By: Bears Butt

FrontSideWithCapote

In this story, I have made up several names and the quotes of conversations are “almost” correct, the jest of them are pretty accurate,  I also made up names for places on the DLL Ranch for the sake of this story.  It’s all meant to be fun and informative at the same time.  Enjoy.

 

It was an early 3 a.m. when I got up yesterday and began getting ready for our cow elk hunt up on the Deseret Land and Livestock company property.  I was wondering just how the day would play out and how the “guides” worked, how many guides there would be and how many hunters.  It being a Thursday I figured those who would be hunting might be older people, like myself, but I just couldn’t be sure.

I gathered up everything I figured I’d need and packed it in the rig for the drive up to Lost Creek, our meeting place for the hunt.  It’s a full hour and a half drive from home to there and pulling a trailer (ready to bring two big old cow elk home on) would add additional time to that commute.  So, Weasel and I had planned a two hour drive just to be safe.  It’s always better to be an hour early and a minute late…my motto throughout my life.

I filled two thermos bottles with hot ground soup and made up turkey sandwiches to go with the soup.  That will taste really good up on a sub zero cold mountain top.

With everything packed and a short memo on this site to you all about what was going on for the day, I jumped in the rig and went to Weasels to pick him up…right on 4:30 a.m.

Our drive was pretty much un-eventful and we finished off our coffee about the time we arrived at the dam.  There was one other rig parked there, with one guy in it.  Once we were where we figured we needed to be parked, he soon came over to make sure he was in the right spot.  He was a hunter from the Salt Lake area.  I believe the outside temperature was around minus 15 with a breeze blowing around 5 mph….Cold enough to make you think “I really don’t have to go take a leak”.

Right at the 6:30 a.m. meeting time, here came the folks.  Truck after truck came rolling in.  Those who were obvious hunters sort of joined our two vehicles and our parallel parking attempts.  The other trucks stayed out near the entry area to the parking lot, obviously the guides for todays hunt.

When it looked like things were getting settled down “over there”, Weasel and I decided it was time to get our warm clothes on and wander over to find out the details…we did this and my nostrils were sticking together as we walked the short 50 yards from our vehicle to the gathering of guides trucks.

Papers had to be signed, guns and people checked in for the days hunt and I think there were nine hunters in the group.  Most of them had paid for a guide to take them out , as did Weasel and I.  There was one “guest hunter” and he was assigned to follow our guide.  I didn’t get an actual count of the number of guides, but before the day was over, there seemed to be more guides than the number of hunters, my guess is there were seven trucks with guides in them and then a visiting guide from the Woodruff area and another driving a Polaris side by side UTV that had 4 tracks mounted on it.

Our guide was Wade Jacklin, part owner and operator of Anglers Den out of Roy Utah.  We could not have been more pleased to have him as our guide.  From the introduction and throughout the day, he made us feel very welcome and comfortable with the hunt.  Wade is as honest a person as is found on this earth and was very concerned about our safety and to make our day a success with or without filling our tags.  As a plug to his business, if you are ever in need of some fishing gear, get on down to Anglers Den, 5345 South 1900 West in Roy Utah.  Give them a call about your needs and to find out if they have what you need, 801-773-1166

When the call to get going was finally made we were sort of in a mini scramble to get our stuff in Wades truck.  And of course I forgot some things, but as it turned out I didn’t really need them after all.  The two thermos’ of ground soup were two of the items…they sure would have tasted good about 2 p.m. when the group of us were sitting and trying to figure out how Weasel and I were going to get our elk.  You’ll read more about that soon.  I also left Edjukateers range finder and my cross sticks.  Who need those things anyway?

Sharply at 7 a.m. the group started out for the hunting area.  The snow at the dam was about 4 inches deep.  As we traveled up and around the dam the snow level increased significantly.  At the back end of the dam, the large caravan of guides and hunters split up.  Most of them went North and three of us went East.  Gates were locked and had to be opened and closed behind us and we traveled slowly, the snow level continued to deepen the higher we climbed.

Soon, I was getting concerned that the snow might be too deep for our vehicles to continue without the aid of chains, but a short parley and the men driving the trucks decided they would go until they got stuck and then put the chains on.  A wise choice, as even though the snow continued to get deeper, we soon decided we needed to go down into lower country to find the elk.

The Deseret Land and Livestock Ranch (DLL), covers thousands of acres of some of the most beautiful country to be found in Northern Utah and if you ever get the chance to go in and check it out, please do, you will not be disappointed.  In our days travels, we saw elk, deer, coyotes, antelope, geese, ducks, sage grouse (by the hundreds) and assorted birds of prey and scavengers.  None of the coyotes gave Wade an opportunity to try out is 204 caliber weapon.

Down in flatter country, which by the way is still very hilly and covered with mostly sage, is where the majority of the cow elk were found.  On our way down into this area, we did see one very big bull up high in the aspens and in knee deep snow (knee deep to me snow, not to be confused with knee deep to anyone else).  Around the same area was a very heavy horned 4X4 buck that I estimated to be 24 wide and 27 high…it was the mass of the antlers that stood out so much.

The guides were in constant radio contact with each other and as we approached the low country we got a call to not go into that area as we would bust up the herd.  Not being familiar with the country, nor the way these outfitters were working, I didn’t pay much attention to that comment and actually thought they were talking to someone else.  Soon, the same voice came on and said we were about to encounter a herd of bull elk.  We stopped the trucks and began to glass the area.  We were among a very large herd of beef cattle and I didn’t think the wild animals and the domestic would interact, but sure enough here came a string of all bull elk and they continued their walk through the domestic animals and up and away over the next rise.

It’s a very unique site to see that many BIG elk all in a line!  Pictures?  Well, I did have my camera but who has time when so much is going on around you all the time.  Actually, I did not take even one picture all day long.

Our threesome caravan continued on and around until we found ourselves next to a large shallow lake (frozen over of course as the temperature outside was a very cold minus 24) and we spotted a very large herd of bull elk, working their way away from our position and on to who knows where.  We thought we had seen one cow in and among one of the smaller groups of bulls and so the “guest hunter” got all excited and wanted to go after it.  Wade made sure he understood, he had to stay with him and that our plans did not include going after a single cow among a group of 15 or so bulls.  A hunter would never be able to get on that cow.  There was a discussion with the other guide in the other truck, and he decided he would take his hunters back and over another road that would take him in the direction of where those bulls would likely go and maybe even cut off their direction and send them our way.  Our job was to get over into a position West of where we were, quite a ways away too as it turned out.

Well, I guess what I’m trying to say to you right now is that these guides “know their stuff” when it comes to these elk.  They know where they need to be to get the elk to go in a direction they want them to go and they know where they need the hunters to be in order to fill their tag.  Once they get the hunter into position, it then becomes the hunters job to make the shot count.

We had all signed papers at the dam, that said, “If you, the hunter, draw blood on an animal, that that animal is yours, whether you are able to kill and tag it or not, your hunt is over”.  Pretty strict rules, but one I certainly agree with.  Nobody wants to see a bunch of wounded animals limping their way around the place to eventually die.

