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As you can see the hunt was hard but very good, 12 day's. My Elk was very good but Judy's WAS much better. I shot mine on day 7, Judy shot her's on day 11. 3:30 am until 8:00 pm every day, then back to camp and start cooking, and in bed at 10:00 pm.. Needless to say I was getting pretty worn down. Mine was easy to retrive, only about a mile pack out of 500 lbs of meat. [image]http://membres.lycos.fr/jeanderunz/danwapiti.jpg[/image] Judy shot her's high in the Lung's and didn't hit any arteries so a 10 mile tracking job began. Away from the ATC. After pushing him hard for 7 miles he began to seriously wear down, as was I. At the 10 mile mark he apparently decided to commit suicide by falling off of a 200 foot cliff, as I watched him expire. [image]http://membres.lycos.fr/jeanderunz/dancliff.jpg[/image] The results can be seen in the photos with the broken tines on the antlers. Notice the desk sized boulder resting on his face. [image]http://membres.lycos.fr/jeanderunz/judyselk.jpg[/image] The real shame is this was her first archery Elk. However, he did die elegantly, and with elan. He will have a special place in our memories, trophy room, and campfire stories for as long as I can hunt. An envious legacy. J B de Runz Be careful when blindly following the masses ... generally the "m" is silent | ||
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OOOOpsssssss here is the pics J B de Runz Be careful when blindly following the masses ... generally the "m" is silent | |||
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Now that is a trophy! Don_G ...from Texas, by way of Mason, Ohio and Aurora, Colorado! | |||
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Nice Bulls!Congratulations on a job well done! | |||
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