Outdoors
Sponsored by

Back from Canada!!!!!

10,273 Views | 72 Replies | Last: 10 yr ago by Lt. Joe Bookman
txaggie02
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Wow, what a trip! I’m not even sure where to start, so I’ll just break this down day by day. It’s gonna be a little long, but here it goes.

Day 1 – Flew from DFW to Calgary. Stayed at airport hotel.

Day 2 – Flew from Calgary to Whitehorse, Yukon. Stayed at hotel. I had a very enjoyable dinner with Bob Speegle from Garland, Texas. For those that don’t know Bob, he is a Weatherby and Conklin Award winner and is one of only a few hunters still alive to have killed all 31 North American big game since he got both the walrus and jaguar prior their hunting being banned in either the late 70s or early 80s. He just got rid of a majority of his hunting collection which he said was valued at over $2 million. He donated it museums so that his wife doesn’t have to pay the estate tax on his mounts when he passes away (I believe Bob is around 85 years old). Damn depressing that our government has the right to do that.

Day 3 – 3 hour drive SE to Watson Lake (Northern British Columbia) where we would then board a float plane for a 45 minute ride into the hunting area’s base camp.




View of base camp.



As I stepped off the plane, I was greeted by someone yelling my name. It was said in a tone of somebody that I knew and as I turned around, I recognized the two guides, Wade and Kevin, as guides that I had previously elk hunted with in Southern BC. I was really excited as I had a blast with them last time. We spent the evening packing everything up for an early morning horse ride to the remote camp where we would hunt from for the remainder of the trip. Surprise of the day was having this grizzly sow chase a moose calf right through the middle of our camp as we were packing things. In this photo, the bear was literally 20 feet behind our cabin.



Day 4 – 2.5 hour horse ride to the remote cabin. It was a nice little place with bunks, propane stove, dinner table, and other amenities.





After unloading, we spent the evening glassing the mountain-side, but only saw a couple of small moose.



Day 5 – Rode to the top of the mountains via horses to check out the caribou situation. Saw some decent bulls, but nothing great. This guy had pretty good tops, but had almost nothing for bez tines so we opted to pass since it was early.



We then looked over to the other side of the mountain and found a very nice bull moose for my hunting partner who was hunting moose only. We spent the rest of the day watching him stalk the moose, shoot him, and then helped clean him and pack out his cape, back straps, tenderloins, and horns. Quarters would have to wait until in the morning since we didn’t have enough pack horses.

Day 6 – We went back to get the quarters from the moose, but as we approached, we noticed a grizzly was already on top of them. The guides said this rarely happens. Waited for an hour or so, but decided to let the bear have them. It was a really big boar and we didn’t want to risk anything over some meat. Not worth it. Glassed some more for caribou, but didn’t have much luck. Rode back to camp and you wouldn’t believe it, but a damn grizzly had stolen my hunting buddy’s back straps and tenderloins off the tree we had hung them in the night before. Canvas tarp was on the ground with claw/tooth marks all in it. At this point, he was a little frustrated to say the least. All of his meat stolen by two grizzlies in two different spots. And this guy had driven all the way from Oregon so that he could take back some meat. That sucks!

Day 7 – Went back out to spend the morning glassing and found a nice group of caribou.



As we were checking them out through the spotting scope at about 750 yards, not sure what made them spook, but they ran right by us and never gave us a shot opportunity.



There were a couple of nice bulls in the bunch (one in the middle and one in the back) so we decided to chase them down. The bull in the back had a nice shovel, but it was only a single and he didn’t have very good tops. I concentrated on the bull in the middle since he had nicer tops and a double shovel (albeit smaller ones). It’s hard to find a caribou with both good tops and bottoms. Most are like women and either have one or the other, but not both. I decided that I wanted one with nice tops (imagine that), so that is what I went for.

After a couple hours of stalking, we finally crawled up to a ridge that was 220 yards from them and upon catching my breath, I managed to get my mountain caribou with a double lung shot. I couldn’t believe the size of these animals!!