In our travel around to “where ever it was we were supposed to be”, while the other guide drove around another way, we spotted several groups of elk way across the valley and up on a hill.  From so far away we were pretty confident there were several cows in at least one of the groups.  How we would get to them was going to be a bit of a task for our guide, as he wasn’t all that familiar with that particular part of the ranch.  The radio belched out more information.  Cow elk had been found!  So and So, you need to be at such and such.  Joe (made up name), take your hunters to the cross road of X,Y.  Eddy (made up name), get your guys over to the black tank.  Wade, where you at?  We are at “I don’t remember the name to tell you here” and I’m almost to the cabins.  Wade it sounds like you are at “I don’t remember the name to tell you here”,  Go towards the cabins and wait there.

It was actually kind of comical to hear that conversation.  But Wade did what he was told.  Then they made us stop where we were and hold in case the elk came over the ridge and descended down to our position.

Well, as wild animals are, they don’t always do what you think they are going to do and so it was with the herd these guys had spotted.  Pretty soon all the guides and all the hunters were up in the same area and the shooting had began.  Two elk down over here!  Two elk down over there!  Where did the herd go?  The last I saw them they were headed down toward, “????”, Wade get your guys down over to “Z” and up the two track to “Y”, Jed, you go with Wade and hurry it up.

And so, the day progressed with this sort of radio chatter.  One time we would be heading down the road in a direction someone had told us to go and then we were spinning around and going in the direction we had just came.  And then turned around and headed back.  The entire time I was grinning like a Cheshire Cat, knowing exactly what the spotters we doing who were trying to get us into position on a moving herd of elk.  They are miles away and high up on a hill overlooking what they can see and it terrain always looks much flatter from a distance than it is in reality.  They are also trying to read the herd and figure out exactly which draw they are heading for and going to.  All a big guessing game.  It was a very fun situation to be in.

Again, we found ourselves up with everyone else.  Some of the guides trucks had the elk from their hunters kills in the back, but all of the guides were there to help every one of us hunters try to fill our tags.  Nobody was going home early.

The radio belched out again, hey, Wade, Scott, get up past the black tank and down toward the swamp (I’m making all of this up), the herd is headed North and West, you need to get down there and cut them off.

And so it was, off we went just as told to do.  About two miles later…Scott, stop right there, Wade, You and Scott get back over to the black tank and down the fence line about 400 yards, the herd is going to cross over at Seep Creek.  Get there fast!  I mean NOW!!!

The rigs were spun around and down the road (well two track) we went lickety split!  Going past the black tank and down to our left, through the fence and stopped by the radio!  STOP RIGHT THERE!  GET YOUR HUNTERS OUT!  THE HERD IS RIGHT BELOW YOU!  HURRY!

And out we baled, guns and bullets spilling on the ground, but done so safely I might add!  And then the herd came up over the rise below us and continued to travel up the ridge in front of us some 400 yards out.  At a slight rise, they stopped.  Glassing the animals it was clear there were two small bulls in the group.  Wade called out, “Bulls in the group, make sure you are shooting a cow before you pull the trigger!”

The two guys in the truck that had been following us baled like Weasel and I did, the hunter was down on the ground with his rifle resting on his shooting sticks, and aiming toward the animals.  His friend was on the spotting scope and verified the two bulls, then off the spotting scope and onto his range finder…382!  Is what I heard him say, and then “You can do it Pete”!  Pete is on the ground with the rifle and asks, “Is the one on the extreme left a cow?”  YES!  A moment later Petes rifle belches out and the cow dropped in its tracks!  Elk down!

Shooting is g0ing on from several directions as all us hunters are on top of this herd of cows, but 400 yards is a pretty long shot, especially for nimrods like Weasel and I who are just not used to such long range shots.  I can see an animal is wounded and does not appear like it’s going to go down anytime soon and I tell Wade, “I’m going to try for that wounded one and if I’m able to knock it down and the guy who hit it first wants it, he can have it, but I can’t stand to see it wounded like it is.”  Wade confirmed and said “Go Ahead”.

I borrowed the cross sticks from Pete and leveled down on the wounded cow, I could see blood all down the side from a high gut shot and more blood toward the rear leg from a second hit.  It was a standing broadside shot for me, but 400 yards…ooo…I’m not sure I can do this.  But I put the horizontal cross hair along it’s back and settled the vertical mid point from the middle of the leg, putting the cross hair X on top of its shoulder, took a deep breath and squeezed the trigger.  The cow went down with a plop!

Well, not knowing if the guy who hit it first would want it or not, I figured I might have just filled my tag and so all I could do was watch as the firing continued and the elk began to walk away.  When the smoke was cleared, 4 more elk were down for the count.  The guy who hit the elk I finished off, did in fact want to take it and without argument from  me, after all he hit it first.

And so, with all of the days activity, Weasel and I and one of the guides were the only three still with tags to fill.  The quest became the guides to get us on another herd of cows.

Long story short, they did in fact have us very close to a couple of herds and of course the animals would not cooperate to allow us any shots.  It was getting late, 3:30 or so and it gets dark at 5:30.  We are high up on the mountain and quite a distance to travel to get back to the dam.  The decision was made to work our way back off the mountain.

In so doing, we encountered a small band of cows along the way, but couldn’t get a shot at them and then about a mile or so farther down, I spotted a cow in a clearing through the cedars about 350 yards up the hill.  We scrambled to get out for the shot, but she bounded up and into the cedars.  We could see more movement in the area we last saw her and so I readied my rifle using the side of a pickup as my rest.  Through the scope I could see elk filtering through a smallish opening between cedars, when suddenly a cow stepped into the clearing and stopped.  With the cross hairs high on her shoulder I let it rip!  BOOM….POP….I knew I had hit her and then she dropped and began rolling down the very steep hill toward the road.  Elk Down!  It’s just after 4 p.m.

By the time we hiked up the steep hill, through rocks, underbrush and deep snow, pushed the elk farther down the mountain and then did the quartering job, it was dark enough to need flashlights to get off the mountain and back to the truck!

Wade did that quartering job in less than 30 minutes and saved the liver and tenderloins in the process and did it without gutting the animal.  I was in awe as he worked that animal over with his knives and in such quick fashion.

Wade you are a great guy, a wonderful guide and I hope I can pay you back some day!

——————-

As a general statement, I must say, the guides and people we have dealt with from Wild Country Outfitters are a very OUTSTANDING bunch of guys.  They care about safety!  They care about the people they are trying to get on an animal!  They care about each other!  They just flat out CARE!  When I saw that even though their hunters had filled their tags and that they were there to help us all fill our tags, I was very impressed.  Nobody was going to go home until everyone was going home!  That really meant a lot to me and I’m sure to Weasel as well.

When I realized one guide came from Woodruff to help in the search for elk, I was again impressed that he would take time away from his personal day to come and help a bunch of people he didn’t even know, try and fill their tags.

When I realized that the “Main Spotter” was somewhere high on a ridge overlooking the valley below and trying his best to get us on our elk, I was triplie (sp) impessed.

Weasel and I could not have had a more enjoyable day and even though he did not get to pop a cap on an animal, he most likely will the next time they allow him access to the ranch and the good hands of the guide services provided.

