SoylentGreen1019
FNG
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2016
- Messages
- 6
I've never draw a tag like this. But now I had, so it was time to start. I got plenty of help from some kind Rok Slide members that I've never met, so I thought it was only fair to post the outcome of the adventure here. This is a long post so I'll have to break it up.
I had a little over 4 months. Crew was already pretty much set. Father in Law, Brother in Law and buddy Adam.
We would camp in the northern Idaho panhandle. I started making lots of phone calls. I spoke with the DWF agent. I spoke with the USFS agent, I spoke with the State parks officer, I spoke with the Wildlife biologist. I found a guy who had the same tag last year. I checked google maps almost compulsively. Many times a day. I took notes and notes and notes.
I ordered maps, ordered MREs for 4 guys for a week. Set up "camp" in the back yard. Loaded, re-loaded, handloaded, and packed. Finally, we loaded the truck and headed to Idaho. It was pouring rain. This would be a very common theme this entire trip.
Driving over the Columbia plateau we finally passed through some decent weather. "I can see for miles and miles".
Deer season opened on the 10th. My hunt dates would be from the 7th to the end of the moose hunt on the 14th. this would be a hunt through the rut, so we were very excited to call in a bull moose. I practiced in the truck on the way to work. I practiced in the garage. Youtube videos on moose calling? I've seen them all.
Heading over, I was worried that we would get to the campground on the Friday before deer season and find it full. Where I wanted to be there were only 6 spots in the little public camp ground. So we left Friday at 03:00 hoping to get there before anyone from Spokane could get off work and fill up the campground. We got there around 11:00 Friday and were the only truck in the entire campground. The fact that it was pouring rain and 40 degrees probably had a lot to do with that.
The camp was not ideal. It is a very low swampy area. there are no facilities besides a vaulted toilet. No potable water. We picked the highest camping spot, which had a large reflection pool to help set our serene mood:
After 3 hours, the camp looked a lot like a refugee processing center. We had everything hung and tarped. We added more tarps and covered spaces as the week went on
We were joined by my in laws who flew into Spokane and joined us. the plan would be to moose hunt hard until the 10th, then hopefully have a moose down and switch to filling everyone's deer tag. I committed to not tagging a deer until we had a moose down. Success rates on this hunt were 70+% in the past decade, but then dropped to "only" 50% last year. No one quite knew why.
But how hard could it be?
I had been warned that this part of the Selkirk mountains was very, very thick. Limited opportunities (if any) for glassing. No problem, I had always said. We hunt Rosies on the Oregon coast. "Thick I can handle."
What I was not expecting was that the rain and fog were constant. So even glassing one clear cut became very, very challenging
On our first day we covered some low swampy ground. Found some good clear cuts that I had marked on the topo maps. And just sometimes, the fog lifted enough so that we could see a big open clear cut.
After some initial scouting, the next day we would start in earnest.
I had a little over 4 months. Crew was already pretty much set. Father in Law, Brother in Law and buddy Adam.
We would camp in the northern Idaho panhandle. I started making lots of phone calls. I spoke with the DWF agent. I spoke with the USFS agent, I spoke with the State parks officer, I spoke with the Wildlife biologist. I found a guy who had the same tag last year. I checked google maps almost compulsively. Many times a day. I took notes and notes and notes.
I ordered maps, ordered MREs for 4 guys for a week. Set up "camp" in the back yard. Loaded, re-loaded, handloaded, and packed. Finally, we loaded the truck and headed to Idaho. It was pouring rain. This would be a very common theme this entire trip.
Driving over the Columbia plateau we finally passed through some decent weather. "I can see for miles and miles".
Deer season opened on the 10th. My hunt dates would be from the 7th to the end of the moose hunt on the 14th. this would be a hunt through the rut, so we were very excited to call in a bull moose. I practiced in the truck on the way to work. I practiced in the garage. Youtube videos on moose calling? I've seen them all.
Heading over, I was worried that we would get to the campground on the Friday before deer season and find it full. Where I wanted to be there were only 6 spots in the little public camp ground. So we left Friday at 03:00 hoping to get there before anyone from Spokane could get off work and fill up the campground. We got there around 11:00 Friday and were the only truck in the entire campground. The fact that it was pouring rain and 40 degrees probably had a lot to do with that.
The camp was not ideal. It is a very low swampy area. there are no facilities besides a vaulted toilet. No potable water. We picked the highest camping spot, which had a large reflection pool to help set our serene mood:
After 3 hours, the camp looked a lot like a refugee processing center. We had everything hung and tarped. We added more tarps and covered spaces as the week went on
We were joined by my in laws who flew into Spokane and joined us. the plan would be to moose hunt hard until the 10th, then hopefully have a moose down and switch to filling everyone's deer tag. I committed to not tagging a deer until we had a moose down. Success rates on this hunt were 70+% in the past decade, but then dropped to "only" 50% last year. No one quite knew why.
But how hard could it be?
I had been warned that this part of the Selkirk mountains was very, very thick. Limited opportunities (if any) for glassing. No problem, I had always said. We hunt Rosies on the Oregon coast. "Thick I can handle."
What I was not expecting was that the rain and fog were constant. So even glassing one clear cut became very, very challenging
On our first day we covered some low swampy ground. Found some good clear cuts that I had marked on the topo maps. And just sometimes, the fog lifted enough so that we could see a big open clear cut.
After some initial scouting, the next day we would start in earnest.