NV Desert Bighorn!

slvrslngr

WKR
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Apr 27, 2012
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Just got back from 4 days helping my brother fill his desert bighorn sheep tag in Nevada. It's his second sheep, the first being a Rocky Mountain in South Dakota, so he's halfway to his sheep Slam.

The hunt began last summer when he got notification that he drew a deer and sheep tag. When it comes to sheep draws, he has had very good luck, having accumulated a grand total of 4 (I think) preference points in Nevada and only 2 or 3 in South Dakota. Anyway, after a busy summer of work and training, he started go out to the unit to scout, luckily only a 2 hour drive from home. The first thing was finding the guzzlers, which are the main source of water there. The second, was finding sheep, which was easy as they hang around the guzzlers and there are good numbers in the unit. He was seeing lots of rams, including some really nice ones. The opener came quickly and he headed out a few days early to look around and see if the sheep were still in their usual haunts. I joined him the day before the opening, ready for anything, or so I thought!

We were expecting cool, dry, and windy weather, hoping it would look like this for the duration.


That night, the weather took a turn for the worst, starting to rain and sleet, with snow up high. We woke up to this. Definitely not what we expected.


Oh well, the hunt must go on! So, we got up, made coffee, ate breakfast and headed up the hill. Was a bit steep.


Glassing for our quarry. Fortunately, as the morning went on, it cleared off some, but the wind was constant.


We spotted a couple smallish rams going down a ridge above one of the guzzlers, so we headed that direction to see if there were more and to get a better look at them. We found them, but both were not what he was wanting. Unfortunately, what we didn't see was the other 8 rams behind the pine tree on the right, including one really good ram. The wind was very swirly and eventually brought our scent to the whole group and they took off.

Look close, there's 2 rams in the middle.


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slvrslngr

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Once that group was far enough away to pursue, we started following them. They really bugged out and by the time we caught up, they had joined another big group of sheep being sat on by another hunter. So, at that point, we backed off and headed back the way we came, working our way back to the truck. It had been a fairly long, hard day and I was starting to bonk, so a quick stop to eat a snack and drink some water was in order. As we arrived back at the truck, the weather started closing in again, cooling off and the wind picking up. It was long, cold, windy night and we woke up to this.



The wind, snow and low clouds lasted pretty much all day, making finding sheep difficult. We did get on a group but the fog made a stalk pretty much impossible. On the other hand, the potential for pictures was amazing!





As it was quite cold and we weren't moving around much, we made a small warming fire to thaw out our fingers and toes.


The day was pretty much a wash as far as hunting goes, but patience is rewarded.

Day three dawned cold and clear, the storm had blown through overnight. The temperature was a chilly 19deg when we headed out of camp. A different group of hunters beat us up the hill, so we decided to go in lower, but we discovered another hunter had beat us there as well. So a change in plans was in order. The decision was made to hunt the next range south, which had fewer sheep, was steeper and more difficult to hunt. As we were running late, we drove up as far as the road would let us and beat feet to the top of the ridge.



It was a good decision. Within 20 minutes of hitting the top, a good ram was spotted walking ahead of us. He saw us about the same time we saw him and a stand off ensued. After about half an hour of watching each other, he decided he'd had enough and wandered off. As soon as he dropped over the ridge, we beat feet to catch up and try to get in position for a shot. As we crested the ridge he was on, we slowed down and started looking, finding him down in the draw, about 200 yards away. My brother ran up to a rock pile to get a rest and set up. The ram walked another 50 yards or so, stopped and turned broadside. I was watching from about 30 yards back and was screaming in my head "SHOOT!". BOOM!

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slvrslngr

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Hunter is on the upper left in the red rocks, ram lower right. (Sorry for poor photo, it's a bit like a "Where's Waldo"!)


The shot echoed across the ridge, the ram lunged forward, then ran about 25 yards, stopped, then took off again. I thought he was hit, but never heard a bullet impact, so wasn't 100% sure. My brother took off down the hill and I followed with his pack. When I got to where the ram was standing I couldn't see any blood or hair, uh oh. My brother came back towards me shaking his head, clearly upset, it looked like a miss. Upon further inspection, I found what looked like a bullet impact hole in the snow and no sign of a hit. At least it was a clean miss. We talked about what happened and came to the conclusion that the wind coming through the saddle above the ram took the bullet off course just enough. Dang it, very frustrating.

We regrouped, had a bite to eat and some water then continued on. Working down the ridge, in the general direction the ram went, we eventually cut a set of tracks in the snow. We quickly concluded it was the same ram and started following the tracks, hoping to catch him like we did earlier. Low and behold, after a couple hours of tracking, I look up the next ridge and saw this.



It was him and he had picked up another, smaller ram somewhere along the way. They moved out of sight and we hastily got up the hill to see if they were in range. Well, they must have really spooked because we never saw them again. We tracked them down, around, back up, around, down, up, etc. until it got to the point where we had no choice but to get off the track and head for the pickup. The day ended with a beautiful sunset, but we were both smiling even though pretty exhausted.



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slvrslngr

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Day 4 came early. The previous day we found out that 2 other hunters killed rams in the area above our camp. Their opinion was the sheep would be gone, but we decided to go back above camp anyway. Also, unless a sheep hit the deck, we were planning on heading out for home at noon, as we both had personal commitments to attend to. We drove up to a good glassing spot and immediately found a bachelor group in a stalkable position.