THANK YOU ALL for a very enjoyable day!  Wade…especially you!  And the very best of luck to you and your family on your upcoming elk hunts!

Bears Butt

December 6, 2013

Written on December 6th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

FirstNightFire

Minus 6 this morning up near where we are going to try for our cow elk!  Put an extra layer on for sure!  My hope is the wind is calm and the elk are ready to come down off the mountain to a warmer climate….in the back of the truck!

Everything is lined up for a good place to hang them while we skin them and then put them in a cold storage locker for a few days to cure out and then cut them up the first part of next week.  Now that’s the way to get it done!

My hope this morning is for everyone to be safe and that we see lots of wild animals.  I expect to see some nice big buck deer as well as some big bull elk on the ranch.  Will we see a bobcat?  Cougar?  Weasel?  Well, the Weasel is a given since I pick him up in a half hour…if he is awake.

This time of year in the high country you can just about see every kind of wild animal that is out and about, just keep your eyes and ears open and you will see them.

They had about a foot of snow from this past storm and if the winds haven’t drifted everything in, we should have a good hunt this morning.

Wish us luck!

I just took the last of my things out to the rig and started it in order to defrost the windshield…all my water is frozen solid!  Probably the beer in the 12 pack as well.  But, all is well, at least the rig started.

Bears Butt

December 5, 2013

Written on December 5th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

TheApparatusWorksGood

Boy Howdy it’s cold outside!  A nice fire like this one sure would be a welcome thing to have right now!  But, you think it’s cold right now, right here!  A look at the weather in Randolph right now would have you singing a different tune!  If you look at your outside thermometer right now it will read about 11 degrees!  Hell fire!  That’s cold, but look at the neighbors thermometer on the side of the barn in Randolph right now and it reads Minus 2!  And don’t expect much more heat to come from the sun today either as the expected high is only 11 degrees up there!  That’s the same temperature it is outside your home right now!  A high of 11 degrees is expected in Randolph!  Put on the long johns and button up the overcoat Martha!  Your nostrils are going to stick together when you breath as you do the chores!

And so, Weasel and I are going to be braving that cold tonight and tomorrow as we head off for our cow elk hunt in the morning.

It was a good call on the part of the game management of Deseret to not have their hunt as scheduled yesterday and they moved it to tomorrow.  So, we have our reservations to stay in Evanston tonight and be ready to hit the ranch at first light in the morning.

My hope is they have the elk tied up in the pasture next to the barn and we can use the upper loft to lay on the hay and shoot out the window to bag our animals.  Then the guide can use the backhoe to lift the animal up, gut it and take it to our trailer and lay it down for the trip home.  That’s the way to git ‘er dun!

But, we won’t know just what will happen until the morning light hits up tomorrow.  Until then, everyone have a great day and I’ll be back on here come Friday!

————————————————

WOAAAH!!!!

I just talked to one of the game managers for Deseret and he has informed me that we will not be entering the ranch from the Randolph side, but rather from their Lost Creek  entry gate!

This news changes a lot!  First off we will lose the money paid for our reservation in Evanston…gone is a solid $50, right now, here in a minute.  And then we will have to set our clocks for a 3:30 rise in the morning…that was something we were trying to avoid by getting our room in Evanston.  But, we won’t have to pack clothes etc.

Gotta just go with the flow and hope that tomorrow we find two fat cows to bring home with us.

 

Bears Butt

December 4, 2013

 

Written on December 4th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

2ImageBear

Today Weasel and I are heading out of town to get a little closer to our Cow Elk hunting area.  We will spend the night and only have about a half hour drive to get to the Deseret Land and Livestock Ranch, where our elk hunt takes place.

We have hired us a guide to help with bagging and tagging!

Our goal is to have both elk down and back to the rig for the drive home by noon tomorrow!  Wouldn’t that be a kick in the……..

If we hunt all day and don’t bag our animals, the Ranch says we will have one more day this month to make another attempt.

The weather forecast is calling for a Winter Storm Watch, which means SNOW!  And then the temperature drops to around zero at the Ranch!  Highs in the mid 20’s…that will seem very cold to our bodies, considering we have been basking in low 40 temps for over a month.  Our plan is to wear our ice fishing clothing and be ready to shoot our elk very close to the road!  (smiley face)

Bears Butt

Well, this story had been published before I got a call from the DLL Ranch guide.  Because of the impending storm and the fact that the previous two storms caused them to have 0% success, they have opted to cancel tomorrows hunt and reschedule it for this Thursday.  More will come on Wednesday.

Dec. 2, 2013

Written on December 2nd, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

I saw this on Facebook and for all my boating friends, I hope you NEVER have to use this method to get back to the ramp or to the safety of the shoreline, but to have it in your arsenal of things to remember, JUST IN CASE, this is a good one!  I never in my wildest dreams would have thought about doing this.  And I have a drift sock in my boat!

A man named Tom Keer, www.tomkeer.com, wrote this up and the guys at Take Me Fishing posted it.

So, the thing is, here you are out boating and suddenly your steering cable breaks on your boat!  There is no way you can move the engine by hand to get back to the dock…Now What?  You are toast right?  NOT!

You have been smart enough for all your years of boating to know that you need a baling bucket in the boat somewhere, and of course you also have an anchor and rope that goes with that.  So, get ready to put those two worlds together.

Take the bucket (5 gallon type) and make holes in it up near the top, the holes will be on opposite sides of the bucket and for simplicity sake, just make the holes straight up from where the bucket handles are attached.  Don’t use the bucket handle itself, as it will probably break off, but even if it didn’t break, your contraption would not work properly anyway.  So, now you have the holes in the bucket.

Take a good length of your anchor rope, maybe as much as 30 feet of it and put one end of it through one of the holes and tie a big old knot in it, so it won’t come back through the hole.  Then the other end of the rope goes through the other hole and gets its own big old knot tied in it.

So, what are you going to do with this bucket with the rope tied to it?  Let the bucket out of the boat and into the water, hang on to the rope, let the bucket fill with water.  Since you are going to be going at a very low speed and it will take you awhile to get back to the dock, tie off the rope to somewhere near the center of the back of the boat.  You will probably have the rope tied at or near the center of the motor and with an outboard motor you will most likely have rope on each side of it.  Remember, your steering cable is broken and so the motor is not going to be able to be moved.  Hopefully the cable broke with the motor pushing the boat straight, if not you will get the feeling for what you have to do to get the boat going in the direction you need it to go.

How?

With the drag of the bucket full of water, the boat will naturally turn itself in the direction the drag is coming from.  So if you want your boat to turn to the right, put the bucket closer to the right side of the boat, a left turn has the bucket closer to the left side or even completely off the left side.

Tom reminds you in his article that you are trying to get back to the dock or to shore and you are not in any kind of race…go slow to go fast, is what I say.  Make your moves in small increments until you get it all figured out.  The motor will push the boat forward, now it’s up to you to make the boat go in the direction you need it to go.

If you don’t have a bucket big enough, use your coat, a tarp, an umbrella, an empty cooler, something that will hold a substantial amount of water and be able to be tied to the rope.

There you go folks!  Happy boating and be safe!

