So with that plan, I was happy to get notice that I did draw the license but then it got pushed to the back burner with a trip to Africa, Wyoming Pronghorn, and Colorado Archery Elk hunts to plan first along with some rifles to build and a few responsibilities with the family.
With a couple weeks to go, we did what we always do and wonder why later: decided to build a new rifle. We had build #8 in the works which reaffirmed our appreciation for concept of a light, mild kicking, backpacking rifle. The #9 rifle, a 7x57 Mauser built on a Remington 700 action, came together quickly and proved to be worthy of the hunt after a second trip to the range. It shot the 140 gr Nosler Accubonds into groups just over 1/2 MOA with very little load development. Not so worried about squeezing more out of it, I proceeded to smack the steel targets at our range using the holdovers on the Vortex BDC reticle and felt confident in a 350 to 400 yd shot with the little rifle. That was good, as I was out of time to do any more practice or make any changes to the load.
So the little rifle and I were off for our hunt down near Salida, CO. We took along #7 as well, since we didn't really know what we were getting into. We had planned to take #4, but it got a last minute chance to go hunting with Sam from Gannett Ridge in another unit. We didn't have much of a plan, but we were on our way.
I arrived at the trailhead just a little past midnight - just enough time to catch some Z's before opening morning. The Lost Creek Inn (the camper on the back of the old Dodge) makes for a pretty expedient and fairly well equipped hunting camp, and I should have been asleep in no time. It turns out I was a little excited and couldn't sleep, or maybe it was the cold that I somehow didn't notice I had caught until I was on my way south. Either way, there was lots of tossing and turning and then a lack of desire to get on the move when the 5am alarm went off.
Dragging @$$ in a major way, I was on the trail and didn't make it far when the hint of the rising sun started making the surroundings apparent. I was actually right where my friend had told me to be on opening morning though, but I had company in the area and the other hunter's headlamp was way up the hill. I took a seat anyway and started glassing. It wasn't long before I had enough light to find a couple does out feeding on a hillside, then some more way up the hill. I didn't see that monster buck 60 yards away like my friend promised me though. After a few hours, I decided to move on up the hill and have a look around. Trying to gain elevation made me realize how sick I was, as I had little energy. An hour or two further up, I found myself in a nice glassing spot and spent some time looking through the binoculars. And then some time trying to look through my eyelids... At about 4 PM I had woken up from my second nap (yeah, lunch induced another one) and I decided to sneak over to the other side of the hill I was on. As soon as I crested the hill, I noticed deer. Deer being plural. All the sudden I was watching 10-15 deer coming out of the shadows on the hillside. After looking around more, I saw a couple still hiding pretty well and one had antlers. Respectable antlers that is, as many of the others were small bucks. At about the same time I spotted him, I realized how bad my optics must be reflecting from the low sun, as that buck got up and disappeared before I could really size him up. Some of the other ones decided to do the same but some of them stayed. Another buck kind of came out of nowhere and stood on the skyline looking at me, testing me more like it. He was testing to see if I could stick to my plan of not just shooting the first decent buck I got a chance at.
Opening day buck, testing me. |
Non magnified view of the above buck. See him on the ridge between the two branches on the right of the tree? |
I maintained my will power, holding out for a big boy since I had waited three years for this hunt. The following morning I found myself way up the hill at first light. There were deer out feeding, several does, a few small bucks and one sizable buck. I got a good look at him through the spotting scope and decided he wasn't the one either. He was a 3x4 with pretty nice dimensions but not much mass. ( I actually got a real close look at this deer the following day as that other hunter that kept beating me up the mountain was packing him out, he was a nice buck and made a sweet double for this guy that also killed a bull elk on the opening day)
3x4. |
I always like the Eastern view during the sunset. |
Big bull, in the center of the picture. |
A little better look at him through the spotting scope. |
That mid afternoon lull in the action is always a good time for a photo shoot. |
First kill for #9 |
The next morning, I made it to the end of a road in some foothills and setup to watch a hillside as the sun was rising.
I don't usually see the sunrise, but when I do I'm packing a rifle (or just finishing up building one...) |
After the does and fawns all made it up the hill into the brush and cedars, I decided to walk around the base of the hill further. It wasn't too long before I was staring at a little 4pt buck that didn't know I was there either. It was still a couple days too early to shoot a little buck so I just let him do his thing and soon enough he was gone. I took a couple steps and then notice deer legs coming up a dry creek bed to the same place the previous buck was. A smaller buck appeared and did the same thing. I then noticed two more coming and got excited thinking the big boy would be trailing behind but they just kept getting smaller. The last two seemed to want to hang out there and I wanted to get a move on so I decided to use them to test my stalking skills. I had the wind in my favor and will admit they weren't very alert, but I got to 15-20 yards of them before they noticed me. That would have been fun with a bow.
After they spooked off, I spent a couple more hours heading up and around the hill, but only crossed paths with a single doe. I was amazed at how many deer and elk tracks I saw on this little hillside though.
Around noon, it was time to move on. I didn't have a plan but when I drove up on the trailhead of the main draw where I had been the previous three days, and saw no other hunters parked there I decided to give it another go. I wasn't 100 yards up the trail before I ran into a half dozen does, which just let me walk right by at 50 yards. Another couple hundred yards up the trail I saw a few more deer which included a little buck. I had a feeling that this was going to be a good trip up the mountain as I hadn't seen deer this low before. An hour or so later I jumped a couple more does but then found nothing on the hillside where I was hoping to see that buck from the opening day sleeping. I set up and glassed everything I could see but did not see any deer. Dissapointed, I started crossing to the other side of the draw to hike back to the truck though some areas I hadn't been through.
I was working my way down a fairly rocky slope looking at a thick timbered area at the bottom of a draw and thought this would be the perfect place for a big buck to hang out and just let me walk all over his mountain for three days thinking he didn't exist. Then I saw him. At about 150 yards, there he was...browsing and facing me head on. One quick glance through the binoculars had me switching to the rifle. I was in the wide open and I knew as soon as he saw me he would be gone and I would never find him in that timber again. I had the rifle up free-hand and he had just started to turn and walk, exposing his shoulder to me and I squeezed the trigger. Then I squeezed it harder. Then I tried to break it off and wondered to myself what happened to that crisp 2.5 lb trigger I had worked so hard tuning and he was gone. I have been packing rifles uncocked lately, by closing the bolt on a pulled trigger as a safe way of carrying one with a full capacity but not relying entirely on the safety. I think this is a better way to carry one strapped to a pack and it just takes a quick up and down of the bolt handle to have it ready to fire. In this case, I had done that up and down so quietly that I failed to get the sear to engage, so it was still uncocked. Thinking I had just missed my one and only chance at him, I started looking for him through the binoculars again, he wasn't spooked and couldn't have went far but I couldn't see any part of him. I decided to move laterally a little bit to get a different angle on where he must have been browsing. As I made this move, rocks slid down the hill and sticks broke. Thankfully I had enough wind to cover that noise and I made it to a little rocky point. My timing was perfect because he had just came into another opening and still didn't have a clue I was there. I knelt down and was able to rest the forend on a rock and found him in the scope. He was leisurely walking along and I reminded myself that I can shoot one on the walk which is a concept that haunts me often from letting a bull elk walk right away the previous year thinking he would stop when he didn't. I also got some practice with this in Africa and had the confidence. Somewhere during all this thought, I must have put the crosshairs on him and squeezed the trigger, because I herd the rifle go off and saw him rolling down the hill. The little rifle and the 140gr Accubond had performed very well and the buck was done for.
To quote my dad, I found the buck "ass over tea kettle" after he rolled down the hill a ways. |
From the top, you can start to see how unique this guy is. He apparently suffered some damage to the base of his right antler some time in his life and it was growing out of his head abnormally. |
As I went to transfer the meat into the coolers I had in the truck, I weighed everything with the fish scale I keep in the camper. I was very surprised at what I had just accomplished, as somehow I had just packed 120 lbs down the hill.
120 lbs of deer and gear. |
Speaking of Antelope, I spotted this guy on the drive home. He was on private land in one of those units that typically takes a decade's worth of points to draw, but he caught my attention.
Back home and rested a bit, I decided it was time to do some taxidermy work, since this boy wasn't going to fit in the freezer. With some advice and the trusty stock pot from the guys at Gannett Ridge, the process began. After getting the skull fleshed out, it was really interesting to see that right antler base and how deformed the skull was.
The coyote, my forked horn from last year, and the big boy. |
Keywords: SR#9