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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Down to 3 roasts in the freezer, until today. Scored not 2 miles out of town, after spending too much time digging out of 2 unseen holes I found on the unplowed road in flat, flat, flat light. Should have been out on the windswept lagoon ice. Or maybe not at all. Couldn't see much definition on the snow, bare eyes was best, but I was running with amber goggles for the wind. Funny thing, sweaty and exhausted, and with the dangerous flat light, I'd abandoned the idea of hunting, but decided to take the 6 mile loop back to town, on the higher, more windswept portion. I'd heard shots up by the AF radar dome when I was digging out the first time, so went up there (about a mile past the loop intersection road) to see what I could (and found another hole before getting there....that one only took 15 minutes to get out of- the first had been over an hour. Not a good idea to put a snow machine into a hole thats 6 feet deep and exactly machine sized in width and length!). Could be, but wasn't hard on the scope settings, it turned out. At least one fresh kill site (blood spatter, head, lower legs), and maybe 1 or two more by blood spatter sites, but no remnants. Or all 3 of those guys might have shot her. They had passed me on the far side of the lagoon while I was digging out the first time. Over where I should have been traveling. Headless and legless animals work better in the toboggans. Glassed lower ground from dome hill-top but saw nothing. Headed back to the Loop intersection to follow that around, as it looked less drifted than the lower ground, ;just on a wild-hair off-chance. No one had been around the loop yet, from the lack of tracks.. Half a mile down the loop, I spotted an antler-less bull on a hillside 347 yards away. Easy shot, but not legal until February. Stupid regs! A quarter mile on, terrain feature change showed me about 20 animals, about 3/4 mile away back toward and in line with the dome, in a depression that couldn't be seen from up there. I had looked! A couple nice, still-antlered bulls in the bunch, but mostly cows and calves. Works for me. Low ground and 15 mile crosswind let me get within 124 yards, motoring slow and quiet. Windscreen for a rest, with a half body height, low hold under hair (rifle is zeroed for 300), and she was down. The rest took off, and I don't do running shots if I don't have to. One animal was enough for today, anyway. I've got all winter.... Gutted, legged, and headed, I loaded her in the sled with a tarp under for blood, and then it was just a 15 minute run back to the house. It IS better to be lucky than good! I'll skin her tomorrow and check that Superperformance GMX hole.....first animal i've used it on. Looks about like the SST holes...
Last edited by las; 12/03/17.
The only true cost of having a dog is its death.
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Good deal! You worked for that in a different sort of way <G>
Adversity doesn't build character, it reveals it.
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Campfire Tracker
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las:
Congratulations. Looks like that one will fill the freezer for a while.
KC
Wind in my hair, Sun on my face, I gazed at the wide open spaces, And I was at home.
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Campfire Tracker
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Nice work.
What rifle did you use?
Okie John
If Montana had a standing army, a 270 Win with Federal Blue Box 130's would be the standard issue.
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Campfire Regular
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Bravo! She should be a tasty one. We've got a pineapple express going on down here right now. You're in the right place, except for those holes you keep finding!
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Nice. Meat in the freezer is a very comforting feeling.
Jeff
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Mauser 98 - 27 inch heavy barrel .30-06, 150 gr GMX Suerperformance. Inch groups at 300 if I can hold it steady enough!
The only true cost of having a dog is its death.
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Campfire Ranger
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"I never thought I'd live to see the day that a U.S. president would raise an army to invade his own country." Robert E. Lee
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Congrats. Here's where I profess my caribou ignorance- I thought that was a little bull. I didn't know both cow and bull caribous grow antlers, so I googled it. But to be fair, I've never seen a caribou .
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Campfire Oracle
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Campfire Oracle
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It's the "good eatin'" size.
If you take the time it takes, it takes less time. --Pat Parelli
American by birth; Alaskan by choice. --ironbender
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********
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Good job. Looks like a nice bou. Congrats
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Campfire Ranger
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It's the "good eatin'" size. Yup! Good job, Las! I bet she's as tender as veal. IMHO, caribou from that part of Alaska taste better than from anywhere else. Ed
"Not in an open forum, where truth has less value than opinions, where all opinions are equally welcome regardless of their origins, rationale, inanity, or truth, where opinions are neither of equal value nor decisive." Ken Howell
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Campfire Ranger
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I agree, there is some good eatin there. I've only shot a few up in that area myself but they were good eating, for sure.
