Sunday, September 13, 2009

Utah Archery Elk, 15 August 2009




I did not have time to prepare for this year's hunt as I started a new job just this Monday. Fortunately I know the area fairly well and three good friends Joe, Reilly, and Mike went ahead and set up camp on Friday. I set the alarm for 3AM Saturday morning with plans to drive 2 hours and hunt the morning. I slept in and when I woke at 5:00 am it was cold and raining. I cleaned the house for a few hours and did some odds and ends and arrived at the hunting spot in the afternoon around 2:30 PM.
As I dropped into the aspens at the top of the canyon I felt, in a word, confidence. Not that I would fill my tag but a relaxed sense of ease. My legs felt strong and my feet felt quiet. I wasn't overly eager to make a kill or worried that I might not. I was peaceful. I had never hunted this canyon specifically but it was so much like the others in the larger drainage that it seemed familiar. I also knew that I was shooting my new bow very well and that can definitely help your confidence.
I was descending into the canyon on a trail at the very bottom of the valley or gut and as I dropped the hillsides to my right and left steepened. I could see there was a significant drop ahead of me where the canyon simultaneously opened and dropped. The opposing hillsides would be spread much wider and the canyon steepened it's descent towards the main canyon. The same thing happens in the other canyons in that area and it usually creates a natural game crossing at that spot. And then I thought I heard an elk.
Elk are very vocal. When I hunt this area slowly, quietly, and careful of the wind I can usually find the elk before they find me. I saw flashes of elk hide ahead of me, crossing from left to right. I quickly moved uphill to my right to intercept them. As I gained altitude I lost track of the crossing elk but I could see the rest of the herd was bedded or feeding back on the other hillside. I retreated off my hillside and back to the bottom. I moved back up the center away from the herd until I felt confident I would not be seen. I then started climbing up the side the elk were on.
It was fairly open aspen trees with thick, waist to chest high undergrowth. I scooted and crawled 150 yards until I could see elk again. The wind was strong and in my favor. When I was about 50 yards from the nearest elk (that I could see) I dropped my pack and binos. The elk were continually moving and I was sure I would get busted at any moment. But with the blowing underbrush and faithful wind I was protected. As I moved into the herd I shifted focus from one elk to another as I found previously unseen animals actually closer than those I was stalking. Now somehow I'm crouched in the middle of a herd of elk and I'm shaking. I know I'm going to get a shot at something but I don't know which elk. I picked out two small elk partially screened by a pine tree and I moved to within 15 yards. I rose with one large aspen between us and some screening boughs from the pine. Now I'm standing and I don't yet have a shot. When I stood two elk on the hill above me start to pick me out and give a few cautionary mews. One of them is a spike bull and he moves down the hill circling me. At that moment I have a broadside at him at close to 40 but still have these two small elk at less than 15. I almost shot the spike but then this little guy turns and gives me the close shot I wanted. My arrow looked great but I found out later it was low and back and went right through him. At this point everything is getting stirred up, elk are barking and mewing and a big bull that I can't see rips a bugle. A few large cows move past me at 20 yards and my little guy stops at 25 yards and I shoot downhill at him and hit right beside the spine mid body. In a blur of excitement my elk runs ten yards and stops and lays down and the rest of the herd is gone.
I turned and went back for my pack and binos and I couldn't find anything! I was a little worked up and started half running up the canyon to find help because now I have lost my pack with my wallet, flashlight, elk tag, knife, and game bags.
Long story short I found Mike Byrd who helped me find my pack and my elk and we carried the little guy in quarters way back up the canyon. And with every step I was happy I picked the smallest one ;)

Saturday, September 12, 2009

Blue Grouse Crops

These are three crops from the birds I killed this morning. They were killed between 10:00 am and 12:30 pm. They were all killed on a western facing slope and judging by the amount of food in the crops they were feeding. They were between 8000 and 8500 feet. One bird appeared to be a juvenile and the other two were at least a year old. You will see that two birds were feeding mainly on green buds. One of these two also had a number of large blue-purple berries and the other had small white-yellow berries. The third bird had mostly young green leaves and the white berries. It was interesting none of the birds had mixed berries in the crop.