Thanks Mr. Keer for giving me permission to use your idea!

Bears Butt

December 1, 2013

Steer with a Homemade Drogue

 

Drastic measures call for drastic means.  When your boat’s steering cable goes down for the count you’ve got to figure out a way to get back in. Make a drogue.  Drogues are commonly known as sea anchors designed to slow a boat.  If they’re moved from side to side, drogues can change a boat’s course.  While a traditional drogue is made from canvas and is hung off a boat transom on a bridle, you can make one out of two everyday items and be home in time for supper. You probably already have the components on board: a bucket used to carry some of your gear and an anchor line. In an emergency all you need to do is to rig it up and head for home.

Tools:

  1. A 5-gallon bucket
  2. A 50-foot nylon line.

Method:

  1. Attach the line to the bucket. Drill two holes where the handle meets the bucket.  Take one entire length of line, and run the tag ends through each side and tie a double overhand knot for bulk.  If you’re using a ½ inch line, make the holes ½ inch in diameter.
  2. Put your boat in gear. Remember that you’re steering with a bucket, so keep the RPM’s low.  Your goal is to get home, not win a race.
  3. Toss the bucket overboard. Allow the bucket to fill with water.  Let equal amounts of line out and make sure the lines are of even length.
  4. Let out line.  Depending on the length of your boat, gradually release line and give the bucket distance from the transom.  One full wavelength from the transom is usually ideal.
  5. Cleat the lines. Tie off each line on the stern cleats on the port and starboard sides.
  6. Left means left. To turn left, gradually shorten the port line.  To turn right, let out the line so the bucket returns to the center and gradually shorten the starboard line. Mark the spot when the boat turns and you can go immediately to that spot when you need to turn.
  7. Adjust the bucket.  Shift the drogue back and forth from port to starboard to accommodate for waves and current until you’re on course.  A bucket to slightly to either side of the propeller makes gradual turns while a bucket further to the side makes sharper turns.

 

 

Tom Keer is an award-winning freelance writer who lives on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Visit him at www.tomkeer.com or at http://www.thekeergroup.com .

– See more at: http://blog.takemefishing.org/steer-with-a-homemade-drogue/?utm_source=hootsuite&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=socialmedia#sthash.bH7amhLg.dpuf

Steer with a Homemade Drogue

 

Drastic measures call for drastic means.  When your boat’s steering cable goes down for the count you’ve got to figure out a way to get back in. Make a drogue.  Drogues are commonly known as sea anchors designed to slow a boat.  If they’re moved from side to side, drogues can change a boat’s course.  While a traditional drogue is made from canvas and is hung off a boat transom on a bridle, you can make one out of two everyday items and be home in time for supper. You probably already have the components on board: a bucket used to carry some of your gear and an anchor line. In an emergency all you need to do is to rig it up and head for home.

Tools:

  1. A 5-gallon bucket
  2. A 50-foot nylon line.

Method:

  1. Attach the line to the bucket. Drill two holes where the handle meets the bucket.  Take one entire length of line, and run the tag ends through each side and tie a double overhand knot for bulk.  If you’re using a ½ inch line, make the holes ½ inch in diameter.
  2. Put your boat in gear. Remember that you’re steering with a bucket, so keep the RPM’s low.  Your goal is to get home, not win a race.
  3. Toss the bucket overboard. Allow the bucket to fill with water.  Let equal amounts of line out and make sure the lines are of even length.
  4. Let out line.  Depending on the length of your boat, gradually release line and give the bucket distance from the transom.  One full wavelength from the transom is usually ideal.
  5. Cleat the lines. Tie off each line on the stern cleats on the port and starboard sides.
  6. Left means left. To turn left, gradually shorten the port line.  To turn right, let out the line so the bucket returns to the center and gradually shorten the starboard line. Mark the spot when the boat turns and you can go immediately to that spot when you need to turn.
  7. Adjust the bucket.  Shift the drogue back and forth from port to starboard to accommodate for waves and current until you’re on course.  A bucket to slightly to either side of the propeller makes gradual turns while a bucket further to the side makes sharper turns.

 

 

Tom Keer is an award-winning freelance writer who lives on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Visit him at www.tomkeer.com or at http://www.thekeergroup.com .

– See more at: http://blog.takemefishing.org/steer-with-a-homemade-drogue/?utm_source=hootsuite&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=socialmedia#sthash.bH7amhLg.dpuf

Steer with a Homemade Drogue

 

Drastic measures call for drastic means.  When your boat’s steering cable goes down for the count you’ve got to figure out a way to get back in. Make a drogue.  Drogues are commonly known as sea anchors designed to slow a boat.  If they’re moved from side to side, drogues can change a boat’s course.  While a traditional drogue is made from canvas and is hung off a boat transom on a bridle, you can make one out of two everyday items and be home in time for supper. You probably already have the components on board: a bucket used to carry some of your gear and an anchor line. In an emergency all you need to do is to rig it up and head for home.

Tools:

  1. A 5-gallon bucket
  2. A 50-foot nylon line.

Method:

  1. Attach the line to the bucket. Drill two holes where the handle meets the bucket.  Take one entire length of line, and run the tag ends through each side and tie a double overhand knot for bulk.  If you’re using a ½ inch line, make the holes ½ inch in diameter.
  2. Put your boat in gear. Remember that you’re steering with a bucket, so keep the RPM’s low.  Your goal is to get home, not win a race.
  3. Toss the bucket overboard. Allow the bucket to fill with water.  Let equal amounts of line out and make sure the lines are of even length.
  4. Let out line.  Depending on the length of your boat, gradually release line and give the bucket distance from the transom.  One full wavelength from the transom is usually ideal.
  5. Cleat the lines. Tie off each line on the stern cleats on the port and starboard sides.
  6. Left means left. To turn left, gradually shorten the port line.  To turn right, let out the line so the bucket returns to the center and gradually shorten the starboard line. Mark the spot when the boat turns and you can go immediately to that spot when you need to turn.
  7. Adjust the bucket.  Shift the drogue back and forth from port to starboard to accommodate for waves and current until you’re on course.  A bucket to slightly to either side of the propeller makes gradual turns while a bucket further to the side makes sharper turns.

 

 

Tom Keer is an award-winning freelance writer who lives on Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Visit him at www.tomkeer.com or at http://www.thekeergroup.com .

– See more at: http://blog.takemefishing.org/steer-with-a-homemade-drogue/?utm_source=hootsuite&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=socialmedia#sthash.bH7amhLg.dpuf

Written on December 1st, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

FirstNightFire

I’ve been busy all day with grinding elk meat and making burger out of it and my thoughts have been about “what if’s”….And then it dawned on my that last year at this very time we were standing around a campfire, much like the one I have posted here, only with No Grimace and Baby Boy in the Crawfords!  YES!  We were there to enjoy another in a series of Crawford hunts!  The one for the big bucks!

BabyBoysBigBuck3

But not so this year.

The year before last, we were there to assist Dry Dog in getting his big buck off the Crawford mountain!  And with a bit of luck and some expert shooting that did in fact happen!

DryDogsBigBuck

And the year before that!  The famous “Chosen Ones Hunt” of 2010!  5 for 5!

