Been a pretty good year so far

jlhois

FNG
Joined
Oct 5, 2022
Messages
14
Since I failed to draw a spring bear tag in my state (I can only get one a bit over half the time), I started out with a 10 day backcountry spring bear hunt in my neighbor state that has "reduced price" bear tags for certain areas. I saw 11 bears. I also had 13 ticks on my body in a single day.

Unloading my trusty $200 Yamaha Phazer. I took the skis off so it would fit in the truck better along with the chest freezer and everything else. Pro tip: unbolt the skis on the ground before loading, then just launch it into the truck and the skis fall off at the top of the ramp when it becomes airborne.
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I rode the Phazer 8 miles up the road and then started off with my too-small snowshoes. After some serious suffering I was finally below the snowline and made camp.
20240512_195833.jpg

Next day I saw many elk but no bears.

I spotted my first bear randomly in the woods about 30-40 yards in front of me. I hemmed and hawed for a minute on whether he was big enough while he fed toward me to about 20 yards. Then he winded me and started running off, so I started blasting. I got two rounds in him and he managed to get about 50 yards down the hill where he died. Since he was only medium sized (under 200 lbs I reckon) I figured I would drag him up the hill to butcher on the flat ridge top. This turned out to be doable, but nearly killed me, so I forgot to even take a normal picture once I got him up there. Fortunately I took this one to document my poor decisions.
20240514_104543.jpg

After butchering I loaded him into my pack along with all the rest of my food and gear and headed up the hill. This was very heavy, so as soon as I got up the first little patch of snow I got the meat cooling off, melted some snow for water, and stashed all my food and gear that I could. Then I continued up the hill with just the bear and the essentials. I spotted a small cinnamon bear on the way up.

Normally I have bullletproof ankles, but with 140 lbs on my back this proved to not always be the case. I twisted my good ankle pretty badly when I stepped on something uneven in the snow, before putting on snowshoes. I immediately iced it, but after a little bit I figured I better just keep going.
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By the end of the day I made it to the top of the ridge and made camp on a few feet of snow. It was 2800' of elevation gain from where I killed the bear.
20240514_202843.jpg

Next morning I started hiking the 4 miles back to the sled, but my ankle was not doing well. After about 20 minutes I decided to drop my pack and hike to the sled unloaded, and ride it back through the trees along the top of the ridge to collect the meat. This proved to be good idea, as the walking was not too bad without a pack, and the snowmobiling was only moderately sketchy.
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After 16 miles on the Phazer I made it back to the truck around noon. I processed the meat, vacuum sealed it, and put it in the freezer, powered by the solar panels on the roof.
20240515_161639.jpg

Next day I headed back out to collect my gear and food, and look for another bear. My ankle was feeling pretty rough, but ibuprofen and icing helped a lot.

Where the foot-powered journey began
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Watched some elk for a while
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Then more elk
20240516_160639.jpg

Continued...
 
Last edited:
OP
J

jlhois

FNG
Joined
Oct 5, 2022
Messages
14
Spotted this bear from a long ways out but when I got closer I saw she was a sow with cubs. This photo is from the next day when I bumped into them again. Another day I spotted her alone, with no cubs...at least almost certain it was her.
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Scenery
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Spotted this hunk eating/69ing a cow elk. Watched for a while and sneaked in to about 20 yards. For some reason I decided he was too small, but I think I actually just didn't want the hunt to be over.
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Delicious
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Headed down to take a dip in the river after passing the elk eater. Was pretty cool going from well below freezing and several feet of snow to a hot dry 80f.
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Collected some weight for my pack on the way up the next ridge
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Spotted a bear a ways out that looked decent size, made a stalk and blasted from 225 yards. Turned out to be a size small, which my ankle was thankful for. I definitely am not good at judging bears.
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Rain turned to freezing rain and then snow as I packed all my stuff and the bear up the hill. First part was cliffy, but it turned to brushy after a while.
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Made camp once I had gotten high enough that I could melt some snow for water. Climbed 2100' after killing the bear.
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Next morning I climbed the remaining 1000' and got to the sled before noon.
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Continued...
 
