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Alaska Yukon Moose/Grizz - PART 2 ADDED
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Guys,

Last week I returned home from an excellent hunt in Alaska for AK Yukon moose. We've been booking moose hunts on the Peninsula for years, but the wolves and bears are really hammering the moose calves out there, so the number of moose tags available each year has dwindled down to just 2 moose/year. We get a lot of inquiries about moose, so I decided to go on an "exploratory" hunt in search of an area where we could send our clients for a reasonable shot at a big bull. Our outfitter on the peninsula directed us towards Joe Schuster, saying his moose hunts were the best in Alaska. After talking to Joe early in 2010, I decided I'd try and get a couple of guys and go up there to try the area for myself. Being on a fairly limited financial budget, I elected to take the "outfitted" option vs. a guide. I knew having a guide would be beneficial for a wide variety of reasons, but I simply couldn't afford having one. The outfitted hunt is not your typical "float hunt". It requires 2 guys to hunt in a camp, but you save nearly $10,000 off the cost of the guided hunt, which put the hunt in my financial reach. I got a longtime hunting buddy on board and we booked the hunt last September.

The area requires you to draw a permit, so we put in as a party and both drew the tags for our 1st choice unit. Our hunt dates were originally planned for September 10-20, but my hunting partner found out his friend was to get married on September 10, so the earliest he could come up would be the 11th, making his hunting start as last as September 13. The season in this unit closes on September 20, so I elected to go up early on my own and hunt a few days before he got there to give us a better chance at shooting 2 bulls (I was worried we wouldn't get 2 bulls in just 7 days of hunting). I moved my hunt dates up to fly into camp on September 8, starting on the 9th. We got to the lodge on the 8th, went through "orientation" and I flew out to camp that afternoon. The flight to camp was only about an hour and a half, most of which was over the hunting unit so I was able to see a lot of different country on the flight in. When we got near the lake I was supposed to land on, we decided to make a wide circle around the area to see if we could see any bulls from the air. Sure enough, there were 3 big bulls, all within a mile of my camp. We landed, set up camp and he flew on to another camp, leaving me out there alone. I still had about 4 hours of daylight left in the day, so the anticipation of the next day's hunt was in the front of my brain for sure. I cooked dinner and had an excellent view of an Alaskan sunset, then hit the hay.




The next morning, I got up before the sun came up and put on a pot of coffee. I went out to take a wizz and decided to do a little calling before the sun came up. After calling a few times without any replies, I went back in the tent to check the coffee. I was messing around with the coffee pot when I heard what sounded like a bull thrashing his antlers on the alders. I stepped outside my tent and sure enough, probably 500 yards from camp I heard a bull. By the time I got dressed (I was still in my long johns when I was calling the moose) it was getting light, so I hurried down to the river bank that was a few hundred yards behind camp and set up for my first calling sequence. Almost immediately after calling I got not one but two separate bulls to answer! I was pretty pumped, especially since both were on either side of me and working my way. The wind was in my face, so it looked like I was going to be right about where the two bulls met each other. Trying not to be too aggressive, I wanted to keep the bulls headed towards me so I grunted every once in a while. The bull to my right was coming straight in, but the other bull started working in front of me from the other side of the river, probably 200 yards into the alders where I couldn't see him (I hadn't laid eyes on either bull at this point). The bull coming from my left made it past me without me seeing him and was raking trees now, basically calling the other bull off the river and up to him. I decided that since the one bull had made his way past me I would move about 100 yards down river to the next bend so I'd have the best chance at seeing them if they hit this small oxbow in the river. Just about the time I got to that point, the bulls met somewhere around 200 yards from me (still out of sight) and started sparring. Not an intense fight, but it lasted probably 3 minutes. I let them break up and gave them about 10 minutes to cool down, then started grunting softly, maybe one grunt every 5 seconds or so in bursts of 3 and 4, then waiting a few minutes and doing the same thing. One of the bulls fired up, first grunting a couple of times then grunting with every step. I heard him walking in the river and knew he was just on the other side of the oxbow from me so I slid back into the alders a couple of feet and got set up on the sticks. Right about now my heart is pumping because this bull is less than 100 yards from me, just beyond the bend and the mixture of fog and the thick vegetation, I still can't see him. He quit moving for 5 minutes or so, so I wasn't sure if he was still there or had moved on so I let out two soft grunts and here he came. I first saw the alders moving about 70 yards from me, then saw the tips of his paddles as he was raking the trees. He came in doing the "cowboy walk", grunting with every sway of his head and slamming his antlers into every small alder bush he came across. At this point I had a decision to make. I went to Alaska with a goal of a bull with big fronts and over 60". Here I am, 9:15 am on day one of what was supposed to be a 12 day hunt, and I've got a bull (that by my rough estimates was right in the neighborhood of 60" with long brows and what looked like around 15 points on the left side) standing 25 yards from me directly across the river. I hate to say it, but I considered passing this bull. I'd seen some of the monsters the area produced and knew that with the extremely limited pressure that there were bound to be some giants in the area, the weather was perfect and the rut was already kicking in. I had to ask myself -"Is this a bull you would pass on day 10?". After thinking it over for what seemed like 5 minutes, the bull was losing interest and beginning to work up the river bank across from me. When he was walking perpendicular to me, I grunted and he looked at me, showing me that his left palm was past the mid-way point of the hump on his back thus confirming that he was at least 60" (I'd also used the 10" between the antlers rule before this). I'd be crazy to pass this bull, so I put the rifle on him and squeezed the trigger. At the shot, he just took about 5 steps into the alders and stood there. "No way I missed, he was 25 yards from me!". He stood there for probably 60 seconds without moving, then starting coughing, alerting me that I'd hit him in the lungs. All I could see was his rack, and with the brush being so thick right there I didn't want to chance a shot. I grunted at him a few times, finally getting him to move just enough to expose the hump on his back. I put one at the base of the hump and he went down like a (literal) ton of bricks. 9:30 AM, Day one, my first Yukon bull down.

