You can count the number of genuinely free range bison hunts in the lower 48 on one hand, and the number of fingers you need is up for debate. The Henry Mountains count, without question. The House Rock/Kaibab hunt in Arizona seems questionable, as most end up waiting for the bison to leave Grand Canyon NP. Similar things could be said for the traditional winter hunts outside Yellowstone, such that I stopped applying for them a while ago. But plenty of bison wander outside the park to summer in headwaters areas, and three years ago Montana created a hunt with this in mind, allowing folks to hunt the upper basins of Hellroaring and Slough Creeks, north of Yellowstone.
This year I got one of those five tags.
Bison let me back in to hunting as an adult. A few years of sitting in trees for whitetails bored me for a long time, until Steve Rinella's 2006 Outside article about hunting bison off the Copper River in Alaska. 12 years ago I knew a lot about climbing and backpacking and general backcountry stuff, but hunting, killing, and packing out a bison, largely solo and way out from roads or trails was beyond my comprehension. The article, and the book it inspired a few years later, got me interested in pursuing deer and elk and sheep in the backcountry of the lower 48, and many good adventures have followed. Things I've learned hunting have increased my backpacking skills, and last fall I fulfilled a long term goal when I shot a bull well back in the Bob and packed it out, solo, over the two days which followed.
The tag gods waited until I was ready.
My resolution for this tag is to shoot a dark old bull back in some beautiful country, and get the meat, skull, and hide out to the road entirely under human power. Thankfully I know a good number of skilled folks with similar interests, and recruiting a good crew proved easy, as the level of interest was very high. In a month I have folks flying in from as far as Alaska and the east coast to help out, and tomorrow I'm heading in for the first serious scouting mission. Over the Fourth I headed in to Slough Creek, mainly to packraft the section above the park, but also to get eyes on some bison in the name of practice. Lots of likely candidates seen on that trip, though most were still down within the park. Hopefully over the next three days I'll see plenty in the Hellroaring drainage.
Updates to come.
This year I got one of those five tags.
Bison let me back in to hunting as an adult. A few years of sitting in trees for whitetails bored me for a long time, until Steve Rinella's 2006 Outside article about hunting bison off the Copper River in Alaska. 12 years ago I knew a lot about climbing and backpacking and general backcountry stuff, but hunting, killing, and packing out a bison, largely solo and way out from roads or trails was beyond my comprehension. The article, and the book it inspired a few years later, got me interested in pursuing deer and elk and sheep in the backcountry of the lower 48, and many good adventures have followed. Things I've learned hunting have increased my backpacking skills, and last fall I fulfilled a long term goal when I shot a bull well back in the Bob and packed it out, solo, over the two days which followed.
The tag gods waited until I was ready.
My resolution for this tag is to shoot a dark old bull back in some beautiful country, and get the meat, skull, and hide out to the road entirely under human power. Thankfully I know a good number of skilled folks with similar interests, and recruiting a good crew proved easy, as the level of interest was very high. In a month I have folks flying in from as far as Alaska and the east coast to help out, and tomorrow I'm heading in for the first serious scouting mission. Over the Fourth I headed in to Slough Creek, mainly to packraft the section above the park, but also to get eyes on some bison in the name of practice. Lots of likely candidates seen on that trip, though most were still down within the park. Hopefully over the next three days I'll see plenty in the Hellroaring drainage.
Updates to come.
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