BT_NVhunter
Active member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2021
- Messages
- 272
So I joined this forum last year as I begun my search of how to get into western hunting. Finding Randy's videos and podcast was instrumental to feeding my fire of getting into it. I was a hunter in my teens in the Midwest and back east in Maine. But had a long time off during my military career, I would hunt when I went home for Christmas and other holidays but not routinely. I've now settled my life in Elko NV, this really peaked my interest in Elk hunting seeing them while in Jarbidge and down near Ely always made my heart race and want to get closer. So I began my research and after getting a GoHunt membership, I found out just how hard it was going to be to hunt Elk in my home state. One thing that really made me hesitant was the 7 year waiting period after drawing a bull tag. I did not want to draw a tag with no knowledge of how to find/ hunt Elk. So I put in for tags that I knew would be a miracle if I drew just to get my points. I did put in for cow and spike tags with more care hoping maybe I could learn a little about a unit I may hunt in the future for bulls. But no dice in the draw for those tags. Once I found out I had not drawn any tags that would prevent me from having time off work to go, I really started to take the non resident options to heart. I actually came to the decision of hunting CO just based off tag price and the amount of opportunity in the state. I reached out on this forum looking for a partner that maybe interested in going and learning together or someone that may need a hunting buddy who had more experience than me. I got a lot of replies of people who's plans might align with mine. One in particular message was from a HuntTalker who lived in CO and had for sometime, he offered for me to come hunt his home units and help me along with questions I may have. I don't know if he quite knew the sheer amount of questions I had lol. But he did answer all of them as we kept in contact for the long months of nail biting in anticipation. His mentorship meant so much to me, and I now consider him a friend and will for as long as he feels the same to me.
So the long months of prep and accumulation of gear were finally over. I left NV on the 18th of September at around 3am and arrived at the local Walmart for my last minute items, extra ice and to get my tag printed at about 4:30pm. My little pop up camper did not fair so well from the journey and one of the legs was not operating correctly when we popped it up. We were able to get a temporary fix in place and I got some sleep.
Day 1, I awoke at 4am and made myself a cup of joe and stepped out to have a smoke before putting my hunting gear on. While outside starring at the BRIGHT moon and starry sky a bugle sounded off from a short distance away. Then another answered from across the trail from my camper. I knew they were bulls as they just had that natural guttural sound. I couldn't believe it all the dreaming and prep and here I am waking up in camp to bulls bugling literally out my camper door. I couldn't get dressed fast enough. When my mentor showed up at 5:30ish I told him about the bugling. He must've thought "yeah right okay". But he humored me and we did a little cow calling as we entered the woods a few hundred yards from the camper. Immediately the bull answered and my mentor lit up as much as me and said "that my friend is a bull". He quickly told me to move down the ridge a short way and get setup he stayed on top to continue calling. I sat down just in time to hear some raking about 50-60yds in front of me. I couldn't believe how much ground the animal had covered in less than 2 minutes, unbelievable. I was watching very intently in the direction of the raking as this was the very first few seconds of legal shooting light and in the timber it was still very dark. I then caught movement off to my left and saw the bulls antlers pass by, his body was just out of sight below a small drop in elevation between us. My mentor we will call Burn for the sake of story telling, had stopped cow calling. I thought any second I would hear the sound of a bow and thwack of arrow but I didn't. I heard a twig snap back in the direction of the raking and Burn came over told me he had hoped I would cow call as the bull would have been forced to come right up and over offering me a shot. We ran up the trail to get ahead of the bull and set back up Burn began to call again but the bull had already passed by. After he moved on we dropped down the hill and Burn began to rake a tree which the bull replied with a chuckle coming back towards us but the thick hill never offered a shot and he became disinterested moving on. We made a large circle again and working through the ridges the bull had actually circled back and caught us off guard as we walked. Not spooking him and with a bad wind we backed out a little. At this time Burn had to go so I set off on my own but was unable to relocate the bull during the midday hours. Burn returned around 4pm and we set out to a ridge side and did a cow party, Burn had seen 4 cows moving down the draw towards him but when he stopped calling I thought that was my que to stop as well, whoops he was sure if I had continued the animals would have continued down towards us. But when we both stopped the animals stopped and went on alert and never came closer before dark.
So the long months of prep and accumulation of gear were finally over. I left NV on the 18th of September at around 3am and arrived at the local Walmart for my last minute items, extra ice and to get my tag printed at about 4:30pm. My little pop up camper did not fair so well from the journey and one of the legs was not operating correctly when we popped it up. We were able to get a temporary fix in place and I got some sleep.
Day 1, I awoke at 4am and made myself a cup of joe and stepped out to have a smoke before putting my hunting gear on. While outside starring at the BRIGHT moon and starry sky a bugle sounded off from a short distance away. Then another answered from across the trail from my camper. I knew they were bulls as they just had that natural guttural sound. I couldn't believe it all the dreaming and prep and here I am waking up in camp to bulls bugling literally out my camper door. I couldn't get dressed fast enough. When my mentor showed up at 5:30ish I told him about the bugling. He must've thought "yeah right okay". But he humored me and we did a little cow calling as we entered the woods a few hundred yards from the camper. Immediately the bull answered and my mentor lit up as much as me and said "that my friend is a bull". He quickly told me to move down the ridge a short way and get setup he stayed on top to continue calling. I sat down just in time to hear some raking about 50-60yds in front of me. I couldn't believe how much ground the animal had covered in less than 2 minutes, unbelievable. I was watching very intently in the direction of the raking as this was the very first few seconds of legal shooting light and in the timber it was still very dark. I then caught movement off to my left and saw the bulls antlers pass by, his body was just out of sight below a small drop in elevation between us. My mentor we will call Burn for the sake of story telling, had stopped cow calling. I thought any second I would hear the sound of a bow and thwack of arrow but I didn't. I heard a twig snap back in the direction of the raking and Burn came over told me he had hoped I would cow call as the bull would have been forced to come right up and over offering me a shot. We ran up the trail to get ahead of the bull and set back up Burn began to call again but the bull had already passed by. After he moved on we dropped down the hill and Burn began to rake a tree which the bull replied with a chuckle coming back towards us but the thick hill never offered a shot and he became disinterested moving on. We made a large circle again and working through the ridges the bull had actually circled back and caught us off guard as we walked. Not spooking him and with a bad wind we backed out a little. At this time Burn had to go so I set off on my own but was unable to relocate the bull during the midday hours. Burn returned around 4pm and we set out to a ridge side and did a cow party, Burn had seen 4 cows moving down the draw towards him but when he stopped calling I thought that was my que to stop as well, whoops he was sure if I had continued the animals would have continued down towards us. But when we both stopped the animals stopped and went on alert and never came closer before dark.