5for5

And so with this being like, year 4 of several way cool hunts, it’s no wonder I feel sort of lost right now.  After all, right now is when the chosen Crawford team of 13 or so hunters are there enjoying their hunt of a lifetime!

I can’t complain, what with getting a bull elk of a lifetime a week or so ago, and a cow elk hunt coming up in 3 days…what could be better?

What will next year bring?

Whatever it brings, remember folks, you don’t get the tag by not applying in the upcoming months.  Keep an eye on this site for the announcements! This year, 2014 is going to be a great one and I say that because some of my Grandkids are going to be hunting big game for the first time in their lives and I’m gonna be there to make sure they have the time of their lives!

Bears Butt

November 29, 2013

Written on November 29th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

OraBoreallisFire

So, is hunting at an end in Bears Butt’s life for the rest of this year?  Hardly!

Before getting the chance to “turn down” the San Juan elk tag, Weasel and I had put in for a cow elk tag for the Deseret Land and Livestock CWMU area and of course with Butt Luck on our side….we drew out!

You have read about how we had to qualify to be able to hunt on their ranch etc. and coming soon is our scheduled date to hunt for our cows.

December 3 is our first outing.

We have sent them all the necessary waivers, our qualification papers and have been in contact with the “man”, via email and are now waiting for the word on what time of day they want us there.  We look at it more as a “shoot” than a “hunt”…at least that is what I’m hoping for…drive in…take one shot each and come home with two big old cow elk.  That works for me!

If this comes to be, I will see my freezer full of more meat than I have ever seen it!

Muskrat…the Un-turkey shoot chili is on me next year!

Bears Butt

November 24, 2013

Written on November 24th, 2013 , Hunting/Fishing/Trapping Stories
By: Bears Butt

ButtWeaselTrackerWithBull

No story would be complete without the “complete” rest of the story!  Right?

So, the big boy is finally on the ground and safe to be around.  Well, as safe as the guys moving around it that is.  Think about the guy that almost died when he slipped and fell on his elk’s antlers earlier this season.  In our turn I think we each backed into this guys rack at least once.

With this guy down, we new we had to get him processed as quickly as we could in order to save the meat, after all that was why we were here.  We had discussed with Night Fisher how he and his dad and brothers processed their elk once they were down and he said that most often they would do it “the gutless method”.  That is, they would skin back the hide and take the meat off the bones without opening up the belly and removing the guts first.  So, that is how we were going to do this elk.

I had watched several videos over the last three months and saw exactly how it was done in them.  I was very confident to be able to do it for real right now.  I had also watched videos on how to cape a big bull while it was laying on the ground as well.  So, not only are we going to take off the hide, we are going to take all the meat too.  Including the tenderloins and the liver.

BigOldBull

Here is the big animal.  How much does it weigh?  Heaven only knows, but I’m guessing 800 pounds.  That is a lot of hide, meat and bones right there.  What are we going to need to get all the meat off the bones?

TarpAndThingsNeededForProcessingElk

I have brought four, very sharp knives for this project.  Tracker and Weasel both have knives as well.  Tracker has brought out a roll of paper towels and I have my hydration pack for drinks.  We also have several cloth bags in which we can put the meat for packing it out….or….in this case we can put the meat right into the cooler.  I mean, after all, how far do you usually shoot a big old bull elk from a road?

HowFarFromTheTruck

My first cut of the hide is from the mid point of his back, right behind the shoulder and down toward its belly.  And then from that same mid point on the back, down to its rear end.  Continuing that cut around his butt and down the inside of the up side rear leg.

Skinning the lower portion of the elk first will allow Weasel to begin taking off meat from the hind quarters, while I skin the cape.  My cape cuts will be from that same mid point on the back, up to the base of the skull and then an angle cut from a point at mid chest over to the back of the up side front leg and then down the backside of that leg to below the knee.

HalfTheHideSkinnedOff

I was too busy cutting meat to take a picture of the front half of the animal skinned back, but you get the idea.  In the picture above, Weasel can begin taking big chunks of meat off the bones.  Our goal here is to take all the meat we can and leave very little for the crows and coyotes.

WeaselCuttingOutBackstraps

Weasel is doing a great job of removing the back straps from this animal.  Next would be a “careful” cut just behind the last rib and down toward the rear of the animal, being very careful not to puncture the insides.  And then reaching in and cutting out the tenderloins.  When this is all done and everyone is happy about the removal of all the meat from this side, the animal is flipped over and the whole process is repeated on the other side.

When we were done this is what it looked like after we re-constructed where the parts used to belong.

LeftVeryLittleMeat

We ended up with a very large cooler full of meat and a smaller one full as well.

TwoFullCoolersAndaBucketOfLiver

The little red lid bucket holds the liver.  In order to get to the liver, we actually ended up opening up the gut cavity and pulling the skeleton away from them.  We managed to cleanly cut away the tenderloins this way as well.  Why?  Well, because by the time we got all the meat off the bones, the animals stomach had swollen so big, it was almost scary to think about the possibility of puncturing them.  Actually, I tried to carefully do that and got a face full of ugly stinky stuff, nuff said.

It took two of us to handle each of the coolers, with the larger of the two being quite a task.

TakingABreakFromPackingItOut

PackingItOut

AlmostPackedToTruck

It took the three of us to get that cooler lifted and put into the back of the truck.  I figure about 200 pounds of meat in that cooler.

The other cooler was much smaller and weighed in the neighborhood of 100 pounds.

I have to commend the men and women who like to hunt 5 miles away from any road and insist on backpacking their elk meat back to camp or the vehicle.  20 yards was enough for us old guys.  Besides, the beer was very cold in the back of the truck.

ButtAndCape

LoadedForTheRideBackToCamp

On the way back to camp, Tracker had to make sure he had some special effects video’s and we did not mind at all.  We had the rest of the day to goof off and didn’t have to go to town for re-supplies….YAAAAAAA!!!!

TrackerGettingSpecialEffects

But, Weasel and I were getting worried that maybe 42 beers would not be enough for this party that was going on!

Back at camp we unloaded all the meat and put it in the shade of a nice big cedar.  Opened up another drink and toasted “Bull Down”!!!!  And then I opened up the 30 pack of Keystone and what to my surprise…one of their special orange beer cans…the prize sought throughout the land!

KeystoneFindTheCanContest

That just added a little more party to the party!

Better clean off some of this dried blood.

WashingUpBackAtCamp

Then we had to get some more special effects going on.  So we loaded the head and hide onto Trackers pack frame and I hauled it around the camp.

GettingThePackWithHeadOn

PackingItOutOnMyBack

GoodThingI'mTall

What a fun ending to a perfect hunt!  But wait it’s not over…the sun is still up!

HeadAndCapeInEveningSun

BeaverSharnsAndAntlers

And for supper…what better than to clean out the fridge and have whatever is in there, along with some good old fresh elk steaks!

TrackerCookingElkSteaks

ElkSteaksHashbrownsGarlicBread

Elk steaks, hash browns and garlic toast!  I have to say, “IT JUST DOESN’T GET ANY BETTER THAN THAT”!!!!

