August 11, 2022. We arose with optimism that today was the day we would find some sheep. We broke down camp, loaded our packs, and lumbered on, further up the glacier. As we trekked through the snow, it soon became apparent we were on the trail of a sow grizzly bear, accompanied by a cub or two. The tracks showed little sign of melt-out, so I knew that at some point we were likely to cross paths with momma bear. To her credit, she did give us a good trail in the snow to follow, just hopefully without a surprise meeting. An hour or so later as I turned a corner, my eyes caught movement up the hill from us. It was her, with not one, nor two, but three small cubs of the year. As the wind was briskly in our face, I knew I would have to be careful in announcing our presence as to not startle her and create an unwanted encounter. As the sow and her cubs voraciously consumed blue berries, we enjoyed watching them for a few moments as they gradually moved in our direction. With the bears now at a 45 degree angle from us, I knew a slight change in wind direction would soon alert her to our presence. Sure enough, a gust hit the side of my neck. The sow raised her head, stared intently in our direction for the longest of two seconds one could ever experience. The, with an audible ‘woof’ at her cubs, her head turned and she bounded up the mountain, cubs in tow. As most bear encounters go, all is well that ends well, and this one ended well.
Momma and her gang
We took this break in our travels as an opportunity to eat lunch, glass for sheep, and enjoy the encounter we just had with momma bear and her litter.
After a few more hours of hiking, we finally arrived at the area we hoped would hold sheep. While it was early in the evening and the weather was favorable, the first order of business was to get camp set up. As I knew we’d likely be spending a few days here hunting out of this camp, finding a comfortable camp site was paramount. After getting our tents up on a grassy plateau, it was finally time to hunt. We gathered our gear that we’d need for the evening and went for a little walk. With just a few hours of light left, we found ourselves a perch that offered a view of a splinter drainage and began our search for sheep. Our surroundings offered a stunning view. The peaks loomed high above us, creating a stadium effect encompassing the glacier below. Only God could envision such a stadium on this grande scale.
Campsite #3
As we glassed and enjoyed the evenings good weather, Charlie broke the silence with the sweetest words a guide could hear.
“Josh, I see some sheep”
As I trained my eyes in the direction Charlie was glassing, simultaneously my hands moved instinctively to my spotting scope. After a quick look through my binoculars to locate the white sheep, appearing to be two of them together, I fixated my spotting scope on them.
“Rams”, I quietly whispered.
After quickly evaluating the first ram, a deep dropping 3/4 curl, I moved my scope to ram number two.
“Charlie, we’ve got a ram to hunt”.
Mr. Big
Up and Comer
While judging full curl sheep can be very difficult for the untrained, as well as the trained eye, the type of ram a sheep guide loves are the one’s that only require one quick look. This was one of those rams. He tipped out well, offering a classic, beautiful flare. He was a classy looking sheep.
The excitement was palpable. After two days of hard travel we finally had a glimpse of our quarry. Now, they likely would, but we just had to hope they’d stick around for us to make a move in the morning.
That night back at camp as I ate a hearty meal of Beef Stroganoff freeze dry, scenarios rolled through my head. The sheep were located on a long spine. Approaching from below would be near impossible. We would have to get on their level, but if the wind direction remained consistent I doubted we could get close enough without them winding us. I tried not to overthink it. I crawled into my sleeping bag, closed my eyes and rested my mind. Tomorrow would be a new day, and we had a sheep to hunt.