Blizzard Bull 2013 - Epic Stalk and Spook Failure

2013 Blizzard Bull

2013 Blizzard Bull

The morning started like any other, dark and me feeling like I could use 2 more hours of sleep. Kirk T. Norris and I hit the trail about 2 hours before light, hoping to make “pistachio ridge” by shooting light. The hike doesn’t seem like much when glancing at a GPS or google earth, but hiking up the steep ridge proved to be quite the challenge. It had rained the night before and the slick grass on the steep hill side put me on the ground several times on our trip up the mountain.

                After the tiring hike, we had made our way to the ridge slightly after shooting light.  We were in high spirits because we had made it and we had seen lots of sign, including a lone cow.  We sat on the ridge and formulated our strategy for the morning.  As we sat there making our plan, the elk rudely interrupted us with several bugles bellowing out of the box canyon behind us.  We spent the next couple of hours playing cat and mouse as both us and the elk made our way up the heavily timbered canyon.  We got several answers to our calls, but we couldn’t close the gap or turn the elk.  We relocated higher up on the canyon wall and kirk set up about 30 yards behind me.  Kirk proceeded to do what he does best, as he blew into his reeds and gave the illusion of several cows and small bull in the area.  After about 10 minutes of calling we listened to the silence, and then “crack”.   Elk? Squirrel?  Moose?  Me hallucinating again?  Kirk continued his sequence and I could tell that the noise was getting closer.  I had set up in front of an old dead lodge pole and some alders.  I had about a 30-40 yard shooting lane that was about 5 yards wide.  The hillside was thick with lodge pole and healthy growth of alder clouding the shooting lanes.  To my surprise the elk chose not to walk into my perfectly planned shooting lane.  Instead, it walked in about 6 yards from me.  It glanced at me, walked straight up to a lodge pole as if it knew where it was going.  Then without hesitating the bull licked the tree.  I still don’t know what to think about that.  I was frozen.  I had no chance to draw or move as the bull was mere yards from me.  Knowing better I tried to lift my bow and the bull snorted and trotted off.  Stalk and Spook success! I was amazed at how silent it could move through the timber as it blasted away from us. Kirk and I regrouped, he was in awe of what he had just witnessed.  He should have been proud, he had coaxed a bull to within yards of his partner.  I had mixed emotions.  I was so excited to be that close, but so disappointed in picking a set up that didn’t give me a chance to draw back and take a shot.  I was quite certain that was my chance for 2013, and I had blown it.  It was incredible, but I knew it would take me several months to appreciate it.  At the the time I couldn’t forgive myself for not taking more time to set up and pick a more opportunistic spot, (lesson learned).  

photo-4.JPG

                After several hours and miles of exploring and chasing, Kirk and I found ourselves back on “pistachio ridge”.  By this point the weather had started to take its toll on us.  A drizzling rain had started in the morning and by afternoon it had turned to a very heavy wet snow.  The snow was now about six inches deep and accumulating by the minute.  It was approaching the last couple hours of light, and Kirk and I planned to hunt back down the face as the light fell.  First we decided we would warm up with a quick fire.  That plan never quite materialized for us, because we managed to bring in a bugling bull with all the noise we made by snapping twigs and branches.  The fire was out and the chase was back on, a chance to avenge my prior flop.

                The herd of elk decided to follow along with our plan and work their way off the ridge to valley floor and river below.  We followed behind, able to track the bulls by their constant bugling.  Getting off the mountain was treacherous.  My feet slipped out from under me several times and my Sitka pants were like a sled on the steep hill side. Kirk and I finally reached the valley floor in one piece.  The snow had started coming down so hard that we had to clean our sights every 5-10 minutes.  It was all worth it, because the elk seemed to be accumulating as fast as the snow.  The elk were dropping into to the valley from both sides of the canyon, and there were making no secret of it as they bugled their way into us.

