Caseknife
Well-known member
You must do a bit more write-up on your lunch and I read a bit more on my lunch
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This is awesome! Congrats on your goat harvest @Stone_Ice_1One thing that my goat research revealed over and over was how tough these animals are. After shooting this goat numerous times and him still going there was certainly a lot of truth to that.
Now we have to get to him. He died at the top of this little cliff and behind a log to keep him from falling off of it. I had actually seen that log while waiting for him to come out and thought it might be useful. Or at least it looked like a little cliff from below. When we got to it we realized it was about 25 feet high. I found a little spot to climb up the cliff a little bit to the left of the goat. I scrambled up it and turned around, my buddy was no where to be seen. I said something to him and could hear him talking back but wasn't sure where he was. Then he popped up right next to me. I ask how that side was to scramble and he said it was bad, probably 40 feet up a cliff. Told him mine wasn't much better but not as high so we could go back down there. We then sidehill a bit and get to the goat, he is completely dead and a brute! I get just above him, it is really steep here and he his jammed underneath the log. My buddy doesn't want to come all the way out to my position with how steep it is. By this time it is almost dark so we get some pictures.
View attachment 361089
You can't tell in this pictur4e but that log by him is right at the top of a 25 foot cliff. It looks like just a slope here but assure you it is not.
View attachment 361090
After the pictures I want to move him over to where my buddy is at because it is not as steep and there is a tree still standing there. We try to get up up the hill and out from under the log and he won't budge. We try this several times and nothing. All 4 legs are wedged underneath it. Eventually I think well maybe if I go over the log and throw him over the cliff it will work out better. The bottom of the cliff is steep but brushy and I think he will get hung up and not go to far. So I grab one of his front legs and get it over the log. Then the other front leg. This is about when my buddy tells me to be careful of not pushing the entire log off the cliff. It is only wedged up here as it extends past the tree he is standing by. If it goes down we are all going down. I get one of the back legs propped over the tree and can see all the weight of this goat is on that 4th leg that is wedged under the log. I am worried I might have to cut that leg to get it out. I pull on it and get just a couple of inches of movement. I can see the goat slowly moving and back away from it as far as possible and slowly it slides over the log. Down the cliff and hill it goes and it rolls about 30 yards down the hill and gets hung up on some more deadfall.
We then have to scale back down the cliff. I throw my backpack and it rolls way down the hill. Buddy throws his and it stops immediately.
At this point, it is dark, I can only hear out of one ear, there is bear sign everywhere and we are in grizzly country, we have no good headlamps, very little food and not much water left. We are about 2 miles from camp and have a goat to take care of. But it's been a GREAT day!
Couldn't agree more!!!!This story has been a very welcomed reprieve from all the other recent threads! Thank you for sharing your hunt and adventure. All the obstacles you guys overcame was crazy!
Can't wait for the elk story.