I'm out!
I booked a Dall hunt close to three years ago. I have to give credit where credit is due; after telling my wife "just once I'd like to get to hunt sheep" (after my 30-ish rejection on my bighorn application here in Montana) she said you've worked hard all your life, just do it. Thanks to input from several Roksliders, I was able to find a good outfitter in the Brooks Range of Alaska-thanks Gents!
I purposely booked the early sheep hunt as you got 2-3 additional days in the field, those days used to scout prior to the opener on the 10th. Mother Nature had other ideas. When I landed in Fairbanks they were in dense smoke. When I arrived at the outfitter's camp via a charter, they were too.
The guide told me that he's like to packraft as we could could glass a lot more drainages in a shorter time. The outfitter dropped us off (guide, packer and myself) on a lake that required just a short portage to the river.
We glassed from the rafts, but would stop occasionally and glass from gravel bars that gave us good views of different drainages.
We saw a fair number of sheep, but either bunches of young rams or ewes/lambs, no fully mature rams.
That evening we camped on a gravel bar that would let us access a couple of drainages that he was interested in exploring. We would refer to this spot as the "beach" as it was more sand than gravel.
Little did we know we'd be spending three nights on the "beach" due to smoke; not what any us wanted.
Each night we hoped the smoke would clear, each morning dashed those hopes. We had to spend opening day on the "beach" and morale was low. The guide could sense it and broke out the world's smallest deck of cards and handed out Hi Chews as chips and we played poker for a couple of hours
I booked a Dall hunt close to three years ago. I have to give credit where credit is due; after telling my wife "just once I'd like to get to hunt sheep" (after my 30-ish rejection on my bighorn application here in Montana) she said you've worked hard all your life, just do it. Thanks to input from several Roksliders, I was able to find a good outfitter in the Brooks Range of Alaska-thanks Gents!
I purposely booked the early sheep hunt as you got 2-3 additional days in the field, those days used to scout prior to the opener on the 10th. Mother Nature had other ideas. When I landed in Fairbanks they were in dense smoke. When I arrived at the outfitter's camp via a charter, they were too.
The guide told me that he's like to packraft as we could could glass a lot more drainages in a shorter time. The outfitter dropped us off (guide, packer and myself) on a lake that required just a short portage to the river.
We glassed from the rafts, but would stop occasionally and glass from gravel bars that gave us good views of different drainages.
We saw a fair number of sheep, but either bunches of young rams or ewes/lambs, no fully mature rams.
That evening we camped on a gravel bar that would let us access a couple of drainages that he was interested in exploring. We would refer to this spot as the "beach" as it was more sand than gravel.
Little did we know we'd be spending three nights on the "beach" due to smoke; not what any us wanted.
Each night we hoped the smoke would clear, each morning dashed those hopes. We had to spend opening day on the "beach" and morale was low. The guide could sense it and broke out the world's smallest deck of cards and handed out Hi Chews as chips and we played poker for a couple of hours