[This message has been edited by txaggie02 (edited 9/26/2011 7:07p).]
txaggie02
How long do you want to ignore this user?



.300 Win Mag made a serious hole



After a good morning hunt, we ate lunch on the mountain, enjoyed the scenery, and then packed everything up for the ride back.




When in camp, we decided to raise the meat another level on the tree (my hunting buddy’s moose was previously on the lower rung) and hang a bunch of metal stuff so that incase the bear came back in the middle of the night, we would hear him.



Day 8 – Went out to find a moose. Saw some prospects, but nothing great.

Day 9 – Went to look for a moose again, but no luck. This day, only myself and the two guides went. The other hunter and cook (one of the guide’s wife) stayed in camp to relax. As they were laying down to take a nap in the middle of the day, they heard some rattling outside. They looked out the window and there stood the grizzly right next to my caribou quarters that were hanging in the tree. She quickly grabbed the .300 WSM that was left behind, chambered a round, and this is where it gets crazy……..somehow the gun goes off inside the cabin. She has been hunting for years and swears she didn’t pull the trigger. Either way, it blew a hole in the door and the bear ran off probably thinking there was some crazy person trying to shoot it without even opening the door. I’m extremely glad that I wasn’t there to hear what a .300 sounds like when fired indoors. And luckily, the bullet didn’t hit the propane tank or the other hunter or else it would have been a disaster that we would have come back to from hunting.



Day 9 – Back out for moose without any luck on the big boys, but did get to take these really nice photos and see some goats up high on the mountain tops.





Day 10 – This morning we were headed to a place they called “The Pimple” which was about a 2 hour ride. Approximately 45 minutes outside of camp, we had just come over a ridge when we saw the tail end of what appeared to be a good moose walking into the woods. We stopped and called for around 30 minutes, but had no luck pulling him back out into the open. Frustrated, we continued on to “The Pimple” which was a bald knob on the side of the mountain where you could see a large river bottom area that looked like prime moose territory.



We ate lunch, took a short nap, glassed the valley for hours, but only saw a small bull, three cows and some calves. Around 5pm or so, we decided to head to camp so that we could make it there before sundown. While coming back over the same ridge that we had seen the bull entering the woods that morning, we spotted a really nice bull coming off the river about 300 yards away. We jumped off the horses, tied them to some trees, I grabbed my rifle and we quickly walked down the ridge another 50-75 feet to get a better look. It was a very good looking bull with long points that was estimated around 55” by the guides. After very little discussion, I decided this was our guy. We only had several days left and in that part of the country, you never know when weather will come crashing down to where we couldn’t hunt for the next couple of days. With some bull and cow calls from the guides, the moose made a 90 degree turn and headed right at us. They called him into 80 yards and he presented me with a perfect broadside shot. After the first shot, I looked down and his feet didn’t move, but his whole body slumped over. I tried to get a finishing shot off, but he was looking right at us and I didn’t want to risk shooting a hole through his paddle. After 15-20 seconds of struggling to stand, he did a back flip and landed in a small pond that was about 12-18” deep. Not exactly where we wanted him to land since one of the guides now had to strip down and get into the water while it was 40 degrees, but I had a really nice moose to bring back to Texas!!




Day 11 – We headed back out early in the morning to pack out the moose and were greeted by none other than our country’s bird lurking over my kill.



After hauling everything back to camp, the rest of the evening was spent preparing packs for the ride back to base camp the next morning.



Day 12 – Rode back to base camp and unloaded everything just in time to wet a lure in the lake. Caught a couple lake trout and saw a beautiful sunset that presented us an awesome back drop for some pictures of our trophies.






Day 13 – Last day in camp and I walked outside at about 7:30am to find out that it has snowed 2” that night.