Good job guys!  And THANKS AGAIN!

GoodJobGuys

Bears Butt

November 22, 2013

TrackerButtWeaselWithTheBigOne2

We came home Friday, Nov. 15, 2013, without incident.  Left camp at 7:30 a.m. and were home in Willard at 4 p.m.

The End of my Elk Dream Hunt!

 

Written on November 22nd, 2013 , DREAM HUNTS
By: Bears Butt

BearWithAntlersModified

As has happened every morning for a full week, the alarm clock goes off directly as it is set to do.  The coffee is tasting good, as usual, and I for one am getting anxious for a good hot shower.  Today we have to go to town and restock on supplies and none of us are looking forward to that.  Maybe while we are in town we should look for a truck stop that offers showers…sounds good to me.

I am sitting there drinking my coffee and thinking about the hunt as it has played out so far and wishing I could go back to last Saturday and refine my aim.  But that isn’t going to happen.  My mind races to all the preparation for this hunt and what one of my mentors said to me:  It’s a tough hunt, both physically and mentally so prepare yourself for both of those things (Thanks Blanding Boy).

Physically I’m in pretty good shape.  I worked hard at that for over three months.  Mentally?  Well, I thought I had prepared well for that and my attitude has been pretty positive so far.  Even right now I feel pretty UP, but with a trip to town on the horizon, I’m not ready for that, but if we are going to stay any longer, we have to go in for some beer at least.  I have a 12 pack left and Weasel has a 30 pack.  I suppose we could make it a couple more days with 42 beers, but no food.  Beer is the all food drink, but some food would be good.  Besides Tracker needs some Whiskey too.  We have to go to town, there are no two ways about it.

I remember in one of my stories leading up to this trip that I could hardly wait to get up into the San Juan Mountains and look up at the stars…200 billion and six, or something like that, is what I said.  And right now would be a good time to go out and see if my camera can take a picture of the early morning night sky.

OrionsBeltAndPartOfTaurus

It’s pretty hard to see what with the dust specs and all, but you can see Orions belt and that means Taurus is in there somewhere too.  Taurus is the Bull (elk in my case) and looking around I think I could count 200 billion and six stars.  The sky is clear and bright and visibility is way past as far as you can see.  It’s going to be a beautiful day.  No wind at all.

So, what is the plan?  Well, I want to be up near where we saw the two bulls yesterday morning.  They might be out in the clearing and working their way toward where we saw them climbing the mountain.  If we can catch them near the road I might have a chance.  You never know.  Then Tracker reminded me that where we saw them yesterday was Not Hammer Camp, but rather Sleigh Camp.  It was one road down from Hammer Camp, closer to our camp.

I don’t know how he keeps all of this straight as I had it in my head that we had gone all the way to the end of the mesa and then up to the end of a side road and that it was Hammer camp, the place I found a miners hammer.  But he said no, we went up a side road that ended with a stump of a tree that looked like something Santa Claus would ride and had me sit on it and pretend to be whipping the crap out of Rudolph.  He is exactly right.

Well, there is where I want to be this morning at first light and that means we have to leave camp about a half hour before light.

That being said, we all put a bit of a hustle on to get ready.  We managed to leave right on time and bounced up the road in the dark of an early morning day.  The sky getting brighter every second.

As we approached the Sleigh road that branched off the main one, Weasel went past it.  I had him stop and back up and pull over to the side so others could get by if anyone came along.  We had not seen nor heard another vehicle for two days, but you never know.

We got out of the truck and carefully closed the doors without slamming them.  I put a shell in the chamber (as a good muzzleloader man would say, I put a suppository up the rear of the gun) and slung the rifle over my shoulder.  It was a beautiful morning unfolding before us and with the sun going to be at our backs any elk that might be up on the hill above would have the sun it its face.  Tracker was ready with his equipment and Weasel with his binoculars.  We already knew we had to go slow, quiet, and glass everywhere. We didn’t want to get busted like we did yesterday or the day before or whenever it was that that happened.  We hadn’t gone even 100 yards up the dirt road when Weasel excitedly whispered “DAD…ELK OVER HERE”!!!!  I looked to my right and quickly saw three elk on the hillside about 500 yards or so out.  My binoculars verified all three were bulls.  How big?  Who cares!  They are bulls and now is my chance to drop one!  But not at that range.  We have to get closer.

We quickly backtracked and then angled their way and got in the cover of a finger of cedar and pinion trees that would afford us plenty of cover to close the distance by at least half.  We moved quickly and quietly.  My heart was pounding like it has never pounded in all my life.  I could feel the rush of adrenaline pumping through my veins and my breath became weak.  I had to stop once inside the trees and stand upright and take a deep breath.  I looked at the other two and the grins on their faces told me they were feeling the same way I was.  We moved closer to the end of the finger of trees.  The opening the bulls were in extended from the end of this line of trees up to the edge of the mesa.  Back from the end of the cedar line we were sneaking through about 50 yards or maybe even more, I could see an elk standing high up on the ridge, maybe 300 yards distance.  I stopped and glassed it.  I could not see all of its antlers but I could see it was a nice big mature bull for sure.  I bent down and picked up some dirt to check the wind.  There was little to no breeze but what there was went from our right to our left.  This is a good direction for it to be going as the elk are feeding from our right to our left.

As we continued to move slowly forward I kept thinking about all the things that go into a well placed shot using a scope.  The scope has to be level and not canted to one side or another.  The rifle has to be placed into the shoulder in such a way as to give the shooter a full field of view through the scope, no amount of “black” ring around the outside edges of the scope.  With my short arms, I know I have to really pull the rifle in and lean slightly forward in order to have a full field of view with this rifle and scope set up.  I’m thinking about breath control and squeezing my whole hand rather than just my trigger finger while holding the cross hairs on the exact spot I want the bullet to hit.

My heart is pounding uncontrollably and we are nearing the end of the finger of trees.  I see movement in front of and  slightly to our right through the tree branches and I know this is the end of the line for us.  I have to get set up and set up fast and now!  Right here and no closer to the open hillside.

I sit down and quarter myself so my rifle will be almost at a ninety degree angle to my body and pointing toward the opening between two cedar trees that are about 30 yards in front of us and are about 20 yards apart.  I hold the rifle up and go through all the same thought process’ about level scope, pull the rifle in, breath control etc. etc. etc. and then I realize my heart is pumping so hard the scope is jumping almost a full inch with each pump.  I look around and see a single cedar stick laying on the ground.  I whisper to Weasel to hand it to me, which he does.  I poke the small end into the ground hard without making any noise and then rest the gun barrel on top of the stick and the clinched fist of my left hand.  I consciously wrap my index finger up and over the barrel to make sure it’s going to stay in place.  Looking through the scope my heart is still causing the view through the scope to jump, but only a fraction of what it was without the stick.  It will have to do.

I look up from the scope and take another deep breath.  It’s almost show time and I want to be ready, but I sure could use a nap right now to get the nerves calmed down some.  Another deep breath and then I see movement through the cedar tree on the right.  From that cedar tree to the next one going left I have about a 70 yard opening in which to shoot.  If the bull is not running I might have a chance.  If it’s running I’ll have a “hope I can do it” shot.  My heart is pounding harder than ever now, and the bull is about to come into full view.

