GrantK
Well-known member
We climbed straight up all the way to the ridge at almost 13,000' to get the wind in our favor, then traversed over to see if we could locate the sheep. This turned out to be more of a challenge than we anticipated. The little basin where the sheep were had more trees than I had initially seen, and we made multiple attempts to peek into it without popping up right on top of the sheep. Eventually, we got a signal from Brent, who was watching from the glassing knob. He let us know that the sheep had fed back into the next basin over, where we had come up, while we were trying to get a look at them.
We still had to reposition twice to avoid popping out too close, as the basin had a very convex roll at the top and it was hard to find a spot we could see more than 30 yards straight down but eventually, we were able to find the sheep at 240 yards across the basin.
Unfortunately, just as we spotted them, they bedded down with the biggest ram behind a tree, making it difficult to size them up. However, I was able to see enough through the spotting scope to confidently count at least seven rings, and probably eight.
We still had to reposition twice to avoid popping out too close, as the basin had a very convex roll at the top and it was hard to find a spot we could see more than 30 yards straight down but eventually, we were able to find the sheep at 240 yards across the basin.
Unfortunately, just as we spotted them, they bedded down with the biggest ram behind a tree, making it difficult to size them up. However, I was able to see enough through the spotting scope to confidently count at least seven rings, and probably eight.