Mustangs Rule
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2021
- Messages
- 699
One of my favorite photos of myself was taken on a remote ranch in South Central Utah ten years ago when I was 63.
In the photo I am sitting a midst a group of flat top sandstone boulders. I look like a rock. I like that. All you can see of me is from the chest up. My clothes match the rocks and I am wearing a round Sheepskin hat, my “Lucky Cold Weather Hunting Hat”.
My face is all covered up. It was a mid-winter 10 below zero morning, I am looking at around 130 elk and watching them walking into me.
Typically I sleep out until I take my Elk. I made my bedroll out of three layers of the heaviest surplus woolen blankets. It is impervious to cold. I decline staying in the ranch bunkhouse at night till I have “made meat”. I feel it is important for me to really be out with the elk or any game animal when I am hunting.
Often I would spread out my bed roll in a shallow cave overlooking a timeless elk trail. The cave’s walls are covered with ancient Native American rock art,,,depicting primal hunting scenes. I would start a small fire and see those images coming and going in the shifting firelight at night.
This cave was a hunting camp, used by native Americans for many thousands of years. Being there was a privilege.
I have never taken an elk beyond 200 yards.. Most were even closer. There is something that seems right the closer I take my big game animals.
Back to those incoming elk.
I made three different tell-tales to judge wind and tied them under my muzzle. They were all made from the course mane and tail hairs from my horses. I braided one thicker, one medium and one was just a bunch of real long hairs.
I used them to judge varying wind speed and I could pick up the most delicate luff of wind with those few fine long hairs.
The wind was ideal, coming almost from the elk to me. Then it stopped, and for just a few seconds the gentlest soft slow breeze went from me to them.
The elk were about 750 yards away going in a long single file line. Then the lead cow lifted her head almost straight up, smelled me, others followed suit and the entire herd compressed into a circle with the youngest in the middle. There were a few young spike bulls but this herd was mostly cows, and yearlings.
Next the rear guard cow began a retreat, the circle formation became elliptical, spear shaped as they returned to the high country. A rule of elk hunting is never shoot the lead cow. She is the keeper of survival knowledge. The last cow elk is also very critical. She is also key factor in herd survival.
Lead cow elk, Last cow elk, they are herd bookends
I was happy for them, seeing their survival skills protect them from me. I felt privileged to have witnessed all this behavior. What a sight to behold!
My rifle was a 1950’s vintage model 70 Winchester in .270. It wears a fixed 4X scope.
All the checkering is worn smooth. The bluing is “thin” at best and the scope finish has been worn down to bare metal from going in and out of my saddle scabbard so may times.
So scoped, for deer or antelope it is a 250 to 300 yard rifle at most. Elk are bigger, so add an extra 100 yards for hunting them,,,at most, but I always do take my big game so much closer.
I know many younger hunters would say that with their modern super long range rifles, they could easily shot elk at that 750 yard range.
Some have told me I should get a better rifle.
I never for an instant regretted not having a longer range rifle that day. I do not want one. I like taking my game animals at about half the maximum range of my old rifle.
For me, shooting one of those elk so far away would have been obscene act, a profane use of way too much technology to feel like I was engaged in a “Fair Chase Hunt”.
There would be many other Elk for me to hunt and kill and I did, the next day at 175 yards in vast open country.
I slept in that same cave again the night before. Doing that, looking at the ancient images made by stone age hunters,,,,well,,,,It makes me aware of some misty, cloud born contract I feel as a hunter.
I am not sure exactly what the all the rules are,,,, but to keep my hunters soul intact,,,and it still is at 73 years of age, there are some boundaries I do not cross, some contracts I do not break.
Happy Trails,
Mustangs Rule.
In the photo I am sitting a midst a group of flat top sandstone boulders. I look like a rock. I like that. All you can see of me is from the chest up. My clothes match the rocks and I am wearing a round Sheepskin hat, my “Lucky Cold Weather Hunting Hat”.
My face is all covered up. It was a mid-winter 10 below zero morning, I am looking at around 130 elk and watching them walking into me.
Typically I sleep out until I take my Elk. I made my bedroll out of three layers of the heaviest surplus woolen blankets. It is impervious to cold. I decline staying in the ranch bunkhouse at night till I have “made meat”. I feel it is important for me to really be out with the elk or any game animal when I am hunting.
Often I would spread out my bed roll in a shallow cave overlooking a timeless elk trail. The cave’s walls are covered with ancient Native American rock art,,,depicting primal hunting scenes. I would start a small fire and see those images coming and going in the shifting firelight at night.
This cave was a hunting camp, used by native Americans for many thousands of years. Being there was a privilege.
I have never taken an elk beyond 200 yards.. Most were even closer. There is something that seems right the closer I take my big game animals.
Back to those incoming elk.
I made three different tell-tales to judge wind and tied them under my muzzle. They were all made from the course mane and tail hairs from my horses. I braided one thicker, one medium and one was just a bunch of real long hairs.
I used them to judge varying wind speed and I could pick up the most delicate luff of wind with those few fine long hairs.
The wind was ideal, coming almost from the elk to me. Then it stopped, and for just a few seconds the gentlest soft slow breeze went from me to them.
The elk were about 750 yards away going in a long single file line. Then the lead cow lifted her head almost straight up, smelled me, others followed suit and the entire herd compressed into a circle with the youngest in the middle. There were a few young spike bulls but this herd was mostly cows, and yearlings.
Next the rear guard cow began a retreat, the circle formation became elliptical, spear shaped as they returned to the high country. A rule of elk hunting is never shoot the lead cow. She is the keeper of survival knowledge. The last cow elk is also very critical. She is also key factor in herd survival.
Lead cow elk, Last cow elk, they are herd bookends
I was happy for them, seeing their survival skills protect them from me. I felt privileged to have witnessed all this behavior. What a sight to behold!
My rifle was a 1950’s vintage model 70 Winchester in .270. It wears a fixed 4X scope.
All the checkering is worn smooth. The bluing is “thin” at best and the scope finish has been worn down to bare metal from going in and out of my saddle scabbard so may times.
So scoped, for deer or antelope it is a 250 to 300 yard rifle at most. Elk are bigger, so add an extra 100 yards for hunting them,,,at most, but I always do take my big game so much closer.
I know many younger hunters would say that with their modern super long range rifles, they could easily shot elk at that 750 yard range.
Some have told me I should get a better rifle.
I never for an instant regretted not having a longer range rifle that day. I do not want one. I like taking my game animals at about half the maximum range of my old rifle.
For me, shooting one of those elk so far away would have been obscene act, a profane use of way too much technology to feel like I was engaged in a “Fair Chase Hunt”.
There would be many other Elk for me to hunt and kill and I did, the next day at 175 yards in vast open country.
I slept in that same cave again the night before. Doing that, looking at the ancient images made by stone age hunters,,,,well,,,,It makes me aware of some misty, cloud born contract I feel as a hunter.
I am not sure exactly what the all the rules are,,,, but to keep my hunters soul intact,,,and it still is at 73 years of age, there are some boundaries I do not cross, some contracts I do not break.
Happy Trails,
Mustangs Rule.