Kevin Dill
WKR
- Joined
- Aug 26, 2014
- Messages
- 3,158
And by that title I mean, when you feel the call of moose country and all that quiet solitude waiting for you. For me....an admitted lover of moose and far-off places...I hear and feel the call every year as spring approaches.
2019 will see me back in central Alaska again as I give it another go. Unfortunately, my hunting partner from 2018 needed to answer a different call and will not be going with me this year. Great guy....longtime friend, and I will miss his abilities and enthusiasm. With short notice, none of the other guys I invited could accept and make it happen this year. I'll admit I have a very short list of guys I'm comfortable inviting and then spending 2 weeks with in camp. I have to be convinced of a guy's good character, work ethic and determination to hunt steadily. A guy with a very stable personality is needed. Anyway....it's getting down to crunch time with just over 6 months until departure, and it's looking like another solo trip for me. I've done solos for moose and caribou before, so it's not a new experience for me. Interestingly, my other solos weren't really of my choosing or preference. In those other cases I was looking for a new adventure and my pilot....who is a friend....was able to work me in to the schedule. Those hunts put me in some far-away backcountry and he didn't have time (enough) to get me and a partner in and out on those long flights.
My last solo was 2015 and I killed a good bull on the next to the last day. Pretty crazy story but no point rehashing it here. I was happy to avoid the bears and get all the meat out intact. I guess I should take some comfort in knowing my pilot thinks enough of my abilities to leave me alone for 12 days with a longbow, sidearm and satellite phone. I think most pilots are looking at the bottom line when they schedule hunters. I appreciate that my pilot understands the value of a true solo adventure, having done them himself. He's actually upbeat about taking me in solo for 2019. Or....maybe I should be worried by that....
So now being on the up side of 60 years old, I'm faced with getting into good physical condition and being ready for the challenge. My gear list will change some from last year, given I'm going in alone. I'm giving consideration to bringing a .45-70 guide gun, having seen 5 different grizzlies near camp last year. This blonde sow came within 75 yards.
There'll be a few more gear decisions to make. Which shelter? What stove? Which bourbon in the titanium flask? I'll be asking myself plenty of questions again. Maybe one of them is "Am I crazy?" I think that's already been answered though. Here's to those of us who hear and feel the call of moose country and those big swaggering giants.