PSA - Mind your surrounding while hunting in early October in the mountains.

ChrisAU

WKR
Joined
Jan 12, 2018
Messages
7,297
Location
SE Alabama
Ok, maybe I wasn’t quite in the clouds but around 8,000 ft hunting mulies in southern WY. Nighttime temps near freezing.

But, if your chosen glassing spot looks like this:

IMG_1036.jpeg

Keep your head on a swivel.

I sat here until right at the end of legal light on Oct 1 and started packing stuff up. When I stood up and spun around to begin putting stuff in my pack I noticed an oddly perfectly round object stretching between two of the pieces of brush in the picture. My stomach dropped, I quickly stuffed what was in my hands in my pack and dug out my headlamp. A quick glance during this process confirmed that the oddly round object had indeed moved.

I held my light by hand and spun around to confirm a healthy rattle snake now at about 6 feet from me and coming straight to me. I quickly reached down and grabbed a nice size rock and nailed him. He rolled and writhed and began to rattle. I then grabbed up my rifle and tripod and trekking pole.

He was now coiled with his head 8-10” off the ground. I estimate he was 2-2.5” in diameter and 3.5-4’ long. I slowly backed up two steps and feeling that he wasn’t going to advance any more I spun around to quickly head up the face, 200’ vertical to the trail.

But it wasn’t over.

As I spun around I planted my trekking pole right by another snake. Much smaller, 1-1.5 ft long, 1” or so in diameter. I shoved him away quickly with the pole that I had almost hit with and then took the widest path possible between brush straight to the top, talking to Jesus the whole time.

Point is, be wary out there. I was a warm, still object to those snakes as the sun fell. If I had been motionless for 2-3 more minutes both of them would have been cuddling with me and if their bites wouldn’t have killed me I’m positive that cardiac arrest combined with an imminent tumble 300’ down that face would have done me in.
 
I have had a similar snake event happen to me. It absolutely shook me to the core knowing how close he had snuck in, un announced. Creepy suckers with huge potential negative consequences.
 
I’m glad you escaped with a minor confrontation. My buddy kicked one as he walked through the grass this year on a pronghorn hunt. We saw two more later that day. We’ve never seen that many in a whole season.
 
Snakes are funny. A couple of years ago I saw 18 snakes in that year. This year I have seen 1. We just don’t know all the factors that make them more active or not.
 
I was out in the backcountry this past weekend packing in a food cache for 1st rifle. I was at a spot that I have frequented over the past 10 years -probably spent 60-70 mights at this spot and have a well established location I set up my tent, put up my food hang and a spot where my buddy always sets up his hammock. There has been beetlekill in the area and we have cut down a couple of looming dead pine trees, but never gave much consideration to the many live aspens.

I was scoping out our usual food hang trying to come up with a way to better engineer it. I was standing on top of a boulder looking up when I heard a big "crack." I did not even have time to turn my head and a 40-50 foot aspen tree came crashing down. No slow tipping, it just dropped with full velocity -I literally mean it dropped as if you had dropped it from the sky. The top section of the tree hit the boulder I was standing on, broke off and deflected about 15 feet. The tree itself wasn't particularly large, probably an average of a 10 inch diameter. Aspens weigh 28 lbs per cubic foot on average and given the size, the estimated total weight was around 1,100 lbs. It missed me by 2 feet. It would have taken out the food hang and my buddy's hammock. If 1,100 lbs falling from 40 feet didn't kill you instantly, you would have wished it would have. Closer inspection revealed a rotten root system- the tree snapped cleanly off at the ground -no pulling up the root system, just sheared off and fell within 1 second. It didn't go down fall line either as it had a C curve in the base where it had grown around something, so it fell sideways.

Took me a second to digest what just happened as it happened to quickly. Pic took from where I was standing.

IMG_0078.jpg
 
Closer inspection revealed a rotten root system- the tree snapped cleanly off at the ground -no pulling up the root system,

So if the roots are all interconnected among aspens are the other nearby trees roots rotted and in danger of falling? Move your camp?
 
So if the roots are all interconnected among aspens are the other nearby trees roots rotted and in danger of falling? Move your camp?

Definitely going to take a closer look at the bigger aspen to the immediate left with a big, hole of rottenness a few feet off the ground.
 
The snake that shocked me was the rattler I encountered last year in mid November packing my buck in South Dakota. He seemed super aggressive and was coiled and ready to strike instantly. This was on a morning that started in the mid 20’s and the temp had risen to maybe 40° at that point.


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