I hadn't even been in camp long enough to inflate the boat, so I had to go back to camp and carry the rolled up boat back to the river and pump it up with a foot pump. By the time I got the boat inflated and across the river an hour had passed since I shot him so I'd calmed down quite a bit. I floated across to where he was standing and quickly found him about 15 yards from the river, laying in a small ravine. Immediately I realized I'd made the right decision because I wanted a bull with big fronts and his were considerably longer than I thought. I didn't have a measuring tape on me, but knew my rifle was 47" so by my estimates he was somewhere between 61-63".

Where he was when I found him:



Looking back at the bank I was sitting on when I shot from where the bull lay:



(He ended up measuring just north of 62", I'll take it any day for a first moose):




I took a bunch of photos using a tripod I'd brought and then began the long CHORE of cutting a moose up alone. I know some of you guys have done it, but Jesus maneuvering a 1600 lb+ animal by yourself is about as tough as it sounds.

They look twice as big when you realize you're going to have to cut him up and pack him by yourself:



I literally had to cut his entire left side off before I could even flip him over. After cutting him up and packing a hind quarter and some ribs, the pilot came in and helped me pack him (thank god). By the time I got back to camp with the bull it was after 11:00 PM, nearly 14 hours after I shot the bull. I was exhausted, but it was worth it. After 18 months of planning, 3 days of traveling and only 2 hours of hunting, I achieved my goal of shooting a 60"+ Moose. Better lucky than good I suppose.


Photo of the rack back at camp the next day:





CONTINUED TOMORROW, THE BEST PARTS ARE YET TO COME INCLUDING A GRIZZLY CHARGE THAT ENDED AT LESS THAN 15 STEPS


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Awesome!! Keep the report coming. Congrats!
 
Posts: 1064 | Location: Bozeman, MT | Registered: 21 October 2002Reply With Quote
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DIY hunts in AK are great, but be damn sure that thing is 50 inches!

Nice bull. I shot one last year in the Yukon; what a hunt. I do want to do a float trip sometime however. Did one many years ago when I was a resident.


Don't Ever Book a Hunt with Jeff Blair
http://forums.accuratereloadin...821061151#2821061151

 
Posts: 7570 | Location: Arizona and off grid in CO | Registered: 28 July 2004Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by AnotherAZWriter:
DIY hunts in AK are great, but be damn sure that thing is 50 inches!


That's the truth, one of the many reasons a guide is really worth it! If you can't judge them on width or are in doubt, better start counting brow tines. After seeing a bunch of bulls in that 50" range after I shot my bull, it was pretty apparent I wouldn't have shot a 50" bull. They just don't LOOK big. This area is one of the few in Alaska with a 50" or 4 brow tine(vs. 3 brow) minimum, so most of the bulls we saw that had 4 or more brows were well into the 50s anyway.


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Wonderful! What a great adventure!
 
Posts: 712 | Location: England | Registered: 01 January 2010Reply With Quote
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Congrats Greg!! Great bull!

Doug
 
Posts: 161 | Registered: 28 March 2007Reply With Quote
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Man that is awesome! Congrats Greg and I am looking forward to reading more!!