I settle down on the rifle stock and pull it in for a full field of view.  I’m holding my breath as the big animal comes into full view…feeding along without a care in the world.  I count the points…1,2,3,4,5…A nice 5X5 and it’s mine if I want it.  Without putting my finger on the trigger, I put the cross hairs on its shoulder and followed it through the entire 70 yard lane and watch it disappear behind the cedar on the left side of my lane.

I’m thinking to myself, “Wynn, What did you just do?!  You let a giant bull elk walk right in front of you and now it’s down wind!  What if it smells you and busts and takes the rest of the herd with it?!!!  You dummy”!!!

Just then I caught another animal’s movement behind the right side cedar.  I settle into the scope once more and the bull steps out feeding just like the first one.  Another 5X5, maybe slightly larger than the first.  My cross hairs are on the shoulder as it continues its trek across the opening between the cedars and then it’s gone just like the first one!  My thoughts return to the wind and the very real possibility of those two elk smelling us…two bulls crossed within shooting distance and I didn’t shoot.

Then more movement behind the cedar and out steps a smallish 4X4 bull.  It too takes the same path as its brothers before and I in turn follow with the scope and practice some control of shooting without actually shooting.  I’m getting pretty good at this.  But what about the breeze…now there are three of them down wind!

I came up off the scope and took a deep breath.  I looked towards Weasel who is now looking through his binoculars with them turned up on their side, his head cocked accordingly.  He is trying to view the animal between cedar trees as it fed calmly along.  I can see the animal coming and I can see part of its antlers.  I whisper to him, “Is this my bull”?  He does not respond.  I whisper a bit louder, “Is this my bull”?  No response again.  And then I can see the bull is about to come into view.  I’m back on the scope with all the thoughts as before, I want to hear Weasel tell me this is the “big one”, but he doesn’t and even though the bull has just about to come into full view I whisper once again… “Brandon!  Is this my bull”?  I have the scope on his shoulder when I hear Weasel whisper back, “I don’t know if it’s the biggest, but it is a nice bull and if you want to take it you better”!

With that, I took a short quick breath and concentrated on the cross hair placement and pulled the trigger!  BOOOOMMM!  And through the scope I saw it drop like a ton of bricks and didn’t kick a leg or try and get up or nothing.  It just fell and stayed down.

Weasel yelled “He’s down!  He’s Down!  Great job dad”!!!!

My body collapsed and I fell backwards onto my back with the rifle laying across my chest.  My head was reeling from the adrenaline rush and I had to lay there a second to catch my breath.  I took a very deep breath and thought to myself….It’s over…Thank God it’s over…What a RUSH!  And as I sat back up I could see more elk running through the opening farther out and could see they too were bulls.  Eight total in my count.  I was slow to stand and Tracker made me sit back down and re-enact the shot and falling backwards.  I think he does that sort of thing to make sure the hunter has all his faculties and at that moment I’m not sure I had all of mine.  Standing back up the second time, I looked out across the open sage and grass flat and could see the bull had not moved so much as an eye brow since I pulled the trigger.  Wherever that bullet hit was the perfect place to kill a big bull elk instantly and I’m certain it had nothing to do with how I was aiming.  I’ve never shot a bull elk before and where I was aiming was just plain and simply the biggest part of its chest.  My heart was pounding so hard at that time the bullet could have gone almost anywhere.  I’m just very happy it put him down for the count and he didn’t run off and down in some God forsaken deep hell hole where we would have had to try and get on him for a follow up shot and then have to pack him out.  THANK YOU GOD!

And so, with the big bull on the ground we started our slow walk up toward him.  I had chambered another round in the Ruger Number One that I was carrying, put the rifle on safe and was moving toward what was the biggest animal I have ever shot in all my 64 years of life.  As I got closer, it got bigger and bigger and bigger.  Ground shrinkage is something that just didn’t happen with this animal and when I put my foot against its rump and pushed and there was no push back, I knew then and there he was mine and that I could relax and say, “Cross that one off your bucket list Bears Butt!  He’s yours”!

My life long dream of shooting such a magnificent animal was over.  Sure, it’s not the biggest and baddest animal on the planet, nor was it the biggest in this bachelor group, but it is the one I shot and it’s the biggest and baddest one I will ever shoot.  I’m so very happy my grin goes from one side of my face to the other and then it wraps around a couple of times.  Everything that went into the preparation, planning, travel, extra work and effort paid off in spades.

A hearty THANK YOU TO WINEMAKER!  When I decided to accept the offer to take this tag, she said she would take on extra hours at work to help pay for it and she did thanks in part to her boss and the Smith and Edwards Company.

And a hearty THANK YOU TO TRACKER AND WEASEL for sticking it out with me and not giving up!  To go as long as we did and then plan on extending until the sun goes down on the last day is a very big commitment.

Not to forget the wives and loved ones of those few who actually got to go on this hunt.  The ones that stayed home to keep the home fires burning and tending to their jobs and families.  The support I had on this dream hunt has been phenomenal and I want you all to know I have not forgotten and will never forget the sacrifices that were made.  THANK YOU!

I wish EVERYONE; Winemaker,  Wapiti, Softball, Edjukateer, Night Fisher, Dennis and Uncle Bob could have been here at this finale!  I hope this story helps to bring you into it and to know just what it was to have been there.

I have enjoyed many a goose and duck hunt, where proper decoy placement and calling had them coming in with their wings cupped and their feet down.  I’ve shot several amazing deer.  But there will NEVER be a hunt with the drama that this one ended with.  Thanks again!

THANK YOU AGAIN GOD!

TrackerButtWeaselWithTheBigOne2

BullDownFor the record folks, I was wearing my blaze orange hat and vest during this hunt.

BullDown4And for the PETA folks, Only one animal was harmed in the taking of this fine bull elk.

Bears Butt

November 20, 2013

Written on November 22nd, 2013 , DREAM HUNTS
By: Bears Butt

RearSideWithCapote

BEEP!  BEEP!  BEEP!  BEEP!  GOOD MORNING VIETNAM!!!!!

Well, not quite, but we did discuss some of what occurred over there last night while sitting around the camp fire.  It’s Wednesday morning and the coffee is tasting very good again today.  What is the plan?  Well, to kill an elk is always the plan, but we only heard elk yesterday and the direction they were running makes you wonder if maybe they didn’t go back into the area where I got my shot the first evening of the hunt.  Maybe we should go over and look in their again today.  But then Weasel did stomp through there last night right after dark and he did say he heard something running.  I don’t know for sure what to do right now.

We know there are elk still around us and with the moon being almost full, we could have had more move in while we were sleeping.  Let’s go up the road and this time sneak in to look at that clearing where we spooked them yesterday morning.  Maybe we will see them this time.  If not, we will continue up the road to the last road branching off (Hammer camp), take a look in there and then work back down and go for a walk to the watering hole that Weasel saw last night while up on the side of the butte.  We have not seen that water hole up close yet.  Is today the day?