Utah Grouse Opener, 12 September 2009

Opening day of Grouse season was a little lonely. All three of my hunting companions bailed on this trip. I left the house on my own around 9:00 am. I chose to do a little exploring in a place I had never hunted before. From the car I climbed a steep ridgeline heading North. I was planning on dropping off the ridge to the North or East in search of Ruffed Grouse. As I neared the first peak at approximately 8200 ft. I turned on a switchback to see what had to be a Blue Grouse banking off the ridge only 20 yards away. She had flushed so quietly I would not have ever known she was there if I didn't catch that glimpse of her as she disappeared off the west side of the ridge. She seemed to have already peaked and was heading down as she dove out of sight. I had never killed a Blue with my shotgun. Though I have killed a couple with my bow as I stumbled onto them in the deer and elk hunts. I tried to contain my excitement as I followed her off the ridgeline trail and onto the Western face of the mountain. The cover was typical high Wasatch Western exposed. Sage and grass, that dried cabbagey stuff, and a thick brush similar to oakbrush but obviously a different plant. The brush was spotty and in clumps ranging from the size of a motorcycle to the size of a suburban. it was about 10:00 am and at that altitude the cool breeze and my sweaty shirt would have been a little chilly without the increasingly warming sunshine. I eased around onto the sidehill and carefully scanned the brushy clumps for the one I might dive into if I were an escaping grouse. No need because as I came just a few feet from the first bush it unloaded Blue Grouse in all directions. Not one but four of the big gray birds went up very quickly and then set their wings down the hill. Sometimes the visual of a flush sticks in your mind and this was one of those. I can close my eyes and see a still image of three of the birds lifting through an opening in the brush. I slapped my little twenty gauge to my shoulder and tipped over one of the birds just as it was about to disappear behind one of the suburban sized bushes. He hit the ground with his head up and about five minutes later I tackled him in a cloud of dust and sage and thought of how nice it would have been to have had Shane and his sweet wirehaired Bella to have helped with that one. The next thirty minutes are a little fuzzy. When I say I was into birds I mean I was really into them. These Blues didn't want to get up and go very far. I would flush a bird and not have a shot but I could tell where it would have gone down I would hustle over there only to flush two more birds on the way. They kind of had me doing circles in an area the size of a grocery store parking lot. At least three times I could see a bird on the ground as I approached but when I would move up to flush them they would crawl through to the other side and flush out of sight. I think I had about four more flushes and missed two quick shots. I followed one for a reflush and as I stopped to look or listen to try to hear him in the dried cabbage he jumped up an tried to cross way to big of an opening. My improved cylinder took him hard in the left flank as he crossed the opening from right to left. I tucked the big bird in my bag, passing him to the opening with my right hand and pulling him in head first with my left. Thinking to myself that every bird I've ever killed went into the bag the same way. First kills in a season always dig up some memories. I climbed back towards my ridgeline thinking about past hunts. Thinking about my three buddies who were going to regret missing this one. I was also thinking I would quit and leave a few "for seed" or for next weekend to watch Bella point these big Blue birds. I found a beautiful spot near the peak. I pulled off my bag and took some water. I smiled a very self-congratulatory smile. I opened up the birds and cleaned them knowing they taste better if allowed to cool quickly. I sat for a while looking down at some Ruffed grouse cover from my high vantage point. I looked at my watch and went through that weird planning or decision making process that one does when he has no companions and no where really better to be than the perch he's currently resting on. It was a successful hunt but it was short and I thought I needed a little more. Nah nevermind, I thought let's go home and save them for next time. Wouldn't you know when I turned home I flushed another grouse. I could say it was a difficult flush and a masterful shot but it was really a gimme. I was on the trail and she was in the open . She folded up only 20 yards away. I quickly cleaned her too and now I was headed home...but wait i guess i could drop down there and swing back to the south through that patch of Pine and Aspen and back to the car. How cool would it be to kill ol' ruff and round off a mixed bag limit. So down I went and up went more Blue Grouse three to be exact and only two of them came back down on there feet. I picked him up and pulled him into my bag head first just like the other three and walked off the mountain, thinking it was a pretty good opening day of the season and one I won't soon forget.