Gellar
Well-known member
We (My dad and I) are on the way home and we got skunked in CO. We arrived last week to rain and wet, heavy, tent collapsing snow. Our primary area we wanted to hunt was closed because of fires, but was opened back up on Sunday. We saw elk, moose, bears, deer, tons of mountain bikers and atvers. We only heard actual elk bugling 1 night while laying in the tent. The wind and snow from the week before plus the pine beetles made the forest a barely navigable mess. The elk were still there but in different spots then when I had previously archery hunted this unit. When we got back to the camp this morning for lunch I had a message from my wife she was in the E.r. She wouldn’t answer calls or texts and we quickly packed up our gear and were speeding East. As we were going down the hill on I70 into Denver she finally texted and said her face was swollen and she was vomiting. They were going to do blood work and a CT scan. She told us to stay and keep hunting, they were blowing it of proportion. A few hours later as we crossed into Nebraska on I76 she texted and said she had really high white blood counts but the ct was normal. They put her on a strong antibiotic and sent her home to return on Monday. She was mad that we had to leave 3 days early and was insistent the doctors were blowing this out of proportion and she should have never texted me. I just told her she was acting like her mom. I don’t think that earned me any brownie points. Lol.
snow on the road. The higher we went the deeper it got. The biggest bull we saw, about 40 yards off the road. We heard two days later someone shot him shortly after saw him.
view without smoke
close to the same spot with smoke
A relatively clear spot compared to the rest of the forest
A postage stamp on a red reflector in the national forest.
snow on the road. The higher we went the deeper it got. The biggest bull we saw, about 40 yards off the road. We heard two days later someone shot him shortly after saw him.
view without smoke
close to the same spot with smoke
A relatively clear spot compared to the rest of the forest
A postage stamp on a red reflector in the national forest.