Our spirits are pretty high still and we have lots of days left to hunt.  The sign is still in the area and it’s pretty much all fresh.  We have even seen elk hoof prints in some of our own boot tracks.  This is good stuff.  There is no sense leaving camp until we can see our sights as the elk could be right around the corner.  After all we are camped next to a big watering hole but the only animals visiting it are domestic cows.  We have even dusted off the trails leading to it and only seeing domestic cow tracks when we check them.  Are these cattle keeping the “real animals” away?  We don’t know for sure, but we do know there are lots of watering holes around here and the elk don’t seem to mind the cattle.

At first light we are in the truck and putting up the road at a snails pace, hoping and wishing a big bull elk would show itself.  We make it all the way up to Hammer Camp road and don’t see anything except more tracks.  Tracker wants to video us coming out of there and so Weasel and I sit in the truck and wait for his signal.  Then too our right and up on the side of a butte, I see movement.  I bail out of the truck and put the glasses on it…a bull elk!  And there is another behind it!  Wholly crap, look at the size of that thing!  It almost dwarfed the first one.  Both of them are traversing the side of a very steep butte and going around the end of a finger of the hill and out of sight.  Dang nice bulls right there!  Well at least we saw some today!  No way for a shot as they were 6 or 700 yards out and up, but we saw them!

We radio Tracker who comes back to the truck hoping to get some footage of the beasts, but they were long gone by then.  So, down the road we went, stopping once to try and get another view of them from the other side of that finger…no luck.  From their angle they could be anywhere over on that side and a mile from our position.  Just like Night Fisher said, they like to find the deepest and nastiest stuff to hold up in during the day and those two brutes were headed right into the thick of it!  Not something for the faint of heart I assure you…did I tell you I was feeling faint?

Well, we slowly drove down to the place we spooked them yesterday and made a slow and quiet walk out to where we could glass the opening.  We used the trees for cover and did not just walk down the road like we did yesterday.  Nothing.  So, now is the time to walk down to the second water hole, the one Weasel saw while high on the side of the bluff last night.

Our hike didn’t take too long and we saw a ton of elk tracks along the way.  In the water laid a wheeled devise used to help a hunter get a critter out of the back country.  Apparently it developed a flat tire and the hunter decided he had had enough of it and pushed it into the pond.

SecondPond

Most of the tracks we saw around this pond were domestic cattle, in fact as we cautiously approached the pond a group of them got up quickly and stampeded off…Tracker said, “Hell we can’t even sneak up on tame cows”!  I think they smelled us…heck we haven’t had a bath since last Thursday!

Continuing to explorer the area around this pond, we went to the edge of the mesa and the view was spectacular, like always.

ViewSouthOfSecondMesa

DeepValleySouthSide

You know beyond all doubt the elk are down in there.  We glass a while but my heart wasn’t into going down into there to look around, what if we nailed one down in that hole?  Would it really be worth it?  I know that Night Fisher would go down in there in a heart beat!  We decided to look somewhere else and turned around and went toward the backside of Cathedral Butte.

The saddle that connects Cathedral Butte and the next one on the South (I’m going to call that one Night Fisher Butte, just because he was the one who spotted the first elk of the hunt on the side of it), was where we thought Whitey had taken his herd over last Sunday.  Now we are on the back side of it and I wanted to go and see just by chance if that herd of elk might be coming in this direction again.  It’s very possible if they were out in the clearing all night, they might be coming our way.

So we decided to take a little hike and see if we could find their trail.  It didn’t take us long at all to find the trail…four feet wide and tore all to heck with elk tracks.  Sure enough, Whitey had lead his entire herd up and over this saddle just like we thought he had.  We continued to follow the trail and all the while I was hoping we would see that big cuss coming our direction.  It didn’t happen.

We found a way cool wash that was quiet to walk down and that was a big part of the trail the elk had used.

UpTheWash

DownTheWash

We stayed on their trail, all the while keeping a close watch for movement and being as quiet as we possibly could.  At times we had to take off layers as the sun was getting up in the air and it was a pretty warm day.

TakingOffLayers

We are standing in the trail right here and with all the trees around us, we would have had to of been right on top of an elk to see it.  I’d call this “Thick”!

Well, our short jaunt to see the pond ended up with us hiking all the way around Cathedral Butte, past camp and eventually back to where we parked the pickup….6 miles.  None of us felt the worst for wear, but it did devour the day.  We went back into camp to cook up our hot dogs and decide what to do for the evening.

While at camp getting the hot dogs ready we talked about “tomorrow”.  Tomorrow is Thursday and we had planned our stay through today, Wednesday.  Our evening meal of burgers tonight will exhaust our provisions.  We needed to take an inventory of our supplies and plan a trip to town tomorrow to stock up.  Weasel got out his inventory computer and began to input our grocery list.  We made up a menu to include more steak, burgers, hot dogs, bread, whiskey and beer.  We had some left over chicken from the Rabbit Chicken night that would do us as a noon meal tomorrow on our way into town.  If we made it part of the plan to be on the road off Salt Creek Mesa by 10 a.m., we could make the 2 hour trip to Monticello, spend an hour shopping and the 2 hour trip back and be back for an evening hunt by 3 pm.  That’s the plan for tomorrow.  What about this evening?

The plan was made to go back up as far as Hammer Camp and then slowly come back down past camp and down to the lower road we had seen and been on briefly a couple of day ago.  This will take us past the clearing where I had gotten my shot last Saturday as well and in fact would completely cover the road through Salt Creek Mesa from end to end.  How could an evening drive be any better?

We went up to Hammer camp and turned around and started our slow drive back down the road.  Suddenly Tracker calls out ” STOP THE TRUCK”!!!!!!  He bails out and picks up a really nice drop horn!  Right off the side of the road!

TrackerFindsAdrop

How much better does it get?!!!  Good eye Tracker!  A fine drop horn if ever I have seen one!  A fine thing to find as the day is coming to a close.  You would expect to find something like that on a six mile hike, but never right next to a main dirt road.

We continue to travel down the road and take the last side road that took us out and across a flat and very close to the base of Bridger Jack Mesa, East of our camp.  There we decided the day was over.  The sunset behind Cathedral Butte was a show to be seen.

SunsetOverCathedralButte

CathedralButteSunset

And as the sun continued to set it just got prettier!

BrilliantSunsetOverCathedralButte

What a nice place to be on such a beautiful day!  Thank you God for sharing this with us.

And just like all the nights before, it got dark quickly and we found our way back at camp once more.  Tracker put his fine find under the beaver sharns and we went back to camp living!

TrackerPlacesDropUnderBeaverSharns

FindingsUnderSharns

Tonight’s meal is a simple one and basically the last of our food…burgers on buns, with a slice of onion and lots of chips and beer.  YUMMY!

And by the looks of this picture the troops were very hungry!

BurgerNight

After that 6 mile hike we  were all very much ready for bed by nine and so it was lights out!

Alarm set for 5:15 a.m.?  Check!

Bears Butt

Nov. 20, 2013

Written on November 21st, 2013 , DREAM HUNTS

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BearsButt.com | Stories, Ramblings & Random Stuff From an Old Mountain Man

Just some of my old stories, new stories, and in general what is going on in my life.