30+ years experience tells me that perfection hit at .264. Others are adequate but anything before or after is wishful thinking.
 
Posts: 854 | Location: Atlanta, GA | Registered: 20 December 2007Reply With Quote
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Greg - Proud of ya man, and glad you made it home safely. Congrats!!


Aaron Neilson
Global Hunting Resources
303-619-2872: Cell
globalhunts@aol.com
www.huntghr.com

 
Posts: 4884 | Location: Boise, Idaho | Registered: 05 March 2009Reply With Quote
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PART 2 - SKIP 5 DAYS AHEAD WHEN MY HUNTING PARTNER ARRIVES IN THE CONCESSION


After shooting my bull on day one, I basically just stayed within a half mile of camp, keeping my ears open for wolves howling, hoping they would find my kill. Unfortunately, after 4 days they didn't find the kill and I knew today was the day my hunting partner was due to arrive. I called Joe on the Satellite phone to see what my next move would be and he informed me I needed to pack up camp into my boat and float 12 river miles down river to meet Sean, my hunting partner, on a gravel bar where they could land the Cub. No big deal, except Joes camps are WELL stocked. I had 2 rubbermade containers full of food and cooking utensils, one cooler full of food, a propane stove, a wood burning stove, 2 cots, all of my personal gear, and still had the moose rack and cape. I didn't think I could fit it all on the boat, but after 8 trips from the tent to the boat hauling loads of gear, I squeezed the last items in and just sat on top of all the gear.



I pushed off, and literally right across the river a legal bull stood up and ran about 40 yards, turning to look at me and pausing long enough for me to snap this photo on my point and shoot camera. 6 brows on the right, but just barely 50". Going to be a good bull in a few years for sure.





We wouldn't have shot him, but it was good to see moose again after staying off the river for 4 days(I had originally thought that Sean was coming into my camp to hunt so I tried to stay away from the river where all the moose seemed to be).

Floating down river alone on a loaded raft into a head wind isn't too fun, but it's all part of the Alaskan experience so I was soaking it up. Because I had the moose on the front of the raft, it kind of acted against me with the wind so I ended up having to paddle basically the entire 12 miles. Interestingly enough, as I was floating I saw a total of 6 bulls, all of which were legal by brow tine definition and 5 of which were 50"-55". ALL of these bulls saw the moose rack on the front of my boat and immediatly went into "cowboy" mode, walking along side the raft and grunting at me. I snapped this photo of another bull, but decided to put the camera up after this because the boat kept wanting to turn sideways on me, which could have dumped me and all the gear out. I figured I new what a moose looked like, no use taking any more photos:

You can see my moose rack at the bottom of the photo:




After a few hours of floating, I finally met Sean and the supercub down at the gravel bar. It was nice to see people as I'd been without contact since the pilot came in to pick my moose up the day I shot him. Long days alone were actually nice as I got to really get some thinking in, and with my bull in the "salt" on day one, it was pretty relaxing. We set up a mobile tent on the gravel bar and the settled in for the day. Sean saw my bull and was pretty impressed, and even more impressed that I saw half a dozen bulls just floating down river to him. He's moose hunted 3 times prior to this, once in Alaska and twice in Canada, and seen a total of 6 bull moose. I shoot a 62" bull on day one and see 6 more just floating, so he's pretty jacked up at this point. To say his first night in camp was restless would be an understatement, I don't think he slept.

The following morning, we woke up before dawn and began getting dressed for the day. Sean was out of the tent before I was even out of my sleeping bag, so I knew he was ready to go. I told him to just call from camp to start off with to see what was in the area. Just as I stepped out of the tent he said he heard a bull grunting up river, answering his calls. We got our binos and guns and walked about 30 yards from the tent to where we would have a better view up river. As I turned my head to listen for the bull, I looked up on the hill across from us and spotted another bull about 500 yards away up on a hill. We could tell he was at least decent, so we started cow calling and he came in on a string. I snapped a ton of photos of him walking in, here are a few. From over 500 yards to about 10 yards, this is how well they were responding to calls:







We assessed he wasn't a shooter for this area, probably mid-50's but kind of spindly, but he was still coming. I could hear the other bull grunting and raking trees up river, so we were a little worried we'd spook this bull if he got too close or crossed the river and blow the other bull out of the area. He came across anyway...