Decided to take a walk around the lake to take the above photos when I noticed these……



Right when I saw the tracks, I looked up to see a bushy tail running off into the brush about 15 feet in front of me. I couldn’t believe that a coyote would hold that tight with someone so close by and I went back to tell the guides. I was pretty shocked when they responded that they don’t have coyotes up there and to grab my rifle. At this point, it clicked that I had just seen the tail end of a wolf. Myself and one of the guides then took off following the tracks up to a small ridge with rifle in both our hands. Wolves are hated up in Canada for killing so many caribou and moose. They want every wolf dead. The tracks went back and forth over the ridge. I took the right side, he took the left side, and whichever of us saw him would get the shot. After about 3-4 minutes of walking, I heard a shot and “the hunt” was over. I guess the wolf let me get so close because he was a first year pup, but I don’t think I will ever have a closer encounter than that. Pretty impressive size for a youngin and huge paws!!!



After breakfast, we messed around camp for a while and did some more fishing on the lake which netted another 15-20 lake trout. Nothing big, but they are fun to fight on light tackle.

Day 14 - Float plane out of base camp, drive back to Whitehorse, Yukon and spent the night there.

Day 15 – Flew back to Calgary and then missed my plane to DFW. Arggg!!! Spent the night in the airport hotel.

Day 16 – Flew back to DFW and can’t wait to sleep in my own bed tonight!!

I cannot recommend Kawdy Outfitters highly enough. Stan Lancaster runs a first-class operation with great guides, camp cooks to keep warm meals (lasagna, spaghetti, caribou ribs and roast, moose back strap, soup, etc) and desserts on the table, very comfortable sleeping accommodations, and 3500 square miles of wilderness filled with goats, bears, sheep, moose, and caribou.


[This message has been edited by txaggie02 (edited 9/26/2011 7:07p).]
rock08
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Ag210
How long do you want to ignore this user?
that's pretty sweet!
water turkey
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Beautiful country and game. You dropped some coin on that trip, huh?
NW80
How long do you want to ignore this user?
texas.aggie.2010
How long do you want to ignore this user?
cant wait to move to alaska and get to go on a hunt like that!
AZAG08
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Great write up and amazing pics.

Looks like a great trip
FSGuide
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sounds like a damned good time! And congrats on the Bou & Bullwinkle. They look really nice.
FirefightAg
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Great stuff! Thanks for sharing!
Ol Jock 99
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Nice!
DVM97
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Enjoy not having kids!!! Great pics and I'm actually jealous!!


DVM
Oneof12
How long do you want to ignore this user?
DUman08
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Lt. Joe Bookman
How long do you want to ignore this user?
This is awesome.

Sounds like a trip to never forget.
ursusguy
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sweet pictures.
Mr07Ag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Michael Shumard
How long do you want to ignore this user?
nice hunt. whats with the pube mustache.
MasterAggie
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Congrats on the great trophies. Sounds and looks like an amazing trip. Awesome pics too.
swampstander
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Wow! Great pics and play by play! So jealous.
Texas 1836
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Awesome pics and story.

Somehow I think it will take about 2 weeks to wipe that smile off your face.

And yes, "Damn depressing that our government has the right to do that."
It's a friggin crime!!
AgBrad08
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Great pics!

cplatt
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Awesome
Codeno
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Centerpole90
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Great hunt.
dboxaggie03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Next time you can take me with you!
Terk
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Epic trip!! Super sweet Caribou... man, that's a good looking animal.

matthewj042
How long do you want to ignore this user?
penn02
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Congrats, I wish that one day I will be able to go moose hunting.
bushman
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Wow, the hunt of a lifetime. Congrats on the great trophies and experience.
lglidewell
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Great hunt and awesome pics buddy!
agsf2010
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Awesome pictures and it looks like a great hunt! What outfitter did you use?
schmellba99
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I am more jealous than if you posted pictures of you and two of the hottest chicks going at it like banshees.

Ok, not quite that jealous. But close.

If you don't mind answering, roughly how much did this trip dent your checkbook?
matthewj042
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Just got done reading a few articles about Bob Speegle...WOW. I bet that was one amazing person to encounter.
nealan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Or at least how many purses did it run you??
Last Page
Page 1 of 3
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.