                Our final set up was nothing more than the standard.  Kirk playing his symphony of calls about 30 yards behind me, and our Montana Decoy splitting the difference about 15 feet off to my left.  The call sequence produced quickly, just as earlier in the day.  The advantage I had this time is I was looking out into meadow with scattered pine trees and bull approaching from about 100 yards away.  As the bull passed the final tree about 60 yards out, the only thing between it and me was a 4 foot pine I had set up behind.  The bull rolled towards me with no concerns at a steady pace.  Before I knew it, I was at full draw.  The bull was 15 yards from me.  Story over, right?  Had this been a TV hunt or I had no conscience I would say yes, but…The truth.  Remember that snow that was accumulating?  I had done a great job of keeping my sight cleaned off.  This proved useless as my peep was filled with snow, and I didn’t realize it until I was anchored at full draw.  I released the arrow, and it was an obvious miss.  The elk jumped.  Kirk Called.  I knocked another arrow from my quiver, trying to be quick and efficient with my movement. The elk stopped.  I now had clear shot, as the previous shot knocked all the slush and snow from bow and more importantly my peep.  I held steady and released the second arrow into the blizzard.  There is no words to describe my emotion as I watched the arrow pass though the bull in double lung fashion.  In the next thirty seconds I was able to witness the same sequence I had seen one year ago to the day.  It was the exact same day I had shot my first elk and first bull.  The elk walked 30 yards, and it fell to the ground with its back legs giving out first.  Kirk had handed me an elk in an area that I had always dreamed of having a successful hunt.  It didn’t go as planned, but we adapted and we were successful...or as we call it a "Stalk and Spook Failure". 

Blizzard Bull with a little snow

Blizzard Bull with a little snow

                At the end of the hunt we found ourselves about a mile from our camp, and about 500 yards from the road with only the river separating us.  We dressed the elk into quarters and made 2 trips across the mountain river.  As we dressed the elk out branches were snapping in the background under the load of all the wet snow.  We picked up camp that night and headed back to home base full of excitement, happiness, and reeking of a rutting bull.  The hunt couldn’t have been complete without Comancho.   Just as we were finished packing the elk out, Comancho showed up to lend a hand as we hadn’t yet returned to our rendezvous point.  Perfectly timed arrival to not have to do a damn thing except celebrate…haha!

Elk in back of truck

Elk in back of truck

Shawn on the Bridge of Fame

Shawn on the Bridge of Fame

Shawn T. Norris

September Failure / Blizzard Bull

Bow season is over and I’ve dawned my rifle numerous times looking for elk but it’s just not the same.  Not even close.  After the rut died down, I couldn’t stop thinking about my missed opportunities and my one misguided arrow that missed what would have been my first bull elk with my bow.  I blew an amazing opportunity and don’t think I’ll get over it until I start hearing the bugles of 2014, but then again, it’s still hunting season.  I keep thinking of this bow season as a failure, as I never got the bull that I had desperately wanted.  But looking back on the season now, was it really a failure?

Shawn's bull

Shawn's bull

 My good friend and fellow Stalk and Spooker Shawn T Norris got a bull on the exact same day as he did the year prior.  We didn’t realize it until later, but it made us laugh.  Must be his lucky day…he should have probably bought a Powerball ticket that day as well.  We couldn't have been happier for him.  We probably were  as excited as he was that a bull was finally down.  We could have cared less who got it.  

After that, we got into multiple bulls almost every night and became so familiar with them that we named a couple based on their bugles.  I was full draw multiple times on different bulls but never quite got it done. 

I passed on a cow that had a calf that walked at 20 yards past me without a worry in the world.  The cow and her calf were continually talking throughout their adventure through the forest something about that family relationship made me drop my bow.  Had she not had a calf, maybe my season story would be a little different, but had I shot her, I don’t think I could look back at the kill and be happy about it. 

Bow season?

Bow season?

