SEAK mountain goat lessons

MT_Wyatt

WKR
Joined
Aug 20, 2014
Messages
2,220
Location
Montana
I recently accompanied a good friend on a fly-in backpack mountain goat hunt, and spent 9 days out in the field, which reinforced a few things to me. I thought I’d share, but also note how some of these lessons learned were so much more blunt or extreme given the conditions compared to my home state of MT. Between base and spike camps, existing out in the weather was a challenge. The normal solution of “start a fire” was simply not in play.

Planned Gear List: https://lighterpack.com/r/5hmjc6

Biggest takeaways:
  • In such a wet environment, how you dry yourself without fire is sleep system, and if staying mobile, synthetic is important for that resistance to failure, both in clothing and sleep bag/quilt.
  • I backpack hunt a lot for 2-5 days: besides more food for longer duration, sustainment in the field doesn’t require a ton more extra gear apart from different duty gloves, rain gear, etc tailored to the hunt.
  • Syn vs leather boots in these kind of environments doesn’t appear to be a super huge deal. Wet is wet.
  • I get cold easy and knew that going in, so having puffy pants and warmer layers for static glassing times or using my shell in the wind became imperative. Knowing that about myself helped make the hunt a lot more comfortable and enjoyable.
  • Although simple, the pocket rocket deluxe is more bulletproof than all other stoves I’ve tried.
  • Active insulating mid layers continue to be a staple in my kit that replaces typical grid fleece.

SEAK is beyond my comprehension in wetness, active precipitation, the atmosphere/humidity, misting, and of course the brush. The wet spongy ground reminded me of Scotland’s peat during the rain.

Clothing:
SG cirque jacket - very, very good for this wet environment. Not quite as warm as a full Grumman down puffy for me, but worked decently in its place. I soaked that jacket daily and wore it dry multiple times. I continue to enjoy the Sitka ambient, which dries well, in the 100 weight hoody, but it’s far too warm sometimes. I thrashed that thing through brush on the pack out and it’s still kicking. I think their latest mapped 75 version with some fleece will be extremely hard to beat.

I also had 1 pair of actual hunting pants (SG DH lites) I wore under rain pants for the only sunny day, which was okay. The venting was nice in the sun.

Merino/Syn - I took boot top aerowool FL bottoms and wore rubber over those for the hike in. They were totally compromised and never dried after. I had zip off P118 kuiu bottoms I wore 24/7 after that, which worked well, and dried at night. I used synthetic SG Avro hoodies throughout and these also dried well at night when worn.

Down - SG Grumman bottoms for pants were amazing to help add warmth when needed, and very light. I left the jacket in basecamp and used it a lot under a rain shell there.

Rain gear- rubber grundens, chugach TR bottoms, arctyrex beta AR goretex pro top. Hiking done in the rubbers, which really sucked. Soaked inside from sweat, but needed robust gear for hikes in/out due to the incredibly thick brush, climbing over rocks, etc. I just wore baselayer bottoms under my Kuiu breathable rain pants while hunting and at basecamp, which worked excellent. Neither my pants/jacket that was breathable got overwhelmed and leaky, and I pushed them both pretty hard. I think I’d still take rubber gear into a basecamp, but would lean towards drying these burlier 4L type rain sets like the Omen series if doing it again.

Boots - once they are wet, they stay that way, and no sun/wind could overcome it, even in synthetics. I took Crispi briksda mtn SFs and they worked fine, apart from the rands completely separating (common theme, I’ve had 4 pairs do this now). “ Synthetic dries quicker” wasn’t really an applicable factor to this kind of hunt.

Weapon: a full action cover to guard from debris, direct moisture and brush is a really good idea. Having a really compact/short setup was also needed, as a 24” barrel was a liability in the alders.

Sleep System: SG chilkoot 15F mummy bag, xlite pad, outfitter provided 4 season 3p tent. I wouldn’t depend on the outfitter for shelter again, I’d take my own so I knew the shelter well, venting, setup in dark, footprint needed etc. Weight too - this tent was sturdy but 8.25lb, a rock in the wind. After a first hike and setting spike camp in the mist, my mummy bag was used to dry me out a bit overnight. But we had to repack and move further onto another mountain. The moisture on my bag shell from pushing it out of the inner bag ended up compromising my treated down when recompressed into my back. The whole next day after setting another spike camp I was soaked and tent bound, pushing moisture into down that was clumping enough I could see through the bag shell quite easily. Days later I’d regain loft, but this was a man obvious reminder treated or not, a synthetic bag would have been a better system to use. It did work, but temps were 40F or so for lowest. Using my clothing system to overheat inside my compromised bag and try and move moisture out was doable.