The plan was to send my brother up the hill while I watched in the scope and kept an eye on the rams, letting him know if he was on track. It was still quite windy and cold, so I gave him my Gore-Tex jacket, pants and wool gloves in case he had to sit in the wind waiting for the rams to come to him. So, up the hill he went. After about 45 minutes, I saw him on top, waving his arms. I could no longer see the sheep and didn't know what he wanted so I drove over to the base of the hill, he hike down, and we had a pow wow. I guess we need to work on our communication. Anyway, he couldn't see the sheep and I told him they worked around the hill parallel below him. Back up the hill he went. I needed to get camp broke down so we could beat feet if the sheep eluded him, so I drove down and got ready to leave.

After taking care of camp, I went back up, loaded a pack with the intention of packing out meat and started climbing. At this point, I had no idea where my brother was, so I just went to the top. I peeked over the edge and immediately saw some sheep about 700 yards below, 2 of which were looking at me, I'm guessing I was more skylined than I thought. Backing out, I continued down the backside of the ridge out of sight, hoping I didn't blow the rams out. About 300 yards down the ridge I shimmied over to the edge and saw my brother in a saddle, just standing there. I signaled him and he waved me over, getting into ear shot, I heard the magic words, "Sheep down!" Holy crap! I never heard a the shot. Sure enough, there he was!



Turns out, as my brother was waiting for the original group of rams to make an appearance, a different group walked into shooting range. This one stepped clear of the trees at about 200 yards and the rest is history.

A happy, tired hunter!


Not the biggest we saw, but mature, lots of mass, plenty of character.


As the plan to head home at noon was now shot, we got into the job of breaking him down and getting off the mountain.

Happy hunter with the trophy!


Happy helper with the meat, pack was right at 90lbs.


Fortunately, the pack was fairly mild, about a mile with the snow the real obstacle as it made footing treacherous. As we made it around to the north side of the hill, the wind hit, hard and cold.

"Come on man, this $%^& is COLD, put the camera away and lets go!"


We got it done!



NDOW aged the ram at 6 1/2 yrs and rough scored him at just over 160, better than we thought.

Rifle used was a Browning A-Bolt II in 30-06, shooting handloaded 150gr. Speer Hot Cores. Shot was high in the shoulder, hitting the under side of the spine, taking out the top of the lungs, with the bullet lodging under the skin on the off side, the ram was DRT.

It was a great hunt, hard work but worth every step. Hopefully some day I can draw a sheep tag and my brother can Sherpa for me!

 
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slvrslngr

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Postscript for the gearheads. While my brother and I are fairly well equipped for backcountry hunts, we're not kitted up like some. But, I will list a few things that worked really well for us.

Trekking poles-I know, preaching to the choir here. This hunt would have been WAY harder without them. I can't tell you how many times they saved our bacon in the snow and steep spots. The pack out would have been brutal with the heavy load going sidehill back to the truck. Climbing, descending, side hilling, everything was easier with them. Plus, they double as shooting sticks in a pinch.

Good boots-Mine were Lowa Tibets, his Asolo Sassalongs. The stiffness and ankle support didn't really do much until the pack out, then they really came into their own. My ankles would have been thrashed in lesser boots.

Merino wool base layer-Again, preaching to the choir. The stuff works, period.

MR 6500 pack-It was my brother's, but I wore it with the meat load. Wow, don't know if my Jandd would have worked as well. Now I know why you all buy either MR or Kifaru.

Good glass-My bino's are Leica Trinovid's, his Vortex Viper HD's. Worth their weight in gold. Our spotters are both Leupold fixed power, which are light and work pretty well, but strain the eyes after a while. In all reality, they were all we needed and I wouldn't have wanted to pack anything bigger.

Go Lite pants-I bought these at their outlet shop last year for a warm weather pant. With the longjohns under them, they were plenty warm unless sitting in the wind. No muss, no fuss, they didn't even hardly get dirty (not that I care). Can't see spending 3 times as much for Sitka or Kuiu.

Cabelas MT50 Gore Tex pants and jacket-Yeah, they're heavy, but I would have froze without them. Sitting and glassing was much easier in the wind and cold with this as my outer layer.

The only thing that we really thought we needed to upgrade was our gloves. Both of us had wool gloves, my brother lost one of his better pair after shooting at the first ram and suffered the rest of the day as neither if us had a spare pair. Mine were fingerless glove/mitts, and worked ok, but...There's got to be a better solution.

Hope you all enjoyed the story!
 
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frans

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 4, 2012
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109
Comgratulations on a nice sheep! Maybe one day I'll draw there too!
 

Travis Bertrand

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Reno,NV
Great story man! Congrats on a beautiful ram, Nevada has killed quite a few huge rams this year. You guys need to not kill them all so I can have one when my name comes up;)
 

realunlucky

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Great write up no better way to send time with a brother and to come away with a brute of a ram what a bonus congratulations
 
Joined
Oct 25, 2013
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Location
Truckee Meadows
The hunter here, not the weather that one would expect for a desert sheep hunt, but it is what it is. For the most part, we stayed dry, thus warm (enough).

Thanks for the meat packer/photographer for coming along! Makes things easier to spread the work, be it camp chores, holding a leg while skinning or packing meat.

Another piece of very useful equipment is the set of shooting sticks used the last day. They are nothing fancy, just 1x1 with a large nails epoxied in the ends. I do not think I could have made the shot without them, since it was steep downhill from an odd angle. I feel these would be worth packing in if one was expecting long(ish) or odd position shots.
 

Stid2677

WKR
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Sep 13, 2012
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Cool trip, nice Ram, memories made with your Brother,, don't get much better.

Steve
 

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