This past Friday night I backpacked into my favorite CO wilderness area about 7.5 miles with buck, bull, and bear muzzleloader tags in my pocket. I got home about 2 am on Tuesday night, and processed meat all day yesterday while still trying to wrap my head around what was an absolute roller coaster of a hunt. The highs and lows included my worst ever hunting moment, in some ways one of my most rewarding moments, and ultimately, one of my most physically painful.
Each year I try to think of a theme to tie my muzzleloader write-ups together. A few years ago, it was the gratification and reward of persistence of searching for years in this same area for bucks, and ultimately killing one in the alpine. Last year it was the acceptance of taking opportunities as they presented themselves as I balanced personal recreation and having a newborn at home. This year, I am still kind of at a loss for a theme. Perhaps it should be a story of what could have been, or just "almost". Maybe it's just a "lessons learned" report. Maybe it is an account of making the most of dodging intense backcountry CO hunting pressure. Regardless, I hope to provide an honest account of what was a frustrating yet action-packed, disappointing yet successful time in the mountains.
I have a lot of great pictures that I can't post due to how revealing they'd be of my location, which I am trying to be increasingly cautious of. As you will read, an excess of hunting pressure is a consistent element through this story. I'll try to get this all up little by little by tonight or tomorrow.
Each year I try to think of a theme to tie my muzzleloader write-ups together. A few years ago, it was the gratification and reward of persistence of searching for years in this same area for bucks, and ultimately killing one in the alpine. Last year it was the acceptance of taking opportunities as they presented themselves as I balanced personal recreation and having a newborn at home. This year, I am still kind of at a loss for a theme. Perhaps it should be a story of what could have been, or just "almost". Maybe it's just a "lessons learned" report. Maybe it is an account of making the most of dodging intense backcountry CO hunting pressure. Regardless, I hope to provide an honest account of what was a frustrating yet action-packed, disappointing yet successful time in the mountains.
I have a lot of great pictures that I can't post due to how revealing they'd be of my location, which I am trying to be increasingly cautious of. As you will read, an excess of hunting pressure is a consistent element through this story. I'll try to get this all up little by little by tonight or tomorrow.