When he crossed the river, he immediately turned around and walked back across acting like he smelled something. The wind was in our face, so it had to be the other bull he was smelling. He paused long enough for me to take this photo, which I thought looked good in black and white with the fog in the background:




As soon as he crossed the river, Sean looked where we'd heard the other bull grunting and saw him standing there looking at the other bull from about 200 yards. We grunted, and he came in thrashing every tree he came across. As he worked his way down the bank, it was pretty apparent that this bull was MUCH larger than the first bull. I knew he was wider than my bull, and knowing my bull was 62" I figured this bull to be 64-65" with wide and long palms. A definite shooter, right? Not exactly. Sean was hesitant to shoot the bull on day one because of my successes and what we'd seen. I did about everything I could to talk him into shooting, but Sean decided he was going to pass and take his chances. Here are some photos of that bull, would you have passed on a non-guided hunt after 3 unsuccessful moose hunts? Sean's a die hard, and he wanted a bull with big fronts. This bull wasn't weak up front by any means, but didn't have the brows mine did so he passed him.

Oh, and keep in mind we were standing 30 YARDS from the tent, ON the airstrip. Talk about an easy pack, I was ready to kick him in the nuts right there...










Last photo as he worked past us:





After that, we actually saw 4 more bulls that morning, so Sean really wasn't too worried about his decision. We even had another chance at that big bull that evening and again Sean elected to pass. This time he was a little hesitant to pass him, but still stuck to his goal of shooting a bull over 60" but with giant fronts (We knew length of tines has nothing to do with B&C score, he just wanted a certain bull and was prepared to pass up big bulls to get it). That night in camp, after a day of letting it stew around in his head, Sean said "I messed up. I should have shot that bull. I've got to find THAT bull now..." I laughed at him, saying we had him across the river from the airstrip and now we'll probably shoot him 2 miles down river 500 yards into the brush, but I said I was willing to help pack and we decided to hunt him.

We hunted him for 2 full days, going back to camp for lunch and nothing else without another sighting. Sean was beginning to feel bummed out at this point, realizing the likelihood of him seeing that bull again was very low. Sean began to get a little restless, so I decided we should move on, telling him that if there's one bull like him, there's probably a few more (This area produced 2 of the largest moose taken in Alaska just 2 years ago, so I knew there were better bulls there). We floated down river, hunting a bit and seeing some bulls but nothing that could compare to the one he'd passed. It's day 4 of his hunt now with just 3 days left in the season, so he's starting to feel the weight of his decision.

I decided instead of floating all the way down to the last known airstrip so soon, we should pull over and camp for at least one night in an area that, from the map, looked like it had a ton of oxbows in the river so looked very "moosey". It's noon, it's foggy, and we're tired. We pulled the boat over and quickly set the tent up on the gravel bar, but left all the gear in the boat because we wanted to wait for the sun to come out to dry everything off. Sean was understandably restless at this point, way past second guessing his decision to pass that bull and in the regret stage. As silly as it sounds, THIS RESTLESSNESS POSSIBLY SAVED OUR LIVES.

We had not seen a single moose between the hours of 10:30 am and 6:00 pm. Warmer than average temperatures probably contributed to this as the bulls were definitely rutting hard, but here we are at around 1:00 pm, both dead tired, and Sean decides to go call moose. I told him to go ahead, really wanting to let him clear his mind and just try. It looked like it was going to start raining, so I told him I'd hang back at the tent and unload all of our bags and cots and put them in the tent. Sean went downriver along the alders and I began unpacking. I got everything unpacked and was finishing setting up my cot when I heard Sean coming back to the tent, kind of half whispering "Greg! Greg!". My first thought was, "Good lord, he actually called up a bull mid-day!" I poked my head out of the tent only to hear him say "Greg, there's a grizzly working down wind of us, you may want to get out here in case he gets into the alders and comes towards the tent". "Shit, keep an eye on him and I'll put my boots back on and grab my rifle". Sean agreed and walked to an open area of the gravel bar so he could see the bear. Sean said the bear was a few hundred yards away and just walking, so I sat on my cot and put my boots on. After tying one boot and starting on the other, I heard Sean yell loudly "HEY BEAR! HEY BEAR!". I grabbed my rifle and threw a 4th shell in and jumped out of the tent.


THE CHARGE - THIS ALL TOOK PLACE IN LESS THAN 30 SECONDS

It was apparent by the tone of Sean's voice that the proverbial "shit" was about to hit the fan when he yelled at me "Hey Greg!". Sean's a very calm, confident hunter. He's hunted Alaska 9 times, was an apprentice guide on the Peninsula for 2 years and has been around TONS of bears. I knew something wasn't right when he yelled at me, so I ran towards him, keeping a safe distance between me and the brush line (I still couldn't see the bear). Sean kept yelling, slapping his gun, kicking rocks and waving his arms, but was slowing backing back into the water. When he backed about 10' back into the water, he took a knee (later explaining that Ronnie Crous told him he took a knee on that lion charge so he could be at eye level with the cat and have less of a moving target. Smart move). I was only 15 yards from Sean and still couldn't see the bear, so I stopped and shouldered my rifle, keeping my head above the scope and on a swivel.

