Hatchie Dawg
Well-known member
Six or so years ago my good friend Pat and I started planning our first antelope hunt by buying a preference point for WY. Neither knew at the time that life would take my good friend of 16 years from next door in Western TN, to just outside of DC. Pat is one of my two best friends in the world and his move left a hole in my life that is hard to fill. At 51, new best friends are slow to cultivate. Pat got me into turkey hunting and back into deer hunting. In turn I introduced him to real duck hunting, and saltwater fishing. He is the guy that jumped in on the Western thing and made two hard wilderness elk hunts with me. We went into country I would not have tackled alone, at first. In all we hunted TN, ND, CO, and fished locally as well as the AL and FL coasts inshore and off. Along the way we raised our kids together, coached soccer, enjoyed cookouts, suffered together through a terrible divorce and later celebrated a new love and marriage. All those little and big things that weave a good friendship together are hard to replace. We will make new memories but they will be fewer and different as time and distance add up. The good thing with men is that we seem to be able to fall in right where we left off and I hope that is the case here. It certainly was on our hunt.
So this year we spent our 5 points and drew pronghorn buck tags for our desired unit in WY. It took the leftover draw but we also drew two doe tags a piece. In all we had nine antelope tags spread over three units. Pat's son Austin was initially going but a last minute school conflict prevented his trip.We planned to camp out on BLM land and started the electronic scouting process from home. Our gear was generally set from the elk trips we had made. I continued to work up loads for my mountain rifle, a Tikka Superlite in .270. I made progress and found some really accurate loads but at the end of the day I couldn't get the velocity and accuracy to match up to my dead reliable Browning A-Bolt in .280. So once again my western rifle would be the Browning. It just plain shoots and hits like a freaking bolt of lightning. Not sure why I'm fussing over 1.5lbs of additional weight. I did upgrade my optics with a Leupold HD 60mm spotter. It seems to be really nice glass but showed me just how good the little Nikon ED 50 is. At the end of the day I am happy with both.
Here are a few pics of the prep.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Hit the road Oct 6th aiming at Jeff City MO., Pat's hometown where we would meet up at his parents house then head on north.
WY Start by Hatchie, on Flickr
From Jeff City we headed up through the Sand Hills of NE, aiming for eastern, WY. It was all new country to me and I enjoyed the drive immensely.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
I'll own up to a mistake here in that in the application process when we didn't draw our first choice doe tags I accidentally applied for private land only tags as a second choice in the leftover draw. As fate would have it I drew the first choice doe tags good for public while Pat and Austin drew the second choice "private land" tags. Didn't look good for the guy running our application procedures. I panicked a little when I realized the mistake and spent a good bit of time trying to find a land owner willing to let us doe hunt on his place. I had just about given up when a blind Facebook request was answered. Turns out the rancher and I had some common interests in local Boys and Girls Clubs as well hospital foundation work. Pat's doe hunt was secured. There are good people in WY.
Sunday the 7th of Oct we met the rancher, toured several sections of land and then were set loose to fill Pat's tags. The rancher was a really nice guy. He said it would not be hard to fill two doe tags and he was right.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
1st lope
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
and the 2nd
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
After filling Pat's doe tags we headed west to Casper. Looking at the forecast of snow and rain for 4 days we decided discretion was the better part of valor and opted for the local Days Inn. It was cheap enough and clean. I've got to admit the hotel was a damn nice luxury.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Had some special attention at a local eatery.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Monday the 8th we set about to fill my doe tags west of Casper.
Contd
So this year we spent our 5 points and drew pronghorn buck tags for our desired unit in WY. It took the leftover draw but we also drew two doe tags a piece. In all we had nine antelope tags spread over three units. Pat's son Austin was initially going but a last minute school conflict prevented his trip.We planned to camp out on BLM land and started the electronic scouting process from home. Our gear was generally set from the elk trips we had made. I continued to work up loads for my mountain rifle, a Tikka Superlite in .270. I made progress and found some really accurate loads but at the end of the day I couldn't get the velocity and accuracy to match up to my dead reliable Browning A-Bolt in .280. So once again my western rifle would be the Browning. It just plain shoots and hits like a freaking bolt of lightning. Not sure why I'm fussing over 1.5lbs of additional weight. I did upgrade my optics with a Leupold HD 60mm spotter. It seems to be really nice glass but showed me just how good the little Nikon ED 50 is. At the end of the day I am happy with both.
Here are a few pics of the prep.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Hit the road Oct 6th aiming at Jeff City MO., Pat's hometown where we would meet up at his parents house then head on north.
WY Start by Hatchie, on Flickr
From Jeff City we headed up through the Sand Hills of NE, aiming for eastern, WY. It was all new country to me and I enjoyed the drive immensely.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
I'll own up to a mistake here in that in the application process when we didn't draw our first choice doe tags I accidentally applied for private land only tags as a second choice in the leftover draw. As fate would have it I drew the first choice doe tags good for public while Pat and Austin drew the second choice "private land" tags. Didn't look good for the guy running our application procedures. I panicked a little when I realized the mistake and spent a good bit of time trying to find a land owner willing to let us doe hunt on his place. I had just about given up when a blind Facebook request was answered. Turns out the rancher and I had some common interests in local Boys and Girls Clubs as well hospital foundation work. Pat's doe hunt was secured. There are good people in WY.
Sunday the 7th of Oct we met the rancher, toured several sections of land and then were set loose to fill Pat's tags. The rancher was a really nice guy. He said it would not be hard to fill two doe tags and he was right.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
1st lope
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
and the 2nd
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
After filling Pat's doe tags we headed west to Casper. Looking at the forecast of snow and rain for 4 days we decided discretion was the better part of valor and opted for the local Days Inn. It was cheap enough and clean. I've got to admit the hotel was a damn nice luxury.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Had some special attention at a local eatery.
Untitled by Hatchie, on Flickr
Monday the 8th we set about to fill my doe tags west of Casper.
Contd