NRA LIFE MEMBER GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS ESPECIALLY THE SNIPERS! "Suppose you were an idiot And suppose you were a member of Congress... But I repeat myself." -Mark Twain
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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I've shot bigger cows for sure. And bulls 3 times her size. She was at least twice- maybe three times the apparent size (from TV shows) of your Texas Whitetail does, Reloder. Probably as big or bigger than your bucks. So there! . Caribou up here tend to run a bit smaller on average than those farther south in Alaska. I'm not adverse to shooting the "babies" either, and have..... they are the best! If I'm going to have to shoot only cows by stupid regulation, I would willingly take her calf, also, if it hangs around, as it is likely doomed to predation, exposure, etc., without a clue how to survive alone. Can't - same time they restricted bull taking, they eliminated calf taking also. But not cows accompanied by calves.... She was a fully adult cow - her calf of the year started back to make contact, then went with the rest of the group. Hopefully it will survive by doing so. Many times they won't leave but will hang around where they last saw mom, and that is almost certainly a death sentence and waste, but I guess the predators and scavengers have to eat also. I did pick out a cow that did not have a calf in obvious proximity, but I guess it was off a little way goofing around with others. the Eskimos refer to lone cows as "barren", but likely their calf did not survive this time around. but they are almost certainly pregnant again, after rut. As I may have said a few times before - this 3 1/2 month long "pregnant cows only" season is just ludicrous, when bulls are perfectly edible after rut by the 2nd week in November, and usually before. No fat on them tho, but I don't eat fat, so I'd take one of them by preference - and have when it was still legal. Calves also. I've taken two "orphaned" and all alone calves in past years, before current regs. With the the limit 5 a day, tagging a calf is no hardship in the meat department. Pregnant cow hunting is a helluva way to "slow the decline" (the nominal reasoning for these regs- actually it is cultural/political) of a population which seems to have been stable for the last 3 years at just over 200,000. In fact, last year saw excellent calf survival, with the heaviest average birth weights ever recorded. Objectively, the current regs are just a PITA, and totally meaningless as to affecting the herd size either way. With luck, I'll get one or two more this winter, and get the freezer fully stocked again. Just jerked the lower jaw for F&G's age/nutritional studies. From the looks of her most excellent teeth I'd guess she was no more than 3, maybe 4. Only sectioning and staining will be definitive, tho. So I killed all her future calves too.
Last edited by las; 12/06/17.
The only true cost of having a dog is its death.
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Campfire Oracle
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Thanks, las. Great story. If not for you i would have no idea what others in my country do to get meat. Many down here would spend big bucks to spend a week with you. How come our bud Iron never posts such. Is he an Anchorage city slicker or something?
Last edited by jaguartx; 12/06/17.
Ecc 10:2 The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but that of a fool to the left.
A Nation which leaves God behind is soon left behind.
"The Lord never asked anyone to be a tax collector, lowyer, or Redskins fan".
I Dindo Nuffin
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Campfire 'Bwana
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Oh he's something all right..... i'm telling you guys that butchering game without canine supervision since my dog died just isn't right! I'm tempted to go borrow the Lab next door..... I've got a scrap pan going for him anyway.
Last edited by las; 12/06/17.
The only true cost of having a dog is its death.
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las, I always enjoy your stories. Lots of fascinating info re your country, etc. Good on you!
I have some great memories of young bull caribou steaks in a huge cast iron skillet with some bacon and diced onions all frying on a wood stove in a log cabin with icy rain beating on the roof. Warm and dry with good friends, hard to beat. Mountain caribou in northern BC. Good eats... and a long way from my haunts this morning.
Best to you this winter!
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Campfire Oracle
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How come our bud Iron never posts such. Is he an Anchorage city slicker or something? That's "Mr. ironbender" to you sport! We don't have 'bou wandering all around here, usually. At least not legal animals. Our caribou hunts on the KP and low-percentage permit draw hunts. In many years of applying. I've yet to get lucky. On occasion they will cause a traffic jam.
If you take the time it takes, it takes less time. --Pat Parelli
American by birth; Alaskan by choice. --ironbender
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