Makua Keaau is unit B and Waianae Kai Valley Road is Unit C. Good hiking and good hunting out there just be prepared and careful hiking in the dark. I think his name was Eric who was an ER charge nurse fell to his death hunting out there.
Of course man, hit me up.Man….. great story and great thread. Thanks for sharing your experience @aftriathlete.
I’ve been doing my research and due diligence on planning a similar Lanai hunt. Might shoot you a PM here in a little bit to pick you brain if you don’t mind.
Elusive they are for sure. Knowing where they are able to hide in the Florida swamps, it’s gotta be another beast hunting them in the islands.Of course man, hit me up.
Went looking for pigs this past weekend in a very piggy GMU. Tons of sign, and saw two piglets right at the moment that a couple guys came blowing through on dirtbikes and scared them out. Getting closer to the elusive Hawaii pig by rifle though.
Great job! Sounds like a hunt I'll have to get into when the applications open up again next year.Man hunting in Lanai is something else. 3 days over too quick. Saw tons of sheep and a good amount of deer, perhaps less than previous years but any mainland whitetail or elk hunter would be over the moon with how many deer I still saw and had opportunities on. Took a decent buck, not a massive trophy but it means a lot to me anyway for my first DIY Lanai axis deer. And it took a hell of a lot of work. I found this guy and a buddy in a brushy bottom about 9 miles into my first day of hunting. One was a very nice buck, one was smaller but still decent. They crossed over the ridge into the next bottom, so I snuck onto that ridge and had them bedded in the brush at about 120 yards. I had clear broadside shot on one, perfect window in the brush, and clear frontal shot on the other, clear window in the brush at his chest, but he was standing frozen staring at me. Couldn’t judge which had the bigger antlers due to the brush and figured I had moments before they spooked, so I took the broadside shot I had. Of course the bigger one busted towards me at first and I could clearly see I had shot the smaller one. But I’m happy anyway. Hell of a pack out back to the truck, it was a mile and 1000 ft climb to get it there on tired legs. Funny, I took the cover a lot of ground approach not knowing any of the hard-earned honey holes, but then I see 4 old guys flying out that each of them got a good buck the one day they hunted, and they probably just parked the truck and sat on the tailgate and shot those deer. I’m not mad at them, I’m sure they beat the brush 30+ years ago to find those secret spots.
Next two days I saw deer, plenty of mouflon sheep and unfortunately wounded a ewe, shot her from a little over 200 yards just low on the shoulder and broke her leg but watched her run off on three legs down a wash leaving no blood trail, so I knew she wasn’t mortally wounded. That one will haunt me for a while.
The place is magical though man, last sunset hunt sitting there looking at Molokai across the water from a mountaintop and watching a nice buck and two forkies feed out into the kiawe trees across the valley, perfectly lit by the sun setting behind me. I watched them disappear into the brush and never saw them again as the light faded. Just quiet and beautiful, it felt good for my soul.
Smaller than the buck I got back in the fall, but this one means a lot more to me having done it myself. My one guided experience was not for me, I felt somewhat dissatisfied, like a tourist. 35 lbs of clean, hard-fought axis venison in the freezer, and one set of antlers that capture the memory. Can’t wait to go back.
Also, they used to let you bring a cooler that could be turned on its side to fit into the cargo area, now the cooler must fit sitting up straight. I'm guessing they had too many leaks on others luggage. I asked if I could just put frozen meat into a drybag and they said that would be just fine. I'm only traveling from and back to O'ahu so I'm not too worried about insulation. As far as antlers/horns go I'm thinking I can remove one antler with a bone saw to make everything fit into a large water proof duffel and reattach after the skull has been boiled. Dry bag full of meat could go into the same duffel and hopefully this will all save a few dollar bills for extra luggage and headaches trying to get everything back home.Congrats! Lanai is a ton of work but work every bit of it. I’m curious how you got the horns back. I was told Mokulele wouldn’t allow them as baggage. PM in bound as well. I head to the private side in 3 weeks.
I failed to add that Mokulele Air doesn’t allow antlers/skulls as checked bag or carry-on, policy changed in October.Also, they used to let you bring a cooler that could be turned on its side to fit into the cargo area, now the cooler must fit sitting up straight. I'm guessing they had too many leaks on others luggage. I asked if I could just put frozen meat into a drybag and they said that would be just fine. I'm only traveling from and back to O'ahu so I'm not too worried about insulation. As far as antlers/horns go I'm thinking I can remove one antler with a bone saw to make everything fit into a large water proof duffel and reattach after the skull has been boiled. Dry bag full of meat could go into the same duffel and hopefully this will all save a few dollar bills for extra luggage and headaches trying to get everything back home.
Wow, glad they didn't catch the two sheds that I picked up on our trip and just stuck in my pack!I failed to add that Mokulele Air doesn’t allow antlers/skulls as checked bag or carry-on, policy changed in October.
Yep found that out at the airport that Mokulele changed their policy just in October to not allow antlers any more, checked or carry-on. So I left them with someone who is going to drop them off at Kamaka for me today or tomorrow to ship them to me here in Oahu since Kamaka is closed on Sundays.