Siwash- has a few different meanings, but in this context- camp without tent or sleeping bag.
Would love to have guys share their siwash stories.
I'll share mine from the Brooks Range this summer. I had a long (almost three years) wait for my hunt, so I read as much as I could and reached out to several folks here on the site on what to expect. One of the things that stood out was that several folks ended up "sleeping" on the side of the mountain during their sheep hunt. As a dyed in the wool Boy Scout, I wanted to be prepared if such an event occurred on my hunt! I've had the "fortune" to spend a couple of unexpected nights here (Montana) that outright sucked, as such I'm a little more prepared now than I was prior to those events.
We (guide and I) started a stalk on two legal rams (and one younger ram) late in the afternoon. We knew it was going to take several hours to get to where we needed to be. We dumped shelters, sleeping bags, most of the food, stoves, etc prior to taking off. About 8 PM we finally got close enough to start our crawl to the edge of the ridge which should put the rams right below us. Well it was several crawls to the edge until we found them clear in the bottom of the basin. and starting up the other side. I was able to harvest a ram, the time close to 8:30 PM- we still had about a 30 minute climb down through a boulder field to finally get to the ram. The guide had inReached the other packer/guide (he had gone up another drainage to scout it), that we had a ram down. The other guide wasn't too far off (he was headed our way already, not finding any sheep in the other drainage) and he joined us while the guide was caping the ram; we started on boning the meat.
When it was all said and done (including quite a few photos! ) it was after 11:00 PM. As we had a long ways to go through a lot of rock with pretty heavy packs, we decided our best option was stay in the basin and head out at first light (about 5:00 AM). Now I said above I had planned for just such a contingency. Puffy jacket-check, puff pants- check, short pad (Z-Lite pad cut to 40")-check- I also had a 3-7' piece of Tyvek to process meat on and used that as a ground cloth. I also had an emergency bivy (SOL Escape bivy), a pair of Apex insulated booties and a warm hat. I put on my mid-layer over my base layer and then added all the above. While I wasn't toasty warm, I did get a little sleep.
The guides, not so much. They had puffy jackets/pants, but no pad or bivy (they did have a nice tarp that got up if it happened to rain, luckily it didn't). They got little to no sleep. The guide used the sheep cape as least some insulation .
They snapped a pic of me sleeping
We were all glad when 5:00 rolled around. We ate some bars and filled our water bottles and headed off the mountain w/ loaded packs. We definitely made the right choice, I'm pretty sure I would have injured myself w/o good light (almost did with good light!). Took us about three hours to get back to where we stashed our camp gear (the other packer/guide found our stuff and ditched his too). We celebrated w/ a couple hour siesta (after a hardy meal!).
We still had a long ways to go, but made it to our rendezvous spot with the float plane for the next morning unscathed (but sore!).
I don't think I'd do anything different in the same scenario- the puffy jacket/pants would have gone regardless. The pad weighs 8 oz and I used it a ton while glassing (also threw under my inflatable pad when camped); the bivy weighed 8 oz as well, the insulated booties 1 oz, so an extra 17 oz. Well worth it, just ask the guides
I should add that there was no source of firewood even close to where harvested the ram, so fire wasn't even an option. My best guess for temps that night were in the upper 30's.
I know I'm not the first (or last) to end up spending a night on the mountain, would love to hear others experiences!
Would love to have guys share their siwash stories.
I'll share mine from the Brooks Range this summer. I had a long (almost three years) wait for my hunt, so I read as much as I could and reached out to several folks here on the site on what to expect. One of the things that stood out was that several folks ended up "sleeping" on the side of the mountain during their sheep hunt. As a dyed in the wool Boy Scout, I wanted to be prepared if such an event occurred on my hunt! I've had the "fortune" to spend a couple of unexpected nights here (Montana) that outright sucked, as such I'm a little more prepared now than I was prior to those events.
We (guide and I) started a stalk on two legal rams (and one younger ram) late in the afternoon. We knew it was going to take several hours to get to where we needed to be. We dumped shelters, sleeping bags, most of the food, stoves, etc prior to taking off. About 8 PM we finally got close enough to start our crawl to the edge of the ridge which should put the rams right below us. Well it was several crawls to the edge until we found them clear in the bottom of the basin. and starting up the other side. I was able to harvest a ram, the time close to 8:30 PM- we still had about a 30 minute climb down through a boulder field to finally get to the ram. The guide had inReached the other packer/guide (he had gone up another drainage to scout it), that we had a ram down. The other guide wasn't too far off (he was headed our way already, not finding any sheep in the other drainage) and he joined us while the guide was caping the ram; we started on boning the meat.
When it was all said and done (including quite a few photos! ) it was after 11:00 PM. As we had a long ways to go through a lot of rock with pretty heavy packs, we decided our best option was stay in the basin and head out at first light (about 5:00 AM). Now I said above I had planned for just such a contingency. Puffy jacket-check, puff pants- check, short pad (Z-Lite pad cut to 40")-check- I also had a 3-7' piece of Tyvek to process meat on and used that as a ground cloth. I also had an emergency bivy (SOL Escape bivy), a pair of Apex insulated booties and a warm hat. I put on my mid-layer over my base layer and then added all the above. While I wasn't toasty warm, I did get a little sleep.
The guides, not so much. They had puffy jackets/pants, but no pad or bivy (they did have a nice tarp that got up if it happened to rain, luckily it didn't). They got little to no sleep. The guide used the sheep cape as least some insulation .
They snapped a pic of me sleeping
We were all glad when 5:00 rolled around. We ate some bars and filled our water bottles and headed off the mountain w/ loaded packs. We definitely made the right choice, I'm pretty sure I would have injured myself w/o good light (almost did with good light!). Took us about three hours to get back to where we stashed our camp gear (the other packer/guide found our stuff and ditched his too). We celebrated w/ a couple hour siesta (after a hardy meal!).
We still had a long ways to go, but made it to our rendezvous spot with the float plane for the next morning unscathed (but sore!).
I don't think I'd do anything different in the same scenario- the puffy jacket/pants would have gone regardless. The pad weighs 8 oz and I used it a ton while glassing (also threw under my inflatable pad when camped); the bivy weighed 8 oz as well, the insulated booties 1 oz, so an extra 17 oz. Well worth it, just ask the guides
I should add that there was no source of firewood even close to where harvested the ram, so fire wasn't even an option. My best guess for temps that night were in the upper 30's.
I know I'm not the first (or last) to end up spending a night on the mountain, would love to hear others experiences!