Dall quest 2015

tuffcity

WKR
Joined
Nov 2, 2013
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601
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YT
I lay on the ridge with my eye glued to the spotter, watching the bedded Dall ram about 400 yards away. He was lying with his right side to me and I could see a broomed off horn, occasionally he would show his left and a tantalizing glimpse of a full curl. Or was it?

It was opening day of the Yukon sheep season and my wife, Helen, and I had flown into an area to hunt Dall sheep. Well, she was hunting Dalls, I wasn’t a resident so I was along for the ride or, as I told my hunting friends, I was “camp bitch” on this adventure.

We have been hunting Stones in BC for the last few years until she moved to Whitehorse for a job, so Dalls were the subject of interest this year. Helen has taken a couple of mountain goats but a ram has eluded her so far. Maybe this year…

Did I mention she only hunts with a muzzleloader?

She had elected to put a stalk on him regardless of size and I periodically looked up from the spotter and grabbed my binos to track her progress. We had prearranged signals to indicate legal, not legal, or “I have no idea”.

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She crept within 125 yards and I still had not had a clear look at the good side. From Hel’s position she couldn’t tell if he made the required full curl or not.

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Finally I saw his nostrils twitch as the breeze swirled in the bowl and suddenly he bolted. I stood up, sky lined, to indicate he was gone and Helen started the long climb back up the slope towards me.

Not a bad start to the 10 or so days we planned to be in there.

That evening, after finding a suitable camping spot, we went for a quick walk and managed to find and sneak up a band of 4 rams, one of which was a tight curl that made the grade but Hel decided to pass on him.

The next afternoon found us high on a rocky hillside, glassing a distant ridge. “There’s 3, no, 4 sheep on the end of the ridge” Hel said. I swung my glasses over to where she described their location. I found them and dug out the spotter. I watched them for a few minutes then mentioned that there was at least one worth going for. I watched the rams for a few more seconds and when I looked up Hel was packing up her kit. “I guess we’re going after them then”. It was 3:30 PM.

The wind and the terrain dictated a very lengthy detour and it was 8:00 PM by the time we had closed the distance to a little over 250 yards. With no cover left and a very stiff cross wind we lay in the rocks and watched the sheep until they went and bedded on the other side of the shallow valley and up on the side of the mountain we had left from hours before. He was a good ram, nice mass and horns sweeping well above the bridge of his nose on both sides.

We stumbled into camp at 1:30 AM and then spent the next 3 days looking for him. Never did see that ram again.

One thing about coming “home” that late is that you don’t sleep though scenes like this.

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The next week was a matter of long days and big hikes; we’d spot rams and decide whether or not to stalk. There was only one day when we didn’t see any rams of some sort.

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One day in particular turned into a 17 mile round trip when we decided to go after a group of rams quite a distance from camp. A 400+yard crawl through the rocks and moss finally got us in range of a decent ram. He kept milling around in a bunch of smaller ones, either in front of or behind other sheep and never presented a decent shot. Eventually one of them spotted something that he didn’t like and the whole band bolted for the next range.

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The moon was well up by the time we reached camp that night.
 
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We had a couple more encounters including one where I snuck under 300 yards on 2 bedded rams, one was legal and the other not quite. I lay in the ground-birch for an hour trying to figure out which was which. However, the SOB’s just sat there enjoying the warmth, both pointed up hill, and all I could see was the back of their heads. Meanwhile, Helen had snuck around the top of the bowl and came on them from above. She sat there at 75 yards and couldn’t tell either because of the steep angle and the way they sat. The wind had been consistently blowing up hill but it must have swirled as suddenly they were bolting for cover.

We thought that was the last kick at them as we were planning on flying out the following afternoon.

The next morning I crawled out of the tent and there was 2 different rams feeding about 300 yards up hill from camp. They looked down at us then bedded. Really? Now? I pulled out the spotter and looked them over. One was definitely short but the other was close.

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I looked them over some more and realized the bigger one was the broken horn ram from day 1.

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All though the picture doesn’t really show it, I was down hill from them and the full curl was just too close to call for me to be comfortable with. I suspected he made it on age (8 yrs) but these pictures are cleaned up a bit and I didn’t have nearly the same clear view then.

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We decided to put him on the list for next year and packed up.
 
We had some time to kill waiting for the plane so a bit of fishing was in order.

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Still less than one…

RC


special thanks to a "alpha-numeric" site member who helped out with info. :)
 
Congratulations on a good hunt. Lots of sheep and stalks but it just didn't come together but you were in sheep with a tag and weapon.
 
Great write up and photos, I leave 9/13 for a combo in the NWT.
 
Nice trip and good call on the rams! One of these days we'll see that muzzle loader ram!
 
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