sweating, suffering, swearing, a fair chase, a fair bit of meat, a fairly good life, a damn good life, a hard knock life, a hard knock hunt

Monday, September 14, 2015

Dall Sheep with a Bow!



Nothing comes easy, and I wouldn’t want it any other way. My toenails have almost grown back now. The unforgiving mountains plucked them loose off my blackened toes. The Mountains also laid claim to a black Iphone, lost forever amongst similarly sized black shale. The Iphone was everything but a phone for me. In order of importance it was: a topo map, a camera, and a watch. I have but one extremely out of focus Go-Pro photo and no one to share memories with, only stories to tell.

I was on a solo backpacking bow hunt for dall sheep. I was slithering through the grass like a snake towards a group of rams. I couldn’t close the distance to within bow range so I changed my tactic. I was now stripped down to my white, wool long underwear, crawling as sheep-like as possible, while angling towards the rams. As it turns out, I’m not a very convincing sheep.

Next I found myself with bow in hand, silent as a whisper, descending a cliff I wouldn't dare tackle without ropes, a harness, and a belay buddy... but for the the perfect shot, I'd do anything. The rams were just out of range beneath me. As I sat perched on a ledge I was too focused on the sheep below to see a different ram ambling along the very ledge I was on! I looked through my rangefinder: a full curl ram at 20 yards! This was it, I’m deadly out to 70 when practicing. I knocked an arrow and went to draw when I realized I wasn’t wearing my release! I’ve never fumbled with anything so much in my life. By the time I had it on, the ram had seen me and was at a considerable further distance. Being too frantic to re-range him I launched an arrow two inches over his back. After missing such an opportunity, the walk of shame back to where I’d left my pack for the stalk was far and felt even farther.

The following day, more vigorous hiking rewarded me with another opportunity on a ram bedded at tree line. I was crab walking towards him and almost within range. I accidently crab walked right into a big red ant town. I held it together for quite some time but was being pinched to death and for once it was almost a relief when the ram spooked and disappeared overtop the next creek drainage. His keen wit told me he was probably the same ram I had seen yesterday.

The next couple days I hiked from sun up to sun down- in the land of the midnight sun, that’s saying something. I came close on a few more stalks, one in particular it was foggy and pouring rain. I’d spotted a lone ram and was able to walk right towards him when the fog rolled in, but as luck would have it, the fog lifted when I was wide in the open. I laid flat on my back in the pouring rain, soaked and hypothermic. I was shivering uncontrollably but was trying to be completely motionless until the fog provided some cover. When I finally got my opportunity I ranged the ram. Laser range finders it turns out, are completely useless in the fog (I suppose the "laser" that normally bounces off the object and back, giving the distance, gets to disrupted). I guessed the sheep to be about 45 yards but after my misjudgment on the first day I wasn’t going to risk it.

I woke up to raindrops on my face. The thought of carrying an extra four pounds outweighed the luxury of a tent. And so I sat shivering under an overhanging rock face until the sun started to rise. I watched far-off rams butt heads. The resulting crack reached me seconds later. Before long I was stalking those very rams. They were below tree line so it was easy to stay out of sight. I knew exactly which ram I was after. As I neared the sheep I caught a glimpse of white out of the corner of my eye. Instinctively I ducked behind the buck brush. He wasn’t the one I was after, but it was a legal ram walking right towards me. It was too good to pass up. I made no mistake this time. I saw the arrow connect and after a short pursuit I released the second and fatal shot. People say: “this is when the real work begins”. I hate that saying. I was in total bliss as I trudged through unimaginable willow thickets, creek beds, swamps and old burns with 150 pound pack of sheep on my back.