Having some fresh elk in the freezer is nice, but thinking about the wandering calf calling for her mother for the next couple days just made me uneasy.  Some people would say shoot, some wouldn’t, but I just did what I felt was right.  I’m definitely not saying it would have been wrong to take that animal, as it was perfectly legal, but I think it’s the intimate part of bowhunting that allows us to make those choices.  Being that close to an animal allows you to look at the whole picture, the herd and family mentality, and allows you to make choices and restrictions with hunting in ways that rifle hunting may not.  I guess that’s what makes bowhunters a little different.  We choose to bowhunt not because it’s easy, or a more efficient way to fill the freezer, but we do it because of the challenge, the adventure, the memories, the bugles, and knowing that it is one of the most pure and honest ways to take down a game animal.  It’s truly a hunt.  The ethics that bowhunters (as well as many rifle hunters) have don’t lie directly in the black print of the FWP hunting regulations, but expand far beyond that.  Not only is bowhunting difficult and at times exhausting, our personal ethics and restrictions that we put on ourselves can make it that much harder.  Try to convince someone who’s never bowhunted before to come out with you and they may say yes right away, but first let them know that you have a slim to nothing chance of getting something, if you see something you’re lucky, and if you actually get close to an animal it’ll be one of your best hunting days of the year. I don’t know many people that would gladly sign up for that, but for some reason us bowhunters can’t get enough of it.  Maybe some bowhunters won't agree with that, but we're normal guys with jobs constantly hunting public land, so I shouldn’t speak for all bowhunters on this, as I don’t know every bowhunter out there, but I’m guessing a lot of them feel the same way I do, especially those I hunt with.  
But really...was this season a failure? 

For two weeks I got two hunt with 2 of the best guys I know.  Four days into the season I was full draw on a nice bull, basically 2 more steps and could have had a bull.  Kirk and I did get to see the BIGGEST SMILE we’ve ever seen on our close friend Shawn T Norris during one of the worst September snow storms we’ve ever been in!

We saw and heard more elk and had more opportunities on bulls this past year than we ever had before, and we got to spend two weeks hiking and camping around the beautiful state of Montana during the fall.  You can’t really beat that.

I guess I can’t call it a failure.  It was definitely a season full of Stalk and Spook success. 

 

photo-6.JPG

One of my favorite times after a Stalk and Spook Failure... 

Getting the job done

Getting the job done

DSC01104.JPG

Is it September yet? Take 2

‘September’ is derived from the word septem which means seven and was the seventh month of the Roman calendar.  It is now obviously the ninth month of twelve in our modern calendar and marks the beginnings of many occurrences.  September means different things to a lot of people around the world.  Mexico’s Independence Day, the start of Germany’s Oktoberfest, first day of spring in Australia, and even ‘National Talk like a Pirate Day’ all fall within the days of September…but for the people of Montana, September brings something different.  For some, it could be the first day of Autumn, the end of summer, the changing colors of leaves or the start of football season, but for my friends and I, September is something special. It's the beginning of archery season and the peak of the elk rut.  That 1-2 week window of the elk rut that you have been preparing for the last 11 months finally arrives and every day not in the field feels like an eternity, and each day in the field goes by faster than you can imagine.  In the United States, September is supposedly ‘National Preparedness Month’ but for a bow hunter, it’s something of the opposite.  The previous 11 months go bye with non-stop thinking, calculating, practicing, motivating, preparing, and dreaming.  It's what we talk about at work, with friends, and with a random stranger on a bar stool.  It's when we hang our trail cams, move our trail cams, and constantly check them to see if you by chance got a picture of something amazing.  If you aren’t prepared by September, you are too late. 

For me, September is using my 2 weeks of vacation to pack into the mountains, losing cell phone service and disconnecting from one world only to connect to another.  It’s waking up early and going to bed late. It's hiking miles upon miles only to turn back around disappointed, where a changing wind can ruin your dreams, a dumb move can look like the smartest thing you’ve ever done, or watching a friend fulfill a dream of a lifetime while you go back empty handed and it being one of the best memories you’ll ever have.  September isn’t just another month, a number or a small part of an ancient calendar, it’s something you can’t describe.  I can’t really say what it is, but if you’re like me, you’ll know when you find it. Is it September yet?

IM000167 copy.jpg
IM000401 copy.jpg