Last edited:
Joined
Nov 28, 2023
Messages
90
That's what my foot looked like when I broke it lol. Metatarsal I think it's called. Rolled it hard and it broke the bone where the toe attaches
 
OP
J

jlhois

FNG
Joined
Oct 5, 2022
Messages
14
Snow was all gone at the truck. Processed the second bear and got it all sealed up in the freezer and headed home.
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Next up was trying to get a bear around home before elk season. I found a sow and cubs eating berries one day
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The next weekend I was able to secure a large bear patrolling the woods. The packout was not horrible, especially since a buddy came and helped. He got a couple quarters since I was pretty flush with bear meat.
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As September rolls around the serious hunting begins. Last year I hunted hard every single day of the 30 day elk season and didn't manage to kill one, due to an untold number of mistakes and bad luck. Certainly not due to lack of opportunity. This year I again planned to hunt all 30 days if necessary, but I wound up having to go home early after my tags were filled.

Since I was tripping over mule deer the whole time I elk hunted last year, I decided to get a tag this year instead of doing the usual blacktail hunting around my house. After a couple days that worked out for me.
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I glassed a buck in the morning headed onto a bench to bed. After a couple hours I made my way around there and came in from above, trying to spot him on the bench below me. But I had miscalculated, and he, along with 7 other bucks, were bedded right where I was walking on the hillside above the bench. Suddenly they blew out from about 20 yards away from me. They scattered a bit, but with persistence I was able to follow this one and eventually get in front of him as he walked by 30 yards away. I made a good shot and he reversed direction, so I gave him another one from the other side, and he tipped over.
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Though I like to punish myself, I am still human, so if I can make it easier I do. I managed to get the truck up to the top of the mountain (legally) on some really gnarly ATV trails. This made for a short packout. I processed the meat and froze it with solar power once again, so I could continue hunting.
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Many grouse fell victim to my arrows, and some arrows fell victim to grouse, as it is.
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Various things unfolded during elk season, but 6 days after securing the mule deer I was able to acquire a small bull. Earlier that day, I had spotted a large 5x5 laying in a big wallow/pond. I did everything I could to call him in with cow calls and a decoy, but he eventually wandered off to his herd, and when I tried to get in front of him he wound up taking a different path. Then the wind switched while I was trying to stalk again and they blew out.
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Then toward the evening I randomly spotted this young 5x5 feeding in the woods, alone, about 100 yards ahead of me. I stalked in to 34 yards and made a good shot. He ran down the hill and I put another one in from 55 yards, and he got weak in the knees so I stopped shooting.
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I cut him up that night and camped there. I am always trying new things and improving on butchering, so this year I brought a small saw and cut out all the rib racks. They are delicious. I also packed out the entire spine and cut T-bone steaks out on the bandsaw. Boning out is easier, but bone in meat is better in my opinion.
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Continued...
 
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J

jlhois

FNG
Joined
Oct 5, 2022
Messages
14
The packout wasn't too miserable, took about 7.5 hours and was 800' of elevation gain for each trip.
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Next task was helping a buddy get his first elk. I took him into one of my old haunts on the coast to find a Roosevelt. We found an absolute giant that roared like a dinosaur, and I called him in to well within bow range, but with the brush there was no shot. Shortly after we found this guy and I called him in and he made a shot. It wound up being a bit of a clusterfuck but we succeeded. The packout was 1600' straight up the steepest brushy bullshit, so a good introduction to Roosevelt elk hunting. Not bad for a half day hunt.
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Next in line was the kitty in the backyard. Not quite a backcountry hunt but meat none the less.
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Next I tried to get a bear for a different buddy. We spotted a big boy eating huckleberries about 400 yards out. I figured we could easily get closer but when we did he had vanished. I spent the next few weekends trying to find him for myself, but all I got were waterfall pictures.
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Now being late November I still had a bear tag, but I don't know how to hunt bears after the berries are gone. I figured maybe they are back to eating fresh green sprouts in the recent burns, so I setup glassing one of my local spots that burned (again) last year. After 15 minutes or so behind my binoculars I heard something below me. Figuring maybe a deer if anything, I had a look and this beast is just walking into the woods 50 yards below me. I slipped out from behind the tripod and grabbed my rifle, loudly racked in a 145 grain solid copper .308, and blasted him. He kept walking, so I blasted again, but he still didn't notice. After two shots through the lungs and clipping the heart, I put another through his neck and he ceased walking.
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The packout was only 600' of elevation up to the truck (interestingly every packout this year has been uphill, wtf) but I did it in two trips when it should have been three. I thought the second trip would be lighter, but when I tried to stand up with the pack I realized I was in for a world of hurt. The first couple hundred feet of gain were super steep and muddy, and a couple times I thought I wasn't gonna be able to do it. But there was also nowhere good to drop the pack and leave part of the load, so I managed to keep going. Once I got out of the steepest part, I figured if I could do that then I could do the rest. Took me 3 hours to pack him out, and probably would have taken the same amount of time to do it with an extra trip, and a lot less misery. After I got home and checked with the scale, my second load was over 190 lbs in the pack.
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These copper bullets go right through most animals, but 2 out of 3 stopped right under the skin on this bear. I am happy with their performance. Meat loss is pretty minimal, and I never have to worry about fragments. I never liked realizing a chunk of lead just went through the grinder.
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Turkeys are a bonus, but not real hunting
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I did manage to sneak up on these two turkeys and line them up for a single shot, which I was pretty proud of.
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Last edited:

Hnthrdr

WKR
Joined
Jan 29, 2022
Messages
3,561
Location
The West
Sounds like an awesome year! Seem like you have bears figured out pretty well… even if you claim you aren’t good at judging them. Congratulations on all the success!
 
Joined
Sep 22, 2024
Messages
19
Since I failed to draw a spring bear tag in my state (I can only get one a bit over half the time), I started out with a 10 day backcountry spring bear hunt in my neighbor state that has "reduced price" bear tags for certain areas. I saw 11 bears. I also had 13 ticks on my body in a single day.

Unloading my trusty $200 Yamaha Phazer. I took the skis off so it would fit in the truck better along with the chest freezer and everything else. Pro tip: unbolt the skis on the ground before loading, then just launch it into the truck and the skis fall off at the top of the ramp when it becomes airborne.
View attachment 796230

I rode the Phazer 8 miles up the road and then started off with my too-small snowshoes. After some serious suffering I was finally below the snowline and made camp.
View attachment 796231

Next day I saw many elk but no bears.

I spotted my first bear randomly in the woods about 30-40 yards in front of me. I hemmed and hawed for a minute on whether he was big enough while he fed toward me to about 20 yards. Then he winded me and started running off, so I started blasting. I got two rounds in him and he managed to get about 50 yards down the hill where he died. Since he was only medium sized (under 200 lbs I reckon) I figured I would drag him up the hill to butcher on the flat ridge top. This turned out to be doable, but nearly killed me, so I forgot to even take a normal picture once I got him up there. Fortunately I took this one to document my poor decisions.
View attachment 796232

After butchering I loaded him into my pack along with all the rest of my food and gear and headed up the hill. This was very heavy, so as soon as I got up the first little patch of snow I got the meat cooling off, melted some snow for water, and stashed all my food and gear that I could. Then I continued up the hill with just the bear and the essentials. I spotted a small cinnamon bear on the way up.

Normally I have bullletproof ankles, but with 140 lbs on my back this proved to not always be the case. I twisted my good ankle pretty badly when I stepped on something uneven in the snow, before putting on snowshoes. I immediately iced it, but after a little bit I figured I better just keep going.
View attachment 796233

By the end of the day I made it to the top of the ridge and made camp on a few feet of snow. It was 2800' of elevation gain from where I killed the bear.
View attachment 796234

Next morning I started hiking the 4 miles back to the sled, but my ankle was not doing well. After about 20 minutes I decided to drop my pack and hike to the sled unloaded, and ride it back through the trees along the top of the ridge to collect the meat. This proved to be good idea, as the walking was not too bad without a pack, and the snowmobiling was only moderately sketchy.
View attachment 796236

After 16 miles on the Phazer I made it back to the truck around noon. I processed the meat, vacuum sealed it, and put it in the freezer, powered by the solar panels on the roof.
View attachment 796235

Next day I headed back out to collect my gear and food, and look for another bear. My ankle was feeling pretty rough, but ibuprofen and icing helped a lot.

Where the foot-powered journey began
View attachment 796311

Watched some elk for a while
View attachment 796306

Then more elk
View attachment 796307

Continued...
Dude you’re living the dream.
 
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