A Cold Camp
I had plans to take off work on Friday and so I would be
driving up to the Mountains on Thursday evening after work to set up camp. Camp this weekend would only consist of my fellow
elk hunting bud Jeff and myself. Evan was supposed to attend but his family
caught a case of Norovirus and he had to cancel. Chris has a social engagement Friday evening, so
he decided not to come and hunted local. A cold front had come up on Thursday morning
and dumped cold air and some flurries up there in the hills. There were several inches of snow forecast on
Saturday afternoon, so we were between fronts and I had high hopes of deer
movement. Temps were in the 20’s as I rolled into camp and set up my tipi after
dark. Jeff had come in about 5 hours
before, so he had a nice fire going in his stove. It was damned cold, and he cooked me up a nice
sausage with onions and peppers for dinner after I had my tent up. I then, set to work on prepping the
longgun. Even the big 8-man tent was too
low for proper ramming of the barrel, so I went outside shortly after this
photo:
I had already cleaned out all the gun oil back at home with
a rinse with acetone, being careful not to get any on the stock. I loaded the pan with a bit of FFFFg Goex and
fired the pan once and it went off solidly, so my flint seemed in good
shape. I swabbed out the bore with a
cleaning patch, then stuck the quill of a pheasant feather into the touch
hole. I poured down 80 grains of FFFg
Goex down the barrel, then set my cleaning patch in as an over powder wad. I have read that this may help with
protecting the powder from Patch grease of the main patch and it cleans some of
the powder down which may have stuck to the side walls. Then, I started the .490 round ball with a
.020 pre-lubed patch (I am still using what I inherited from my dad or
otherwise I would have made my own with bear grease). I seated the ball sprue up on the muzzle and
started it with my short starter. It was
a tight fit…that is good!
Ramming it home well I bounced the ramrod off the ball a few
times to ensure I was well seated and put the rifle in the truck at half cock
to stay cold, condensation may have been an issue with it in the tent.
Preparations now being completed I went back in the tent
with Jeff, had a few snorts of fine bourbon he brought and chatted about
hunting and fishing until it was time to go to my tent and stick up the fire
there. Sleep was sporadic and I was up
feeding the little stove about once every hour, but with temps outside in the
teens it was cozy.
Here is a photo of the camp the next morning, there was no
one else in camp …we had the place to ourselves;
A Crackling Cold Friday morning.
I got up Friday morning, as I often do, before the
alarm. I loaded up the little stove and
fired up the coffee pot eating a sourdough English muffin and breakfast
bar. It had snowed and sleeted enough
overnight to create a fresh coating of snow on the ground. In this area, we have the luxury of driving
up a forest road to the top of the mountain ridge, so I warmed up the truck and
Jeff and I got driving. We just had to circle
around the mountain and drive up the road.
I saw only one or two sets of tracks in the fresh snow from other
trucks, so that was good. One truck was
lower down, and we were heading to the top.
It was first light by the time I had my pack seat on my back
and clicked the lock on the truck doors.
I had about a mile walk ahead of me, but it was fairly flat and across
mountain. The area I wanted to hunt was between
the ridge and the top of a big, abandoned orchard. The area is very thick and chocked with
creeper vines in the green times. I have
seen deer almost every time I have a few hours to sit there, but getting in bow
range is always the trick. Now I had a
few more yards of range to play with! I
sat under a vine chocked bush I had bow hunted from before and had a view on my
right of the ridge top which was more open.
The front was the edge of the thick stuff, and down to the left was
another lane to see if something comes from that way. The wind was blowing in my face! Always lots of squirrel in this area too.
I was set up, had my big wool heavy blanket pants on with
800 gram merino wool longjohns and a thinner merino wool base layer. I put on my heavy plaid wool coat that I had
folded in my packseat on the hike in. I had insulated over shoes on top of my
heavy 1500 gram insulted boots and toe warmers in each. I was going to be comfy sitting for a handful
of hours. I settled in with my rifle on
top of a telescoping rifle stick and cozied down to watch the squirrels play.
Here is the view looking downhill, thick area to the right…
This is the view from the front where I expected deer:
The moment of Truth
I had been sitting there fairly comfortable despite the 20
degree and overcast conditions for about half an hour, when I saw movement to
the right of the picture above…a white flash that at first looked like a
squirrel’s tail, but I soon saw it was the white underside of a deer’s Jaw. I raised my binos and identified the lone
deer as a doe, and readied my rifle on the stick. She was in thick stuff and quartering towards
me, but I had hopes she would continue in that direction into the more open
area. I had not refreshed the powder in
my pan since I sat down….would things go off without a hitch…that was also in
the back of my mind.
I cocked back the hammer to full cock and waited. She, as they commonly do, had other
plans. She was very weary and on
constant high alert. This was the final
weekend of a two week gun season, as well as a week of previous muzzle loader
on this highly pressured public land. Creeping
and to my dismay, she was heading to the left, and towards the impenetrable
tangle of deadfall and vines. If she
kept going that way she may continue downhill and go away forever….
She was between 45 -50 yards away in heavy brush, I needed a
window and a broadside chance at that distance.
After a bit she stepped into a narrow view where I saw the front
leg. I clicked back the set trigger, and
steadied on that spot just behind the shoulder with the very top of the front
blade. The hair trigger was a surprise and the smoke filled BOOOOM echoed
down the mountainside. Through the smoke
I see her big white tail up and running a bit to the right.
I first saw her in the square and she ended up in the star when I fired:
Half the battle was won. The rifle fired without a delay. Now the other half was in question…did I make a hit? And did I imagine a crashing sound after she had run off?
Blood on the ground?
I reloaded the front stuffer from the horn and loading block and kicked off my overshoes. I went to where I thought she was standing, but saw no sign of blood or hair…Oh no. I decided to circle back to the right where I thought she went…nothing. I started to panic.
Then I went back to the shot site and searched again a little farther back. There, I saw blood. Dark and red and frozen on the heads of The matted tan week seed heads and grass. It was so cold the blood froze almost on contact with the ground in star pattens.
It wasn’t great blood, but it was steady and I could follow it fairly well. The doe ran straight away from me as it turns out and traveled quite a ways after being struck. I was about 70 yards after the hit area, when I crossed a rocky short wall of rocks that began an area of thick laurel. I crept slowly at the ready in case she decided to jump up still alive. Then, I heard walking to my right. A line of 7-8 does was approaching! The lead doe was large and offered my a quick chance at about the same 50 yard distance through brush as the one I was trailing. I cocked back the hammer but a feeling of cautiousness rolled over me as I was recreating a shot that maybe wasn’t the best, and doing so freehand. Should I shoot? She helped me answer as the window closed and they all flowed by me nervously never a clear shot in the open. I really didn’t want to deal with another iffy shot when I had one down that I may still not find…or may.
After they had gone I eased the hammer back and continued to
follow easy blood. Then about 15 yards
farther down, maybe 8o yards from the shot, I see her laying there.
A nice fat adult doe, and about a perfect double lung shot.
The area made it clear that she had expired very quickly and
maybe that was her crashing I heard not long after the shot. The trail reminded me of a bow kill.
There was splatter on a nearby tree trunk in that star
pattern as the blood froze on contact.
I was very happy, and now I could use the packout bags for
the first time. I wasn’t about to drag
this doe out of the woods for a mile back to the truck. I searched my pocket for the yellow folding
knife that Nate gifted me to start skinning, but I had left it in my other pants. Oh well, I pulled out my newly acquired Green
River hunter I had under my coat and around my neck as a neck knife and it did
a careful job skinning as I began the gutless method. I had my first chance to use my TAG game bags
and Pack out bags. Alas not on an elk,
and when I unfolded the pack out bags, I found the shoulder plastic supports
were dry rotted and cracking LOL. I wanted
the hide on this to tan, so I was careful not to cut any holes. I found out that all I needed was 2 big elk
bags, as I could put a hind quarter and a front from each side in each
bag. Then I used a smaller nag for the loins,
tender loins, and all the neck, skirt meat, and rest of the trimmings. It all
went fairly smoothly, and I found teasing out the tenderloins to be easier than
I thought it would be. I did forget
about the heart in all the excitement, only remembering it halfway back to the
truck. Dang! I never cracked open the chest to get at it
and forgot.
I had a pretty balanced load with a leg bag in both the
front and back with the hide rolled up in front and the scrap/loin back in
back. I slung this over my waldrop seat
and started on my walk back. This is
when I wished I didn’t have those heavy insulated boots! I made it about a ¼ of the way before I had
to make my first break, but it was MUCH easier than trying to drag all that
way. From there I made many stops to
catch my breath and my hamstrings were streaming by the time I got back to the
clearcut.
Jeff was supposed to be waiting for me there and he
was. But when I got closer he waved me
to stop! He apparently had spotted
something way down the powerline and was trying to acquire the target with his high
tech suppressed 6.5 PRC rifle (yeah I had to look that up) but after a while I
heard no shot and he waved me in.
Apparently, he was waiting for me and playing on his phone when he
looked up and saw a deer moving down below in thick cover. He got in position to shoot and lost sight of
it for good. At least it gave me a
chance to rest.
Got back to the truck and headed back to camp.
Victory is sweet - tasting!
Back at camp, we warmed up and I shared some of my award winning (yes, I came in 3rd place at my work chili cook off) venison chili and enjoyed some camp camaraderie. I decided that because I was now “hunting horns” as my brother would say, I would use my old new to me 30-30 with scope the rest of the hunt. This zone only allows one doe and one buck so I was now only hunting antlered bucks. I had never killed anything with this old marlin lever gun that I bought from Mike, who inherited it from his father. I figured the extra range and optics might be good to see antlers way out there if necessary. I don’t hunt with it much so here we go.
That evening (Friday) we hunted around camp. We knew the traffic was increasing and
Saturday morning would be filled with other hunters for the weekend. It was the last day of gun season. Jeff had a doe in his sights again, but this
time he decided to stop it with a bleet before shooting as it was walking. The crafty doe took 2 more steps and stopped
behind a tree. That was all for that
opportunity! I didn’t see anything that
evening and didn’t last long as I just put on my beaners with no toe warmers. I
got back to camp to stoke a good fire and fry up some strap medallions completed
with boiled small potatoes. We ate in
the hot tent again like kings with a few Modelo and some more of that
bourbon. I was a happy camper and my
legs were feeling it!
The next morning would be our last to hunt and I planned to hunt around the camp again as to avoid the crush of hunters up on the ridge. It was again a very cold night but clear stars out…tomorrow a cold front..4-6 inches here starting around 3pm. The deer should be moving! Would the old lever gun see action?
The Final Countdown
Woke up again before the alarm. Jeff was slow to rise, but I had some
sourdough muffins and coffee ready in short order. That damned little stove had the tent so hot,
I had to leave the flap open to eat my chow.
We headed out to hunt and I knew
of a little ridge overlook that had some real thick stuff, an open field
behind, and I had seen good sign there before.
I was stillhunting my way up to the top thinking to myself how nice the
little rifle slung over my shoulder was as I had my hands stuffed into my
pockets. It was quiet out but every minute
or so, the stillness was shattered by rifle shots from across the road up on
that ridge. The deer were really taking
a beating this morning. Deer were
apparently indeed moving! As I neared
the edge of the field I spotted orange sitting right below where I planned to
set down. Dang! Plan B, I backed down and out and doubled
back towards the access road to a handicapped spot a mile or so down.
The road ran a ridge and there was a steep hillside on each side. I got down about a half mile from the hunter and sat with my back to a trunk and watched the adjacent hill. My plan was to sit here and around 8:30am move back to the other side as Jeff was hunting over that side and he said he had to return to camp at 9am. He may push something perhaps.
I was sitting there and it was still…Rifle shots still sounded like the battle of Lexington was going on over the hill. Then, I heard deer steps…you know a little different than squirrels. I strained to see on the other hill but couldn’t see anything for the longest time.
Then I saw the deer. It was big bodied, head down, and had a deep chest. I thought it may be a buck. Dropped the binos and raised up the 4x scope. Spotting it I cocked the hammer and tried to see any sign of antlers. It was about 160 yards away on the adjacent hillside and in some thicker cover. I had it go behind a closer trunk and waited for it to emerge out of the other side, still unsure if it was a buck or doe. Then it pulled a Houdini and disappeared like deer sometimes do at that range. Never heard it or saw it again!
Dang, I was betting it was a buck and it came from the
direction of up top near where the other hunter was. I should have been down the hill closer.
At 8:30am I switched sides and by 9am nothing was coming so
I headed back up to the road. There I
saw the other hunter from up top who stopped to chat with me. He told me he had "walked around up there all
morning and not kicked out anything." I
chuckled. He also said he had 500 acres
he had permission to hunt on private land, but he just felt like trying the
public and leaving that area to his brother and his son to hunt. Ugh, I could bet he was from PA also. The mountain was crowded.
Anyway, that was all the action. Jeff didn’t see a thing. We packed up ahead
of the snow and left. Back home I had a
bunch of meat to process. I awoke the next day to several inches of snow on the
ground and made myself busy boning out meat, rendering tallow, getting ready to make some
bone broth, marinating some fresh jerky, and getting gear cleaned and put away.
Next weekend is the start of a week-long muzzleloader season and I am hoping the landowner will let me hunt that hay farm with it. He has seen some heavy coyote action in recent days so I told him I would shoot that as well if seen! I hope he says yes and the wife does too LOL.
Then it is back to bow until the end of January
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