Uintah
FNG
- Joined
- May 5, 2020
- Messages
- 36
So I just got back from my first Alaskan caribou hunt and I have to say, it was everything and more that I hoped and dreamt it would be. We saw and experienced everything from incredible landscapes, moose, caribou, grizzlies, muskox, sun, snow, and even the northern lights during a rare, clear night! We flew out of Kotzebue with Ram Aviation as our transporter. Brian, Ben, Megan, Hunter....The whole crew went way out of their way to ensure we had the trip of a lifetime! I can't say enough about how happy I am with the service we received, Ram is a first class operation all the way!
We were dropped on a gravel bar/beach along the Noatak river in the Noatak National Preserve, a few hundred miles above the Arctic Circle and no one else around for who knows how many miles! Since you can't hunt the same day you fly, we quickly set up camp ate a quick dinner of delicious Mountain House fettuccini alfredo (the first of many) and headed out onto the tundra to glass...
Picture of camp and the view out our front door each morning:
The first night glassing turned up a few herds of caribou, nothing too close, one herd across the river with some decent looking bulls and another herd of about 30 caribou way off (probably 2 miles +) in the distance moving and feeding along the way. They were so far away it was hard to tell what was a bull or cow, we could only tell they were caribou. Never the less seeing caribou got us excited about the next days prospects. We also glassed up a grizzly not far away feeding on what looked like a previous hunters carcass/gut pile. We were then treated to an amazing Arctic sunset!
Grizzly through the scope and sunset:
We were dropped on a gravel bar/beach along the Noatak river in the Noatak National Preserve, a few hundred miles above the Arctic Circle and no one else around for who knows how many miles! Since you can't hunt the same day you fly, we quickly set up camp ate a quick dinner of delicious Mountain House fettuccini alfredo (the first of many) and headed out onto the tundra to glass...
Picture of camp and the view out our front door each morning:
The first night glassing turned up a few herds of caribou, nothing too close, one herd across the river with some decent looking bulls and another herd of about 30 caribou way off (probably 2 miles +) in the distance moving and feeding along the way. They were so far away it was hard to tell what was a bull or cow, we could only tell they were caribou. Never the less seeing caribou got us excited about the next days prospects. We also glassed up a grizzly not far away feeding on what looked like a previous hunters carcass/gut pile. We were then treated to an amazing Arctic sunset!
Grizzly through the scope and sunset: