a day.That’s not too hard, I often hit 12-16/day durning bow season. Hell, I hit 13 this week with a hunter I was guiding, and he was not in shape.
Does sound a bit far fetched I agree. 16.5/day day in and day out? Through the country you describe? With a pulled hammy? But I know people like him and they live to toot their own horn soCongrats on a great bull! How in the hell do you pull off 16.5 miles/day? I hunt the breaks dam hard every day and don't come near that close and I don't have deadfall to deal with.