That is awesome! I'd like to get out west and do an elk hunt. I have heard the out of state folks have pretty slim chances.We had a good year. Last year I managed to help my brother-in-law shoot his first deer, this year he shot his first elk. So, I'm not sure what the goal will be next year!
My BIL and I had a few bulls running straight at us at 50 yards. The first is me with mine, second is my BIL's first elk
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It's funny you say that! He's out of state!That is awesome! I'd like to get out west and do an elk hunt. I have heard the out of state folks have pretty slim chances.
We have used those and a wheeled cart, I always have paracord in my bag, typically from the truck to where I post is a 40 min hike without a deer.. this guy was several hundred yards down the other side of the mountain, this pic shows the terrain but doesn't express how steep it was. But we'll worth the effort.Try these game sleds next time. I have the large and it works great. I pulled a decent size muley buck over rock and thick sage brush without much trouble. In fact, you can see some of the sage brush in the background of our elk photos that I pulled it through.
https://www.j5gear.com/product/Large-Roll-Up-Game-Sled
They roll up and are light weight. I've created a sling out of 550 cord (paracord) for it to carry through the woods. The sling doubles as the rope to tie up the sled around the animal and to pull it with.
I know what you mean! Hillsides have a funny way of becoming more steep when you're dragging an animal. I've had to do something similar with an elk a couple years ago. At least it's good exercise!We have used those and a wheeled cart, I always have paracord in my bag, typically from the truck to where I post is a 40 min hike without a deer.. this guy was several hundred yards down the other side of the mountain, this pic shows the terrain but doesn't express how steep it was. But we'll worth the effort.
Yep, my dad's side from butler.. hunted in western PA when I was young, now we're more central pa. Definitely best to drop it in it tracks, which I did this year... last year I tracked my deer for almost 2 hours, that's what happens when you hesitate.Reminds me of going out with my dad in my teens where he grew up between Altoona and Johnstown (pa). We went out for small game the weekend before bucks season open so he could teach me the lay of the land and pick our spots. When we came to a spot at a power line, he made it clear if we were on a push and I saw anything to the left, "don't even raise your gun, and let it go, please"
Naturally I asked why(the please was very out of character). He said unless you drop it where it stands (which you won't-nobody ever does) you aren't going to want to track, or worse, drag it out. "AND I AIN'T Helping if you do!" He then walked me 50 yards around the corner to the "deep valley" that dropped abruptly down between the 2 mountainsides with a switchback trail carved into it that ran hundreds of feet below the high tension power line. Young dumb and full of-energy- even I saw the wisdom in that warning.
The rocky hillsides of PA can be a workout without anything extra to drag. I am sure Montana is just as much fun.
It may not even be a "your fault" sort of thing. I had one this year go over 800 yards after a lung-only shot. If not for the fact it was open fields and the deer keeled over next to the road, I can tell you that blood trail was pretty sparse and I would not have wanted to be tracking it in the woods.Yep, my dad's side from butler.. hunted in western PA when I was young, now we're more central pa. Definitely best to drop it in it tracks, which I did this year... last year I tracked my deer for almost 2 hours, that's what happens when you hesitate.