jeremy.b
Well-known member
Hunt time!
Travel day
Andy headed up to our hunt area on Sunday (11/1) and the rest of us would follow on Tuesday.
Andy made it up without issue Sunday evening after dark, parked for the night and Monday morning located a camp spot for us. He spent the rest of Monday getting acquainted with the area near camp and found some cell service to get us a pin for the camp spot. He did find plenty of deer sign and a grouse to throw in the pot for his dinner, but no real deer sightings from my understanding.
Tuesday I rolled out of town, made it to Meridian noonish to meet up with Tim. We grab a few last minute supplies and headed up the road. Mike got off work and hit the road about an hour or so after us and would end up meeting us at camp.
The drive up from the Treasure valley was also uneventful and we made it into the national forest with 20 minutes of shooting light left. We jumped one doe along the road to camp and a grouse too, which I nicely missed because I made an attempt to hit it high and shot right over it instead...
We got to camp, set up the tent and got settled in waiting for Mike. Andy had not had much luck finding anything other than some sign that day unfortunately.
The evening wore on a bit so we made a quick run to find cell signal and along the way bumped into Mike (he decided to take a 11+ mile detour on his way to camp). We made sure Mike was in good shape, got to cell service, touched base with everyone at home and jumped back to camp caught up and laid plans for the next day.
Tim and I would go check out a ridge that was a mile or so from camp that looked to have good habitat. Mike & Andy would spend the morning behind camp.
Day 1
We all did a quick breakfast the next morning Mike & Andy headed their way with Tim and I heading over to our ridge.
We chose to walk the road up to the ridge instead of driving so we could get a good look at any deer sign going across the road and have a better chance of catching something along the way and not bumping anything when we split off the road onto the ridge.
We did see plenty of sign along the road but made it to the ridge without seeing anything else. Our target ridge had a road that does a big loop out the ridge and then back again to the main road, gated at both ends.
We hit the "back" side of the ridge first which overlooked heavier timber mixed with occasional open pine ridges. There was no recent human sign on the roads which was a good sign.
Within 1/2 mile we jumped a cow elk off the road which moved off over the top of the ridge without being especially spooked. Within 100 yards of where we found the cow we took a minute do a quick range check on a open ridge across draw from us. While we were looking it over Tim caught some movement and said it was at least a couple deer. I eventually was able to pick out a couple does near the top of the ridge. I was working to pick out more deer when they flagged and took off (it was 4-5 does).
I made a comment that it was weird they were taking off to Tim (they were 300+ yards away and no wind going in their direction) and then he's like "dude, there's a wolf!"
My immediate response: "no way man, its gotta just be a coyote..." I'm watching the ridge and finally pick out what he saw: "Nope, definitely a wolf!!" and it was gone that fast. Neither of us had picked up wolf tags (nor did we have a real shot), but that's the first time I've run across one out in the woods. I'm not a fan of their impact on game populations and behavior, but even with that said they are pretty cool.
We continue our way out the ridge when eventually opened up a bit. We finally found a semi-recent scrape. We made plans to have time work a draw while I would hang back to watch for movement. Before even getting settled we jumped another set of does. We probably would have had a chance at them but neither Tim or I were quite ready to shoot a doe just yet.
We continued to work the upper edge of the open ridges but didn't turn up anything new.
We also got a look at an isolated ridge that I half considered checking out (if I felt like dropping a ton of elevation that I would have to gain back).
We eventually rounded the end of the ridge and found another good draw to work. We made plans to have Tim set up on one side and I'd go work the draw from the other side his way.
As we split and I headed back to drop down the opposite ridge I caught sight of a deer trotting out onto my ridge. I put glasses on it and it started off again and I saw that it was a small buck! It was headed right into the draw that Tim was going to cover and I hoped that he was in a spot to see it. I took my sweet time working down the ridge and then eventually through the draw but there was no shot from Tim.
We met back up and he never saw it and the buck likely slipped right under him in the brush, or between us. We were overlooking camp from our location and could see that Mike and Andy were back now (it was midday). We had a few more draws that could be worked and since we were finding deer we decided that I would head back to camp to grab Andy and/or Mike to help us work the draws. Tim would stay put until we made it back.
I hustled off the ridge and back to camp (~2 miles). Mike had headed back up the hill behind camp but Andy was still around and was happy to hear we were into deer and to join us for the last couple hours of daylight.
We worked our way back to Tim, eventually settle on the plan to have each of us setup on a separate ridge and draw for the evening.
Nothing showed for any of us though, and I snuck into a different spot for the last 30 minutes of shooting light, but still nothing.
Darkness was settling in and on the way back to meet up with Tim and Andy a deer blew somewhere below the road system we were on. I caught up with Tim shortly after that and he said it had been in the draw that was right between him and I. Which means it probably had been there the whole time, no more than 100 yards from either of us. It was a good (re)learning experience on how hard deer will hold to cover if they need to!
We made it back to camp (with maybe finding a dead end to a road we thought would take us out and having to crawl up to the proper way out) and caught up with Mike. He had a doe he tried to make a move on but he was using his 45-70 and she spooked before he could close to a comfortable distance.
We spent the evening bs-ing and eventually working on plans for the next day.