Just then, I heard it. It sounded like a faint "thud" of a large animal's feet moving quickly, but I STILL couldn't see the damn thing. I looked to where I heard it and the bear burst into my view at a DEAD RUN, locked in on Sean. At this point the bear is at 30 yards and running at a speed I thought only capable of a quarter-horse. I put my head down and got him in the scope at the very moment Sean shot the bear. The bear was 14 steps from Sean at the first shot As soon as he shot the bear took a barrel roll forward to about 10 steps and looked up dazed. I picked him back up in my scope, his gigantic head and beady eyes basically filling my field of view, but because he rolled in towards Sean, the shot was a little too tight for me to shoot. I'm sure some of your know that in moments like this your brain is working a million miles an hour. I decided that if the bear made any sort of movement towards Sean that I would shoot him (My muzzle was clear of Sean, but it was only about a 4' window and I didn't want to risk it unless I absolutely HAD to). The bear instead rolled back and turned towards the tent, trying to get away from whatever the hell just knocked him in the dirt. Sean quickly shot again, putting one somewhere through the midsection and rolling the bear again into the alders and out of our sight. We moved along the bank towards our tent to get in the boat and safely across the river, keeping a close eye on the area the bear went. We could hear him thrashing around and growling very loudly, but got to the boat and across the river. We waited probably 30 minutes after the last time we heard him, and came back across the river to end the ordeal and try to ensure the bear was dead and not wounded. When we got over to the other side of the river, we could easily see the bears running tracks heading towards Sean, where the bear had been rolled by the shot, and where he ran back towards the tent and entered the brush. The problem was, we couldn't find a single drop of blood. Not good. Anyone who's hunted up there knows that Alder brush along the river banks is THICK, comparable to the long grass in Africa except very difficult to walk through due to the complex root system you're trying to navigate with your feet. With visibility at about 10 feet, it makes for a tense follow up. I decided to grab a pocket full of rocks from the gravel bar to throw at him if I saw him (ensure he was dead without having to poke him) and we entered the brush. Not having any blood to follow and no tracks were visible, we just went shoulder to shoulder and slowly walked forward. After about 15 yards of walking, Sean saw a small patch of brown to the left and stopped me with a "tssst" sound. Sean raised his rifle and I threw the rocks, hitting him with both of them with no reaction. We approached the bear and he was done, just 10 YARDS behind the tent.


Your mind starts thinking about all the "what if's" for sure. "What if Sean had shot the bull on day one, we wouldn't have been here", "what if Sean hadn't SEEN the bull on day one, he wouldn't have been as restless". "What if we had both decided to hang out at the tent". A lot of things go though your head. Whatever it was that actually made Sean leave the tent mid-day to go call moose, I'm glad he did it. Had we been in the tent or sitting in chairs around it, we probably would have been in deep trouble. Neither of us was too shaken by the ordeal, both obviously had adrenaline pumping like crazy but I never really felt "scared". Excitement would be a better word, and a little remorse for a bear that we had no choice but to shoot. We took a ton of photos of the scene, called fish and game and were told to skin the bear, get its skull and float 6 miles down to an airstrip where they could come pick it up.

Sean with the Grizzly, this is where he fell but we obviously cut some brush and moved him for the photos.



Me holding his head up:




We skinned him carefully, packed up camp and headed off. Sean did a quick measuring of his skin and came up with 8'8", a true giant of a grizzly. This was later confirmed by fish and game when we gave them the skin and skull, in addition to them measuring his skull at 24 5/16", nearly a half inch into the all time record book for Boone and Crockett. Just a gigantic old bear.

