This season my buddy Ted and I (actually I alone and he just trusted me) decided to hunt a new zone in Idaho. We bought tags early. Another longtime friend, Rich, wanted to come with but waited too long and the zone tags sold out.
Fast forward through the summer, and Ted had to bail from the hunt, but Rich was able to buy a leftover tag. I’ve known Rich for 33 years. His dad taught me much of what I know about hunting, and I was glad to have him along. I was also really bummed Ted wouldn’t join us.
We launched into an enormous elk zone with no experience there whatsoever. Two friends, two Drahthaars, and a bunch of time off. Rich owns a half brother to Finn, and he is a wonderful dog.
Requisite supplies.
It was 80 degrees and smoky when we hit the trailhead. We decided to start the trip with a Pabst Blue Ribbon. I’m a self admitted beer snob, but I’ll admit the PBR ain’t bad and it’s a hell of a lot cheaper than an IPA.
We lined out down the trail towards a predetermined campsite. Unfortunately, the water I had scouted was now dried up. Fortunately, we found an alternate source we could hike to.
Home.
The best laid plans of mice and men, or some shit like that. We glassed that evening through the smoke to see a tent right in the middle of the basin we planned to hunt. We ran into two other guys camped near us. Turns out they were bivy hunters who bit off way more than they could chew. They were gone by Friday.
I did a big loop around a drainage on Friday. Tons of old sign, absolutely nothing within the last week or so. I dropped about 1900 feet from camp without cutting a fresh elk track or hearing a bugle.
Friday evening brought a huge change in weather. 40-50 mph gusts almost folded up the Copper Spur. The moon dust we were camped in was blowing underneath the rain fly in clouds. My tent looked like a potato field inside from all the dirt. I was relieved when the rain came.
And rain it did. In sheets. I woke up on Saturday to fog and 30 yards visibility. Then more rain. And wind. And fog. It ended up being a complete weather day where our only meaningful accomplishment was reorientation of the tents into the wind. And some whiskey. And a nap. And a fire.
Boy Scout skills.
Parting of the storm.
Nightcap.
Fast forward through the summer, and Ted had to bail from the hunt, but Rich was able to buy a leftover tag. I’ve known Rich for 33 years. His dad taught me much of what I know about hunting, and I was glad to have him along. I was also really bummed Ted wouldn’t join us.
We launched into an enormous elk zone with no experience there whatsoever. Two friends, two Drahthaars, and a bunch of time off. Rich owns a half brother to Finn, and he is a wonderful dog.
Requisite supplies.
It was 80 degrees and smoky when we hit the trailhead. We decided to start the trip with a Pabst Blue Ribbon. I’m a self admitted beer snob, but I’ll admit the PBR ain’t bad and it’s a hell of a lot cheaper than an IPA.
We lined out down the trail towards a predetermined campsite. Unfortunately, the water I had scouted was now dried up. Fortunately, we found an alternate source we could hike to.
Home.
The best laid plans of mice and men, or some shit like that. We glassed that evening through the smoke to see a tent right in the middle of the basin we planned to hunt. We ran into two other guys camped near us. Turns out they were bivy hunters who bit off way more than they could chew. They were gone by Friday.
I did a big loop around a drainage on Friday. Tons of old sign, absolutely nothing within the last week or so. I dropped about 1900 feet from camp without cutting a fresh elk track or hearing a bugle.
Friday evening brought a huge change in weather. 40-50 mph gusts almost folded up the Copper Spur. The moon dust we were camped in was blowing underneath the rain fly in clouds. My tent looked like a potato field inside from all the dirt. I was relieved when the rain came.
And rain it did. In sheets. I woke up on Saturday to fog and 30 yards visibility. Then more rain. And wind. And fog. It ended up being a complete weather day where our only meaningful accomplishment was reorientation of the tents into the wind. And some whiskey. And a nap. And a fire.
Boy Scout skills.
Parting of the storm.
Nightcap.
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