Aug 31, 2012
Shot my first bull at 5pm during archery season, took a few pics and started the work. I was almost 4.5 miles into a wilderness area and solo. Took about 2 hours to quarter the elk and hang three quarters. Then remove tenderloins, back strap and neck meat and then debone one rear quarter and load it all into my pack along with my day gear.
Left the kill site at 7:20pm with it raining, the first mile was blow down timber and marshy ground. Had to cross several creeks and headlamp went dead during the first mile. Had to unload pack to get extra batteries, and get going again. It had started to hail about 8:30pm, and the rain was freezing on the bushes near the creek.
Even wearing rain gear pullover I was soaked all the way through and my boots were sloshing with water by 8;45pm. At 9pm still had not made it out of the blow down and had hit the ground several times, twisting ankles and knees in the process.
At about 9pm I decided to unload the deboned quarter and hang from a tree. Left me with about 65-70 lb load which felt much better.
At 9:30pm encountered a bull moose near a large pond who decided to show he was king of the mountain, do you know how hard it is to run in the mud when loaded with meat?
Shortly thereafter encountered a steep hillside of mud, found I had to backtrack to find a way up, or walk back around the large pond with the moose.
At 11pm I finally hit a trail that would lead me out, made it to the truck at 12:30am with it still raining.
The next morning had a swollen knee and sore ankles, made it easy to call in pack horses to get the rest of the meat out. It still took 4 hours to get to the kill site with horses.
Side Note: helped a buddy pack an elk out two weeks later almost 5 miles back into a wilderness and it was easy in comparison, no rain, in daylight, and several guys to split the load. I would definitely handle things differently in the same situation.