TrailDog
FNG
Hind sight is always 20/20, but curious for some experienced advice here...
First time hunting SWest Montana this past week, I typically don't leave region 1 but a friend showed me around his home turf near Ennis. Man, what a time...bugling bulls all over the place, first time calling back and forth with elk, great learning experience and great country to hunt. Shot my first archery elk and am still learning some hard lessons....
Long story short, I shot a bull on a rainy Friday morning in some THICK blowdown and young timber. Shot him high lungs perhaps, 35 yards, heard the THWACK of a hit. Bull takes off into the blowdown hell hole and I wait around for an hour, send an inReach to my hunting partner. 8 hours later I still have not found a trace of blood or sign of him, and I keep bumping elk and bulls in the blowdown. Find my arrow, the fletching 1/2, broken with some meat at the break, definetly not a pass through shot. I peel out of there at dark not sure what to do. Hunting partner has me convinved I hit him too high for a fatal shot, arrow did not pass through, so likely hit him in the shoulder or backstrap and he'll live. So we take Saturday to glass and rest. I don't sleep well, and get up Sunday morning early and stomp into the area I've already gridded hard for this elk, wanting to give it one last attempt.
Immedietly there are tons of ravens and crows in the area, swooping down to the ground. I pull out bear spray and start yelling, and am hit with the smell of guts/carcass. A bear charges through the blowdown to maybe 20 yards huffing and snapping jaws, I climb up on some blowdown and yell back. Bear goes back to the carcass, I start retreating, he bluff charges a few more times and I get the hell out of there.
Lots of questions, but first:
What are your tactics when you've made a shot on an elk and there is zero blood? In this area you could walk 5 feet from a dead animal and not see it, the blowdown was so tangled and thick. Also there were so many other elk that it was nearly impossible to check all the fresh tracks and beds for blood, which I tried to do, within a 1/4 mile radius.
In what scenario would you attempt to chase a grizzly off your rightful kill?
First time hunting SWest Montana this past week, I typically don't leave region 1 but a friend showed me around his home turf near Ennis. Man, what a time...bugling bulls all over the place, first time calling back and forth with elk, great learning experience and great country to hunt. Shot my first archery elk and am still learning some hard lessons....
Long story short, I shot a bull on a rainy Friday morning in some THICK blowdown and young timber. Shot him high lungs perhaps, 35 yards, heard the THWACK of a hit. Bull takes off into the blowdown hell hole and I wait around for an hour, send an inReach to my hunting partner. 8 hours later I still have not found a trace of blood or sign of him, and I keep bumping elk and bulls in the blowdown. Find my arrow, the fletching 1/2, broken with some meat at the break, definetly not a pass through shot. I peel out of there at dark not sure what to do. Hunting partner has me convinved I hit him too high for a fatal shot, arrow did not pass through, so likely hit him in the shoulder or backstrap and he'll live. So we take Saturday to glass and rest. I don't sleep well, and get up Sunday morning early and stomp into the area I've already gridded hard for this elk, wanting to give it one last attempt.
Immedietly there are tons of ravens and crows in the area, swooping down to the ground. I pull out bear spray and start yelling, and am hit with the smell of guts/carcass. A bear charges through the blowdown to maybe 20 yards huffing and snapping jaws, I climb up on some blowdown and yell back. Bear goes back to the carcass, I start retreating, he bluff charges a few more times and I get the hell out of there.
Lots of questions, but first:
What are your tactics when you've made a shot on an elk and there is zero blood? In this area you could walk 5 feet from a dead animal and not see it, the blowdown was so tangled and thick. Also there were so many other elk that it was nearly impossible to check all the fresh tracks and beds for blood, which I tried to do, within a 1/4 mile radius.
In what scenario would you attempt to chase a grizzly off your rightful kill?