BirdManMike
Well-known member
Wonderful writeup. Cant wait for more.
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They get prep time here and there during the day and a lunch. If he can pick up extra tags he can surely get this wrapped before 3:15 pm. No excuses - keep hammering. We’re all waiting. . .Do we have to wait till the end of the school day for the rest of the story?
Oh please!!!! Looking forward to how this ends!Monday Morning
I woke Monday morning to a thin sheet of ice on, well, everything. Despite the night disappointment of the night before I was excited for what this shift in weather could mean for the rut activity and animal movements, including the anticipated recreational post-weekend exodus from the CO backcountry.
From the glassing knob that morning as I destroyed some MH biscuits and gravy, it quickly became clear that my hopes were being realized.
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Within the next 30 minutes or so, I had 5 different bulls picked out feeding or chasing cows on the slopes of a now snow-dusted mountain across the basin. This slope was the front side of the exact basin that I had found all the bulls in a few weeks before. The past two days it had been empty, but now, teeming with rut activity. Two herd bulls pushing small herd and bugling across the skyline. 3 sattelite bulls feeding or thrashing brush. All well above treeline and clearly visible despite being 2 miles away.
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The skylined herd bull, who I am pretty sure was this same photogenic bastard from weeks before, eventually drifted into a small timber patch at 11, 200 ft.
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Meanwhile, a half mile or so to the east, these two perfectly respectable satellite bulls fed serenely through a puzzle of krumholz, cliff bands, and openings. These two were clearly in no hurry, and also clearly aware of the rut pecking order.
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My plan would be to get above these two and try to tempt them out of their midday beds with cow calls, before turning my attention to the herd bull if that didn't pan out. It seemed like a low consequences play that the terrain and wind would allow for.
With multiple opportunities within 2 miles reach, it was time to move.