We floated 6 miles down the river to a gravel bar we knew the cub could land on and set up camp. Both of us smelled like a bear, so we decided to change and start dinner. It was about 7:30, so we still had a couple hours of good daylight left so I started calling moose from camp, hoping to get a bull to show up or at least move closer for the next morning's hunt. I heard a bull answer my cow calls about a mile away, so I started raking a tree with the lid to one of our rubbermade totes, imitating a bull raking his antlers on the brush (That lid was probably the best call we had in our arsenal, it carried the sound a long way and sounded very realistic. Gotta use what you got on hand out there!) Sean was still changing, but I could tell the bull was moving in on us. He was raking trees and grunting like crazy, so he sounded pissed. I'm standing 10 feet from the tent, Sean is sitting down pulling his hunting pants on over his sweat pants and we've got a bull closing in on camp fast. From the sound of his antler raking, you could tell he was a good bull. I kind of had to convince Sean to get ready because he thought the bull was farther away (he's got terrible hearing from shooting a lot as a kid), so Sean stood up literally seconds before the bull came into view. I could see his paddles coming so I knew he was good and wide, but couldn't see his brows to completely see what he looked like. When Sean looked down to jack a shell into his gun and turn the scope power down, the bull broke the brush at 50 yards directly across the river from us. I could tell he was a great bull, so without hesitation I said "Shoot that damn bull!" Sean grabbed for his binos and I said "Don't look, just shoot him!". Sean shot him in the front shoulder, nearly bringing him down in the water (would have been terrible had he fallen in the river) but a second shot quickly knocked him down safely on the river bank. The bulls head fell into the brush, so Sean had literally no idea what he had just shot. We gave him 5 minutes and got in the boat to go take a look, of which the whole time I was messing with Sean saying "I know he's over 50 inches, and he's got pretty decent length and a folded right palm". Realistically, I knew he was over 60", knew he had gigantic fronts with some non-typical type trash on both sides and a huge folded palm on the right, but after he passed that big bull early in the hunt I figured I should mess with him. I did start telling him he was a big bull, but I don't think he was going to feel any better at this point until he saw it with his own eyes.

We crossed the river and Sean said "Man I hope you're right, I'm going to be pissed if he's 50". We walked up to him and immediately Sean said "Whoa! You're off the hook!". He was pleased with his bull, I was pleased with the fact that we only had to pack the bull 10 feet to the boat. We were camped on the land strip!

View of the bull from the tent across the river:



Sean with his bull:






The folded right palm of the bull, very cool looking:



After "packing" him 10 feet and getting him back to the tent across the river:




To say this trip was great would be an understatement. This area was EXCELLENT, with over 30 legal bulls seen from ground level and a ton more from the air in really only 6 days of hunting. The outfit is OUTSTANDING. So outstanding that when I got home, Jeff and I bought up all the permits he had for 2012 and 2013. We've been looking for a moose area like this for a long time, and we didn't want to let the permits go away. (We do not add on to the hunts, we just wanted to keep the permits for our clients). These hunts are very affordable, and if you're confident in your hunting abilities, your ability accurately judge an animal and you are physically able to do it, this is the way to hunt moose and this is the place to do it. You'll save nearly $10 grand by just taking the outfitted option.

Here are a few more photos of some of the bulls taken on this trip, and some other photos I took along the way. Many of the bulls below were taken by guided clients, but the non-guided guys did very well. They had 18 moose hunters this year spread out over 3 separate units. 17 guys shot bulls, with the only guy who didn't shoot being a non-guided client.













RANDOM IMAGES FROM THE TRIP:







Moose standing in the background behind me:



Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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What an adventure !!!! Great story and fantastic pictures ! CONGRAULATIONS to both of you !


Hang on TITE !!
 
Posts: 574 | Registered: 19 August 2004Reply With Quote
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Originally posted by Aaron Neilson:
Greg - Proud of ya man, and glad you made it home safely. Congrats!!


Thanks Aaron, I appreciate that. This trip (like all the others) only further fueled the fire in me to get out there and hunt. My checkbook is going to hate me for a long, long time...

quote:
Originally posted by leemar28:
What an adventure !!!! Great story and fantastic pictures ! CONGRAULATIONS to both of you !


Thanks! It was a great hunt with a great friend! Hopefully many more to come!


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Greg..Good for you on that Moose!
What an adventure.Thanks for that report
 
Posts: 1662 | Location: Winston,Georgia | Registered: 07 July 2007Reply With Quote
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What an adventure! Thx for sharing. I want to hunt that place,too


http://www.dr-safaris.com/
Instagram: dr-safaris
 
Posts: 2064 | Location: Around the wild pockets of Europe | Registered: 09 January 2009Reply With Quote
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Awesome hunt! You got to love a sucessful DIY hunt.
beer
 
Posts: 753 | Location: Michigan USA | Registered: 27 September 2008Reply With Quote
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Great report. Congratulations on one helluva trip!
 
Posts: 262 | Location: Mount Pleasant, SC | Registered: 02 February 2010Reply With Quote
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O M G !!!! Terrific report and trophy.


~Ann





 
Posts: 19123 | Location: The LOST Nation | Registered: 27 March 2001Reply With Quote
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Great report & thanks for sharing.


"When the wind stops....start rowing. When the wind starts, get the sail up quick."
 
