We got caught way off guard this year... 2 miles from camp and five from the truck, I thought I was good with my warming layers (Puffy top and bottom, mitts, goretex top and bottom, obviously polypro base layers and fleece mid layer.)
We sweated our ass off putting on a stalk. Mistake on our part there, but easy to do when you are focused and the elk seem so close yet so far away. Then the temp just so happened to plummet about 30 degrees in less than an hour and the wind picked up to 15-20 mph. I believe it got down to 0 F and stayed there for the next several days.
I will never forget how quickly I went from mild discomfort to the point I could tell I was physically and mentally handicapped. All I wanted to do was curl up in a ball and go to sleep, and consciously knew that was really bad. That feeling is burned into my memory from this point forward.
We were searching for sign of a hit from a cow we shot (or maybe just shot at, that’s a mystery lost to time at this point) and were desperately tracking and searching for signs of a hit in the fading light. That desperation clouded my judgement and we stayed on that mountain side way too long. Had we had some sort of sleep system with us we would’ve just made an impromptu camp when the temp dropped and searched more thoroughly at daybreak and it would’ve been no big deal. Instead we got ourselves into a shit sandwich of a situation and possibly lost an elk in the process.
If the temps are forecasted to go much below about 25F or so and or I’m more than about a mile from camp, I’m just dragging the bag, pad and DST tarp along with me. It’s really easy to get steep and deep chasing elk around, and when the weather turns suddenly that can get deadly fast. All that stuff weighs about 5-6lbs, which isn’t light, but it’s better than dying. Also nice to have the option of “putting them to bed” rather than face a tracking and quartering job via headlamp.
ETA forgot to mention we did start a fire in an attempt to get warm, but as someone else mentioned when you are already cold, the wind is whipping, an open fire just doesn’t give off a ton of warmth. Not downplaying the importance of fire in a survival situation, but the ability to make fire isn’t a cure all. It helped a bit, but we decided hiking back to camp in the dark where we had a stove, tent sleeping bags, etc was the better option.