Tarps: covering common areas between tents is really nice to permit being outside in rain to cook and relax. Not something I’d normally prioritize but for a wet area, this is a huge deal. A tarp to lay meat out on is very useful - but easy to cut, we nicked one up pretty good boning the goat. Tyvek ground sheets might be better suited for this use.

Elec: I took both audio books to listen to and digital books to read. Managing my phone settings and using battery packs I was able to really stretch things out. I found when tent bound, just plain reading a book on my phone and listening to the rain was quite enjoyable. Didn’t even tap into podcasts and audio books.

Trek poles: BD alpine carbon corks are on another level from anything I’ve tried in stiffness, dampening, and especially flex in the bottom section. I’ve tried other lower grade BD trail series stuff, argali, and these are FAR and away a better product in my use.

Water carrying: interesting issue I would not have anticipated. My buddy used 3 UL Nalgenes. 2 were grabbed out of his packs bottle holder on the way in…..I took 1 UL Nalgene and a 3L hydropak seeker bag. An extra couple ounces for a platy bag is good backup. I should note my bottle didn’t come out of my K4 bottle holder.

Packs: expedition style hunts with larger bags end up either pushing bags out from your sides, out away from your back, up above your head, or all 3. One always valued having a frame/pack that isn’t wider than me for getting through brush, and this proved useful here. I took an Exo K4 7200 and would do it again, packing camp and half a goat left me impressed with this system. I used the dry bag liner and that really helped along with individual dry sacks. The suspension and outer bag got pretty soaked, but I did get it dry on a sunny day.

Food/cook: being able to get warm bone broth, ramen, etc in your system when holed up trying to dry yourself is really helpful.

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Bhunty19

FNG
Joined
Oct 1, 2024
Messages
18
Awesome sharing your lessons learned and backpacking tips seems very helpful.
 

Marty

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 3, 2020
Messages
290
Great write up, thanks for sharing!

Any training prep that you could speak to? Mental fitness? Physical fitness? Goat ID training? Shooting drills? etc...
 
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MT_Wyatt

MT_Wyatt

WKR
Joined
Aug 20, 2014
Messages
2,220
Location
Montana
Great write up, thanks for sharing!

Any training prep that you could speak to? Mental fitness? Physical fitness? Goat ID training? Shooting drills? etc...
Marty I’m far from any kind of authority on the matter, but would say my preference for backpack based mountain hunts was a good starting point, because I knew a lot of my weaknesses. I’m not overly positive or a large person. Gear and living out there were more of the easy parts. Since I was more of a guest, I felt like my roll was to capture the experience, be helpful, be positive, and be an asset. I don’t really feel like anything I did was ground breaking - but having a friend to be accountable to, daily, for prepping for this was awesome (for us both).

Fitness: Mtn Tough programs (foundations body weight and gym, min gear daily) for general fitness and mobility. Running, walking weighted and unweighted incline. Rucking up mountains with grade > 1k ft/mile 1x per month (kept building up longer and longer outings) and a lot of mobility work. Weighted step ups for 45min-1 hr to grind. None ever felt like enough. Did a little backpacking with little regard for being ultralight.

Mental: I strained my lower back BIG time in late July. Chiro for first time in my life showed I had huge binding in my right SI joint that I got to maybe 85% by September? Was pretty worried 6 weeks out. As far as training for this, mtn tough always had some good twists to expand me a bit, and the rucking helped (should have done more) but I found my previous military time some of the most helpful, just because there’s always something that’s truly sucked more :) it seems.

*best training would have been hiking in my grundens rain gear while getting continuously smacked and tripped with brush, ha.

Goats: I helped a friend last year on a goat hunt here in MT, which was a nice warm up for IDing and recognizing behavior. I reread a lot of goat books (for behavior aside from physical characteristics), sat in on a webinar this year, did a goat survey with rmga in the past. I’ve been hiking and taking my kids out with my spotter/digiscoping setup to ID goats, which was fun practice. Lots of RMGA instagram “quizzes” for sure. Reading others’ stories and photos, basically being very focused on goats where possible.

Shooting: I was just a +1 (friend was hunter) ans shots < 300 were the very strong preference so not a ton of focus on this topic. Custom load was developed and lots of debate on bullet choice. Asked a lot of folks who have shot goats their experiences. But in the field training (yours and Ben’s posts have been pretty cool in showing this) wasn’t a huge thing this past year. That’s a big goal of mine for 2025.

I read a lot on here to help try and prepare for AK since so different from my State, which is exactly why I started this thread. SEAK is just so very “different” and not all pleasant, but I find myself wanting to go back already.
 
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