Posts: 11005 | Location: New Zealand | Registered: 02 July 2008Reply With Quote
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Greg
You may have sold me on this one.. those are some fantastic bulls!!

Congratulations to you & your amigo. Very cool hunt (& I've never really given moose hunting any thought!)

Please do me a favor if you can & pm me the info on this hunt.

Thanks
 
Posts: 2163 | Registered: 13 February 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Scottyboy:
Greg
You may have sold me on this one.. those are some fantastic bulls!!

Congratulations to you & your amigo. Very cool hunt (& I've never really given moose hunting any thought!)

Please do me a favor if you can & pm me the info on this hunt.

Thanks


Thank you sir, we had the time of our lives! I'm still living this hunt, and it's been a couple weeks!

You have a (fairly lengthy) PM awaiting you!

Greg


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by matt u:
Greg..Good for you on that Moose!
What an adventure.Thanks for that report


quote:
Originally posted by Caracal:
What an adventure! Thx for sharing. I want to hunt that place,too


quote:
Originally posted by Chris Lozano:
Awesome hunt! You got to love a sucessful DIY hunt.
beer


quote:
Originally posted by opus72:
Great report. Congratulations on one helluva trip!


quote:
Originally posted by Aspen Hill Adventures:
O M G !!!! Terrific report and trophy.


quote:
Originally posted by Nakihunter:
Great report & thanks for sharing.



Thanks guys/gals! I appreciate the compliments, this hunt was an excellent experience and something I'll be doing again in 2013 or 2014 for sure!


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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quote:
Thanks guys/gals! I appreciate the compliments, this hunt was an excellent experience and something I'll be doing again in 2013 or 2014 for sure!

Are you doing more exploration hunts in ak? I'd like to do that. Any chances that you take someone with?

Cheers

Dennis


http://www.dr-safaris.com/
Instagram: dr-safaris
 
Posts: 2064 | Location: Around the wild pockets of Europe | Registered: 09 January 2009Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by Caracal:
quote:
Thanks guys/gals! I appreciate the compliments, this hunt was an excellent experience and something I'll be doing again in 2013 or 2014 for sure!

Are you doing more exploration hunts in ak? I'd like to do that. Any chances that you take someone with?

Cheers

Dennis


Dennis, when I got back I'll do the same type of hunt without a guide. I'd absolutely entertain the idea of taking you along, keep in touch and we can see what we can work out.

It's an excellent hunt, but I may go back for a caribou in the same area because I'm beginning the long process of trying for my North American slam, and I'll need the caribou for that. Most years the herd that migrates through there numbers in excess of 350,000 animals. They weren't there in numbers like that while I was there, but the migration started trickling through towards the end of my hunt.


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Great adventure... nice moose. Well done!


On the plains of hesitation lie the bleached bones of ten thousand, who on the dawn of victory lay down their weary heads resting, and there resting, died.

If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
Or walk with Kings - nor lose the common touch...
Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!
- Rudyard Kipling

Life grows grim without senseless indulgence.
 
Posts: 7507 | Location: Victoria, Texas | Registered: 30 March 2003Reply With Quote
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Great story... Great photos... Great hunt...

Thanks for sharing the experience.
 
Posts: 51 | Registered: 16 October 2009Reply With Quote
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Excellent job Greg and congrats on a great hunt! Also, that first photo of the sunset is spectacular!


____________________________

If you died tomorrow, what would you have done today ...

2018 Zimbabwe - Tuskless w/ Nengasha Safaris
2011 Mozambique - Buffalo w/ Mashambanzou Safaris
 
Posts: 2789 | Location: Dallas, TX | Registered: 27 January 2004Reply With Quote
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Holy Crap! Greg, great story and pics, thanks for sharing man
Its reports like that which really get me pumped for the next trip. Moose on plan for 2013... maybe in them thar woods?

O
 
Posts: 1490 | Location: New York | Registered: 01 January 2010Reply With Quote
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Awesome story and a great post.
 
Posts: 392 | Location: Atlanta, Georgia | Registered: 05 January 2005Reply With Quote
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WQW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
do you not get to keep the bear? i thought the tag was good for moose or brown bear.
 
Posts: 325 | Registered: 12 July 2006Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by kevin davis:
WQW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
do you not get to keep the bear? i thought the tag was good for moose or brown bear.


Kevin,

We didn't have a guide, which is required in order to hunt Grizzly or Brown bear in Alaska, so we couldn't buy a bear tag. The bear was a "DLP" bear, or Defense of Life or Property, so by law the state of Alaska had to keep it. We are going to try and purchase the bear skin back from the state at the Fur Rendezvous auction in February, so hopefully Sean can get it.


