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Our First Colorado Archery Elk Hunt - Public Land - Success!!! (added pics pg4)

Posted on 9/28/15 at 11:28 am
Posted by dnm3305
Member since Feb 2009
13609 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 11:28 am
What was an incredibly tedious and thoroughly thought out hunt, turned into a great adventure and the most fun I've ever had (in the woods). I began planning and google earth scouting in March for this trip. We hunted the southern portion of Gunnison National Forest/Grand Mesa National Forest. There was an 18% success rate for archery last year in our particular unit (which is fairly high actually), so we were pumped when we got the job done. This was a non-guided public land backpack hunt. One either sex tag was bought ($660) by my FIL so he was dedicated shooter and I was caller. The original plan was for me to buy a mule deer tag, but I screwed that up by not realizing that the particular unit we hunted was draw only for muley's. We were then hesistant to buy two elk tags knowing the odds were not in our favor and that getting two elk backpacked out with only two guys in the terrain we were in would have been a daunting task, so taking into consideration that this was going to be a learning experience, one tag was the way we went. Getting one out was a hell of a chore that challenged us both mentally and physically, but I wouldnt have changed a thing. I felt like our initiation to Rocky Mountain hunting was complete when we got back to the truck with 150lbs of meat per person at 1am from a 4+ hr hike. It brings a whole knew meaning to the "walking to school 5 miles up hill both ways in the snow" saying.

Blue Mesa Reservoir about an hr from our trailhead


The Hunt- Drove from Louisiana Fri after work at 4pm, slept 3 hrs in between in New Mexico and parked in the mountains off of our trail at about 5:30pm Sat afternoon. Weather was 69 deg., no precipitation at all. Altitude was about 8200ft at the truck, 8500ft at camp.

The range that was hunted. Took this photo sitting on the tailgate right before we hiked in.


We hiked about 1.5 miles in and began searching for a place to hang our food and set up camp as night was approaching. We walked out into an open meadow in the valley that split both of the ranges and we saw movement to our right on the ridge above us at about 100 yards. Three cow elk had walked out and stared in our direction. We froze for a second, slowly lowered our packs and kneeled behind brush as I handed over my range finder to FIL and let out a few cow chirps. The wind was perfect as the sun was going down and the thermals were in our favor so we know they didnt smell us and visibility wasnt great so we were pretty sure we werent busted. Just then, a shooter bull walks out about 30 yds behind, so I continue to call as FIL crawls down the edge of the brushline to get to the left flank of the ridge. After about 5 mins of them feeding/being occupied with the calling, FIL has closed the distance to 50 yds and had a clear range on a cow (53 yds). He draws and pops his arrow off the string. He nocks another arrow and then the bull walks out broadside, completely unaware of his presence. He ranges (45 yds) then draws again and releases. POWWWWW!!! It sounded like he shot a gun....popped bow string. Apparently, he hadnt shot his new broadheads through his bow prior to hiking out and they hit the edge of his rest, pulling the arrow off the string. His arrows were cut too short. The pop shot resulted from it being un-nocked and the nock severed the string upon releasing. He was very lucky he wasnt hurt. This was a problem last yr, and he missed a deer because of it so I was disappointed to say the least that we missed that opportunity on a bull at 45yds the first 2 hrs being in the woods. I was almost as disappointed as he was. Def a low point. It was a critical mistake, and he knew it. We regrouped, took 2 hrs to hang our damn food because all we could find was Aspen's with weak limbs, then set up camp and fell asleep at about midnight. Although we missed an opportunity, we couldnt sleep because of the adrenaline.

Day 1-
We hiked back to truck the next morning and got my bow and made the afternoon hunt near our camp. We saw another bull and two more cows on the adjacent range that afternoon that we put a long stalk on (800 yds) and close the distance to about 120, but were winded and could never get closer. For the remainder of the evening, we hiked about 200 yards above the ridge those elk came in on us the night before and basically sat and deer hunted them. In this pic, you can see a muley about 60 yards from our camp set up.



Our water source for the week


Day 2 (Mon - Kill Day)
We decided to hike the highest point before the sun came up on day 2.



After glassing the entire morning and only seeing one gigantic bear, we decided to hike deeper into the valley and got about 3.2 miles in. We found an awesome water hole that was loaded with elk sign everywhere. We hiked to a slight bench overhang that had a clear shot at 50 yards and were planning on hunting that hole like deer until the sun went down.


After sitting for 30 min, we finally hear the first bugle of the hunt. Loud and proud, about 700-1000 yards away on the opposite side of the valley. You can see the peak through the treeline on the waterhole pic in which the bugle came from. I answered back with a loud bugle and got an immediate response. IT WAS ON!! We packed up and started hiking hard in the direction it was coming from, calling back every 5 mins and continuing to get an immediate response every time. We both ran out of water at the same time so had to take a break to filter more and grab a breather.