Travel day
Andy headed up to our hunt area on Sunday (11/1) and the rest of us would follow on Tuesday.
Andy made it up without issue Sunday evening after dark, parked for the night and Monday morning located a camp spot for us. He spent the rest of Monday getting acquainted with the area near camp and found some cell service to get us a pin for the camp spot. He did find plenty of deer sign and a grouse to throw in the pot for his dinner, but no real deer sightings from my understanding.
Tuesday I rolled out of town, made it to Meridian noonish to meet up with Tim. We grab a few last minute supplies and headed up the road. Mike got off work and hit the road about an hour or so after us and would end up meeting us at camp.
The drive up from the Treasure valley was also uneventful and we made it into the national forest with 20 minutes of shooting light left. We jumped one doe along the road to camp and a grouse too, which I nicely missed because I made an attempt to hit it high and shot right over it instead...
We got to camp, set up the tent and got settled in waiting for Mike. Andy had not had much luck finding anything other than some sign that day unfortunately.
The evening wore on a bit so we made a quick run to find cell signal and along the way bumped into Mike (he decided to take a 11+ mile detour on his way to camp). We made sure Mike was in good shape, got to cell service, touched base with everyone at home and jumped back to camp caught up and laid plans for the next day.
Tim and I would go check out a ridge that was a mile or so from camp that looked to have good habitat. Mike & Andy would spend the morning behind camp.
Day 1
We all did a quick breakfast the next morning Mike & Andy headed their way with Tim and I heading over to our ridge.
We chose to walk the road up to the ridge instead of driving so we could get a good look at any deer sign going across the road and have a better chance of catching something along the way and not bumping anything when we split off the road onto the ridge.
We did see plenty of sign along the road but made it to the ridge without seeing anything else. Our target ridge had a road that does a big loop out the ridge and then back again to the main road, gated at both ends.
We hit the "back" side of the ridge first which overlooked heavier timber mixed with occasional open pine ridges. There was no recent human sign on the roads which was a good sign.
Within 1/2 mile we jumped a cow elk off the road which moved off over the top of the ridge without being especially spooked. Within 100 yards of where we found the cow we took a minute do a quick range check on a open ridge across draw from us. While we were looking it over Tim caught some movement and said it was at least a couple deer. I eventually was able to pick out a couple does near the top of the ridge. I was working to pick out more deer when they flagged and took off (it was 4-5 does).
I made a comment that it was weird they were taking off to Tim (they were 300+ yards away and no wind going in their direction) and then he's like "dude, there's a wolf!"
My immediate response: "no way man, its gotta just be a coyote..." I'm watching the ridge and finally pick out what he saw: "Nope, definitely a wolf!!" and it was gone that fast. Neither of us had picked up wolf tags (nor did we have a real shot), but that's the first time I've run across one out in the woods. I'm not a fan of their impact on game populations and behavior, but even with that said they are pretty cool.
We continue our way out the ridge when eventually opened up a bit. We finally found a semi-recent scrape. We made plans to have time work a draw while I would hang back to watch for movement. Before even getting settled we jumped another set of does. We probably would have had a chance at them but neither Tim or I were quite ready to shoot a doe just yet.
We continued to work the upper edge of the open ridges but didn't turn up anything new.
We also got a look at an isolated ridge that I half considered checking out (if I felt like dropping a ton of elevation that I would have to gain back).
We eventually rounded the end of the ridge and found another good draw to work. We made plans to have Tim set up on one side and I'd go work the draw from the other side his way.
As we split and I headed back to drop down the opposite ridge I caught sight of a deer trotting out onto my ridge. I put glasses on it and it started off again and I saw that it was a small buck! It was headed right into the draw that Tim was going to cover and I hoped that he was in a spot to see it. I took my sweet time working down the ridge and then eventually through the draw but there was no shot from Tim.
We met back up and he never saw it and the buck likely slipped right under him in the brush, or between us. We were overlooking camp from our location and could see that Mike and Andy were back now (it was midday). We had a few more draws that could be worked and since we were finding deer we decided that I would head back to camp to grab Andy and/or Mike to help us work the draws. Tim would stay put until we made it back.
I hustled off the ridge and back to camp (~2 miles). Mike had headed back up the hill behind camp but Andy was still around and was happy to hear we were into deer and to join us for the last couple hours of daylight.
We worked our way back to Tim, eventually settle on the plan to have each of us setup on a separate ridge and draw for the evening.
Nothing showed for any of us though, and I snuck into a different spot for the last 30 minutes of shooting light, but still nothing.
Darkness was settling in and on the way back to meet up with Tim and Andy a deer blew somewhere below the road system we were on. I caught up with Tim shortly after that and he said it had been in the draw that was right between him and I. Which means it probably had been there the whole time, no more than 100 yards from either of us. It was a good (re)learning experience on how hard deer will hold to cover if they need to!
We made it back to camp (with maybe finding a dead end to a road we thought would take us out and having to crawl up to the proper way out) and caught up with Mike. He had a doe he tried to make a move on but he was using his 45-70 and she spooked before he could close to a comfortable distance.
We spent the evening bs-ing and eventually working on plans for the next day.
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