Day Two - Morning
The second morning started slower than I hoped. I drove back to the far reaches of the unit, climbing the good ridges that afforded great viewing places. In spite of the great looking country and the good glassing points, I did not see anything in the first two hours.
By mid-morning, we had made our way to the spot where the one group of elk had been spotted the previous morning. I told Bernie to wait, and I would hike around the ridge and glass the unburned areas below.
As I rounded the ridge, a coyote was sitting on some rocks looking back at me. I looked down and saw a large number of ravens flying off what looked like a dead elk. I glassed and could see antlers.
I walked down to find a young 5X5 bull laying dead on the grassy open hillside. Not sure how this bull was not recovered. It was hit perfectly. The bull would not have traveled very far with that kind of wound. And, there was not a tree for over a half mile. Not sure how this bull ended up not being retrieved.
Did the hunter not even bother to follow the shot, even in this very open terrain?
Did the hunter find it and decided it was not the size he was looking for?
Did the hunter find it and was intimidated at the prospect of trying to get an entire elk off this hillside and did not know how, or have the means necessary, to quarter and pack this bull the 1000 yards up the hill, or the mile down to the road below?
Who knows. But, to find the bull dead, and rotting from three days in the sun, was kind of disturbing. I had thought about cutting off the head and boiling him out in a Euro mount, but figured the game warder would wonder what I was doing with a dead rotted elk head in my camp, when I didn't have a tag. So, I left him there, and the coyotes and ravens will continue to have a feast.
The good news of the morning was that after leaving the elk and continuing around the south facing ridge, I set up the spotting scope, and in the course of an hour, had three herds of elk bedded on benches below. I walked back to Bernie and told him what I had found. It would take some serious navigating to get around these ridges and move the two miles southeast to the areas these elk would be.
Having seen at least four branch antlered bulls in these groups, it was decided that we would go after them, regardless of the vehicle damage incurred to get Bernie over there. Those of you experienced in traveling what they call "roads" in Nevada, know that a vehicle will suffer greatly on some of the goat trails. The hour it took to travel these short few miles demonstrated why you need a reliable rig to hunt Nevada.
The second morning started slower than I hoped. I drove back to the far reaches of the unit, climbing the good ridges that afforded great viewing places. In spite of the great looking country and the good glassing points, I did not see anything in the first two hours.
By mid-morning, we had made our way to the spot where the one group of elk had been spotted the previous morning. I told Bernie to wait, and I would hike around the ridge and glass the unburned areas below.
As I rounded the ridge, a coyote was sitting on some rocks looking back at me. I looked down and saw a large number of ravens flying off what looked like a dead elk. I glassed and could see antlers.
I walked down to find a young 5X5 bull laying dead on the grassy open hillside. Not sure how this bull was not recovered. It was hit perfectly. The bull would not have traveled very far with that kind of wound. And, there was not a tree for over a half mile. Not sure how this bull ended up not being retrieved.
Did the hunter not even bother to follow the shot, even in this very open terrain?
Did the hunter find it and decided it was not the size he was looking for?
Did the hunter find it and was intimidated at the prospect of trying to get an entire elk off this hillside and did not know how, or have the means necessary, to quarter and pack this bull the 1000 yards up the hill, or the mile down to the road below?
Who knows. But, to find the bull dead, and rotting from three days in the sun, was kind of disturbing. I had thought about cutting off the head and boiling him out in a Euro mount, but figured the game warder would wonder what I was doing with a dead rotted elk head in my camp, when I didn't have a tag. So, I left him there, and the coyotes and ravens will continue to have a feast.
The good news of the morning was that after leaving the elk and continuing around the south facing ridge, I set up the spotting scope, and in the course of an hour, had three herds of elk bedded on benches below. I walked back to Bernie and told him what I had found. It would take some serious navigating to get around these ridges and move the two miles southeast to the areas these elk would be.
Having seen at least four branch antlered bulls in these groups, it was decided that we would go after them, regardless of the vehicle damage incurred to get Bernie over there. Those of you experienced in traveling what they call "roads" in Nevada, know that a vehicle will suffer greatly on some of the goat trails. The hour it took to travel these short few miles demonstrated why you need a reliable rig to hunt Nevada.