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Amazing Photos Greg,thanks for sharing your hunt.


"Never in the field of human conflict
was so much owed by so many to so few." Sir Winston Churchill

 
Posts: 1870 | Location: Throughout the British Empire | Registered: 08 October 2004Reply With Quote
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Picture of Greg Brownlee
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quote:
Originally posted by Sevens:
Excellent job Greg and congrats on a great hunt! Also, that first photo of the sunset is spectacular!


Thanks Alan, appreciate it!



quote:
Originally posted by Orvar:
Holy Crap! Greg, great story and pics, thanks for sharing man
Its reports like that which really get me pumped for the next trip. Moose on plan for 2013... maybe in them thar woods?

O



Anytime you're interested let me know and I'll send you some information.



quote:
Originally posted by GA DEER HUNTER:
Awesome story and a great post.


Thanks!

quote:
Originally posted by TOP_PREDATOR:
Amazing Photos Greg,thanks for sharing your hunt.


Anytime! I enjoy writing the hunt reports ALMOST as much as I enjoy the hunt that makes them!


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Greg,

Excellent! Alaska when the stars align can offer some incredible expereinces for a DIY hunter that is prepared as you were. Big congrats to you guys on a boomer hunt.

Mark


MARK H. YOUNG
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Posts: 12842 | Location: LAS VEGAS, NV USA | Registered: 04 August 2002Reply With Quote
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Picture of Greg Brownlee
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quote:
Originally posted by MARK H. YOUNG:
Greg,

Excellent! Alaska when the stars align can offer some incredible expereinces for a DIY hunter that is prepared as you were. Big congrats to you guys on a boomer hunt.

Mark


Thanks Mark! I agree, preparation and good conditions for most of the hunt certainly upped my odds, but the area is absolutely phenomenal for Moose!

For whatever reason, the caribou movement was down this year from previous seasons, usually it's a slam dunk but I saw very few while I was there except when I was flying out. They were in the area, but very spread out and not on their normal migration paths. I'll go back for them one day, hopefully in the near future if I can get the African bug out of my system.

Thanks again,

Greg


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Greg;

What an amazing hunt!!!! Your moose are both fantastic and I love your LONG meat packing processes! Way to go.

You had me holding my breath while reading about the griz.... What an adventure.

Best regards, D. Nelson
 
Posts: 2271 | Registered: 17 July 2003Reply With Quote
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quote:
Originally posted by D. Nelson:
Greg;

What an amazing hunt!!!! Your moose are both fantastic and I love your LONG meat packing processes! Way to go.

You had me holding my breath while reading about the griz.... What an adventure.

Best regards, D. Nelson


Thanks! The second bull was definitely a breeze to pack 8 feet to the boat! Cutting them up is still a chore, but it really helped having someone else there the second time around.

And congrats again on your moose,he looks like a very good bull!


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Picture of Tim Herald
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Great trip and report! Congrats to you both???


Good Hunting,

Tim Herald
Worldwide Trophy Adventures
tim@trophyadventures.com
 
Posts: 2980 | Location: Lexington, KY | Registered: 13 January 2005Reply With Quote
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Picture of Greg Brownlee
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Tim Herald:
Great trip and report! Congrats to you both???


Thanks Tim! Your leopard report from Niassa was a great read, also enjoyed the "Hunting Report" article you wrote on it.


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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quote:
Greg





Cool photos, love the report ! If we could get moose like that in Sweden I would be a very happy man. We tend to shoot them young and small
 
Posts: 2634 | Location: North | Registered: 24 May 2007Reply With Quote
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posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by A.Dahlgren:
Greg

Cool photos, love the report ! If we could get moose like that in Sweden I would be a very happy man. We tend to shoot them young and small


Thanks! I'm getting more into the photography as my hunts come along. Photos like the ones from your trips are what I'm shooting for!


Greg Brownlee
Neal and Brownlee, LLC
Quality Worldwide Big Game Hunts Since 1975
918/299-3580
greg@NealAndBrownlee.com


www.NealAndBrownlee.com

Instagram: @NealAndBrownleeLLC

Hunt reports:

Botswana 2010

Alaska 2011

Bezoar Ibex, Turkey 2012

Mid Asian Ibex, Kyrgyzstan 2014
 
Posts: 1154 | Location: Tulsa, OK | Registered: 08 February 2010Reply With Quote
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Thank you for an exellent report,
and congratulation on a magnifisent bullmoose Smiler
 
Posts: 93 | Location: Norway | Registered: 12 April 2006Reply With Quote
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