singleshot1
Well-known member
A buddy and I had a second season Colorado Elk hunt planned and decided that we might as well grab a couple over the counter doe tags in Wyoming and give Antelope a try while we were out there.
We picked a unit that had a lot of leftover tags and not much public access...geniuses we are.
We drove through the night from Illinois and arrived just as the sun was rising. Changed into our hunting clothes along side the road, then set off to drive around our unit and check out the accessible areas that we could hunt. Couple hours later we had two area's that we were going to focus our efforts on.
Now finding antelope wasn't a problem, probably saw 1000+ antelope in 2 days, finding antelope on accessible public land was a whole different story. We had 4 doe tags between the two of us so we didn't think that would be a problem to fill those.
We got out and hiked into a larger section of public ground, getting away from the roads and over small rises in the land we found several does to chose from on both days. I ended up taking a nice doe on day one and one on day two. My buddy filled both his tags on day two.
Here is my first antelope.
And a picture of camp, nothing like the feeling of camping in the middle of no where.
Lessons learned:
1. Lots of leftover tags doesn't always mean good things.
2. Them damn prickley cactus things suck! Suck Bad! Still finding them 2 weeks later.
3. Wyoming mud is like no other mud, sticky, heavy, and haunting. :W:
Off to elk camp, will start a new thread for that....
We picked a unit that had a lot of leftover tags and not much public access...geniuses we are.
We drove through the night from Illinois and arrived just as the sun was rising. Changed into our hunting clothes along side the road, then set off to drive around our unit and check out the accessible areas that we could hunt. Couple hours later we had two area's that we were going to focus our efforts on.
Now finding antelope wasn't a problem, probably saw 1000+ antelope in 2 days, finding antelope on accessible public land was a whole different story. We had 4 doe tags between the two of us so we didn't think that would be a problem to fill those.
We got out and hiked into a larger section of public ground, getting away from the roads and over small rises in the land we found several does to chose from on both days. I ended up taking a nice doe on day one and one on day two. My buddy filled both his tags on day two.
Here is my first antelope.
And a picture of camp, nothing like the feeling of camping in the middle of no where.
Lessons learned:
1. Lots of leftover tags doesn't always mean good things.
2. Them damn prickley cactus things suck! Suck Bad! Still finding them 2 weeks later.
3. Wyoming mud is like no other mud, sticky, heavy, and haunting. :W:
Off to elk camp, will start a new thread for that....