This post was edited on 9/29/15 at 6:23 pm
Posted by dnm3305
Member since Feb 2009
13609 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 11:28 am to
We were within 500 yards at this time and crossed the stream onto his side of the mountain. After hiking an almost vertical rock face, we got to a fairly flat open aspen meadow.
We knew we were close so I started mixing in some estrous cow calls and chirps, which worked out perfect. We were then getting responding bugles off of cow calls so we were in his backyard. It began raining on us at this point, so we dropped the packs and put rain covers over the electronics and made the last stalk with only the bow and calls. I dropped the ball on this one by forgetting my camera, because I could have gotten some incredible shots. It took about an hr to close the final distance as we only hiked about 20 yards and then knelt to check wind and call. I started interrupting his bugles with my own and we could tell it was pissing him off because he became more aggressive. When the wind was right, FIL closed the distance to the very ridge he was on and I fell back to about 20 yards behind him, just below the ridgeline and began cow calling. We were within 70 yards. He bugled one more time and I interrupted him again and that was the final straw. He came down the hill pissed off and snorting. This was a man, a stud at least a 280" bull. FIL ranges at 45, draws and lets it fly. He misses by an inch, just under the belly. It was a tough shot as it was a severe angle up hill at about 45 deg. The bull runs up hill, so we call, and he stops, then a cow pokes her head up. I start soft calling and chirping very subtly and she begins to make her way down to us on a string from about 80 yards away. Well the bull does an about face and slowly starts to make his way back down again. I cant describe the adrenaline rush of benig in the presence of these magnificent creatures. The cow begins to flank us to the left to get our wind and before the bull gets back into range, FIL smokes her at 30 yards on a slight quartering too shot. She made it less than 40 yards and expired.

This is the from the cow's perspective when she was shot. I am standing right next to the bloody tree from above. FIL was hiding between the two aspens in the middle that fork up about 6" apart. He slung an arrow right through the middle of them. I was about 5 yards below that ridgeline calling.

We hike back to our packs and grab a bite to eat knowing the long night ahead of us. Skinning, quartering, taking neck roasts, loins, & straps took about 1.5 hrs. We left the bow and any unnecessary gear at the kill site along with my pack underneath its rain cover. We were 4.2 miles away from truck so decided to pack the entire load out in one trip. We began hiking at 9pm (precisely when it started raining) and got back to the truck at 1am. The days were comfortable at about mid-60's-70's but it got to low 40's at night, so we were cold as frick on the hike out being as that it rained on us the whole time. It's an experience I'll never forget and Im already excited to go back next year and take that bull. After that hike out, a beer never tasted so good.



In all, we hiked a total of 27.5 miles in 2.5 days.
The cow was shot with a Hoyt Nitrum 30 with Easton Axis 340 arrows and a 100 grain Ramcat broadhead. This is a devastating setup as you can see it punched through the front shoulder and penetrated to the fletching. I can include an extensive gear list if anyone is interested.
This post was edited on 9/29/15 at 6:22 pm
Posted by Broke
AKA Buttercup
Member since Sep 2006
65049 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 11:46 am to
WHY would you kill such a magnificent creature? They are majestic and wild and not worthy of being hunted down by a crazy person like you.




j/k, nice kill. And really awesome pics.
Posted by rattlebucket
SELA
Member since Feb 2009
11468 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 2:23 pm to
Dang dude. Talk about bucket listing it right there.

If I could post that black and white gif of people clapping in the theater I would.

I enjoyed reading that.
Posted by PTBob
Member since Nov 2010
7072 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 2:36 pm to
helluva trip
Posted by kengel2
Team Gun
Member since Mar 2004
30897 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 6:07 pm to
Awesome, Id love to do a rifle hunt up there.

Maybe one day.
Posted by Mid Iowa Tiger
Undisclosed Secure Location
Member since Feb 2008
18716 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 7:44 pm to
Awesome post. The grand Mesa is out my uncles back window (he lives outside of Delta) thinking about trying OTC later this year.

Just an FYI a sheep rancher we know on the Mesa shoots about 300 black bear a year. They are like rats up there and the warden has green lighted him and his hands to kill them on site.

Posted by Dodd
Member since Oct 2003
21060 posts
Posted on 9/28/15 at 9:27 pm to
Just poking in to complement you on an awesome story.
Posted by jakedel12
Dallas, Texas
Member since Nov 2006
1449 posts
Posted on 9/29/15 at 10:11 am to
quote:

dnm3305


Awesome man, my dream hunt.

Thanks for sharing
Posted by scottyd
Member since Dec 2014
419 posts
Posted on 3/4/16 at 12:14 pm to
Which unit were you in if you don't mind me asking?
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