Week 2 Elk Hunting with my 15yo daughter was one of those you wish could make different.
First it was a difficult week, major snow storm and cold front hit our area about 4 days early of our arrival, following a mild fall, coupled with a full moon, nobody was seeing much all week.
On our last day we find two bulls and my daughter sets up on a tripod with a very difficult 90 yard shot, in which a suspended 12" diameter log is blocking the majority of the body (vitals). He steps up hill quartering away and she pulls the trigger dropping the bull like a rock and the guide (owner) with 31 years of Elk guiding immediately goes to high fiving my daughter for the second year in row for what he thought was another DRT. At this point the bull is mostly out of sight and I move up the slope to take a better look and see him struggling to get up calling for her to shoot again but at this point its too late he moves off. We get a second look at him, observing that he has a blown out left front shoulder (her shot was to right side), and she attempts a standing unsupported shot and misses. The guide says no problem he ain't going a hundred yards further and he can't go up hill. Wrong again, we track him to dark and decide to come back in the early am hoping to find him dead. Wrong again. This tough SOB was still going strong uphill after 4 miles and through some of the nastiest deadfall, at one point crisscrossing me through a 100' patch of misery 4X, when I heard on the radio from one of the other guides wrangling up the free grazers, for pack out; "Gary I have bad news Pancho has a broken leg". I half heartedly continued on his track knowing that not only are were we losing this very nice bull but now we just lost a horse. The other 4 first time Elk hunters in our camp were able to get a real nasty taste of free range Elk hunting, meanwhile my daughter took away, some valuable lessons, while we had a great time together. Two of those guys didn't even hunt the last two days they were so tired. My daughter felt bad, but accepted the realities of the situation, and can't wait to get back and I am Blessed for it, as I feel so much at home hunting Elk in such difficult conditions. While reflecting on it, I have come to realize how much Elk hunting resembles a whole series of very challenging problems mimicking life. I am going to start a new thread on this coupled as dads hunting with their kids.
1st pick is my kid "brumby" in whom I am well pleased. It is not the shot set up on the bull but similar sans the slope.
2nd pic is blood trail about 400 yards from where shot.
3rd pic is about 1 mile.
4th pic is about 3.5 miles, 24 hours, and the last bedded spot we came across.
5th pic is Pancho the paint and this was the last pic taken of him. He is now bear and wolf feed.
6th pic partial misery he took me through 4X crisscrossing back and forth.
Till next season