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Cowboy Heaven Consulting, LLC
6116 Walker Road
Bozeman, MT 59715
406-587-9563
1-877-613-0404
info@cowboyhvn.com
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Past Month's Moccasin Telegraph
November 2002
| 11/5/02 |
Lady luck smiled on the OConnells in a big way Sunday morning, when
my son Cody shot a bull elk within about 500 yards of the tent!
Ive got a comfortable camp set up, with a wall tent, wood stove, cots, and all the
trimmings, but no, we didnt go there. Took a backpack tent and spiked out overnight
at one of my other favored campsites. It was a brisk proposition, as it got down to ten
below the night before, and must have been not much warmer than that Saturday night.
Ive got a little catalytic heater that can make all the difference in a backpack
tent, and yes, I know that is potentially dangerous, but so are most other things &
used with care
. Anyway, on this trip I believe I discovered the limits of its
capabilities, and that is when it starts getting down around zero it no longer cuts the
mustard for warming a tent. Oh, well, we have good sleeping bags.
Saturday we got in there with enough time to scout around a bit, ascertain there were elk
about, and verify that an alleged horse-compatible trail into a nearby basin only exists
in a friends imagination. Mountain goats, perhaps, but horses; definitely not.
Reports from outfitters & various other folks in the know were that the elk are
primarily high up, & so our plan for Sunday was to take a roundabout but more feasible
route into the aforementioned basin.
Sunday morning we hadnt walked twenty steps from the tent when Cody spotted a spike
on the ridge right above camp! I never did see that spike, but immediately saw the one he
wound up shooting, which triggered vast excitement heavily leavened with disbelief. We
hunkered down and shifted over just a bit until some trees screened us, and beat feet up
to a clump of aspen a couple of hundred yards closer to the elk. He was still standing
there like hed grown roots! Incredible
.
Cody crawled up to a suitable tree for a gun rest, as did I. We both needed to skootch
around a bit to get a clear shot through the limbs, and any elk with a lick of sense would
have been long gone, but this one was clearly predestined to go home with us. I had him
dead to rights in my crosshairs, ready to blaze away after Cody shot, which wasnt
happening. The elk had been looking our direction, but turned & looked uphill, and I
just knew he was about to go mobile. But no, he was just not a highly strung individual,
and looked back at us just as Cody touched one off.
Ive never seen an elk go down so fast. Youd think that Husky
06 with 165 Hornadies was the proverbial Hammer of Thor! It was literally like the
earth had been yanked out from under him. He rolled over once, & that was that. And
no, I havent been that excited in quite some time
.
I later stepped off the distance at 367 paces, but about 75 of that was down a pretty
steep ridge, and all of it was sort of weaving through the sagebrush. Id guess it
was right close to 300 yards. Cody said he aimed high on the shoulder, figuring if it was
closer than he thought hed spine him, and if further itd drop into the lungs.
He shattered the spine, & the elk never knew what hit him, and you talk about some
fine meat
. In fact, I believe Ill go cook up the rest of a tenderloin for
breakfast soon as I finish this. And that means Im going to wrap this up in short
order.
Cody said the reason he held fire was in hopes the elk would turn his head & he could get a better look at the antlers. The kid kind of wanted a
big old nasty herd bull, and dont we all. So, he had a millisecond of misgiving when
we got up to the elk, but thankfully that rapidly passed. Hes in public school now
(previously homechooled), and is playing basketball. He was already feeling the strain of
nightly practice combined with climbing all over the mountains on the weekends, and the
thought of being through elk hunting really started to grow on him in short order. Passing
on that elk would have been the height of stupidity, especially for a 13 year old, and
would have been a decision just fraught with a high probability of regret. Retrieval
couldnt have hardly been simpler, and all in all it was about as easy as elk hunting
gets.
So, now the kid has his antelope and elk, and counting last year has shot three antelope,
a decent muley, and two bull elk, and hasnt missed a day of school in doing so! When
he started public school this year we were all sweating a potential lack of time afield,
which has turned into a non-issue. I think hes going to miss a day or three when we
head out after big muleys, though, and he says hes holding out for Mr. Big now. Me
too, and I believe Im going to head out with that backpack tent again possibly
tomorrow. Got some spots I want to check out high up, before the snow gets too deep, and
who knows, maybe were on a roll! |
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