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My first Rocky Mountain Elk
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Well I finally killed my first Bull Elk. I have hunted Elk twice before here in Arizona, once archery in 1996 and once with a Muzzle loader in 1999. Yes it takes that long to get good tags here! I did not draw an arrow or pull the trigger on either hunt. But I finally drew an early rifle permit in our unit 4B. Due to work I was not able to scout the area prior to the hunt. I had two days off work since my return from Namibia with my family in early August.

A good friend that I was in the Marine Corps with came out from Ohio to help me on the hunt. He had never been on an Elk hunt but is a hell of a Whitetail hunter and woodsman in general. I got up in the hills three days before the hunt. I saw a few small bulls but the numbers and movement were not promising and they were practically silent. The rut had not started yet. The archery hunters were still all over the place so I tried to stay out of their way and still get some scouting in.

I found an archery killed bull in a remote bottom that was nearly identical to the bull that I ended up taking. He was shot through the guts and died without being recovered by the hunter. After I was done hunting I turned it in to the game and fish. I did not want them crashing around an area on a quad to investigate the bull in an area I might still want to hunt.

I drove back to Phoenix to pick up Tony at the airport the day before the hunt. We sat on a good looking water tank that night but nothing came in. We found one lone spike north of our camp that evening. Opening morning I chose to hunt out of the camp towards where we saw the spike. There were no camps past mine and there was no traffic past us either. I figured if it was quiet and the spike was unbothered then we might find some cows and maybe a bull trying to pick them up.

We silently padded down the road about a half mile. Then we heard two bulls bugling at each other about a half mile to the east. We listen to them for a bit and decided to see if we could close the gap and get a closer look/listen. As we crossed two deep valleys try to close the gap, the bulls were chasing each other around and away from us. We tried a bugle to them but they totally ignored it. So from there on out I stuck to my cow call. As we started to close the distance I would hit them with my cow call. They would hold up for a bit and then blast off again. As we closed on a huge ravine that forced us to follow until we found a place to cross, we had a third bull on a point bugling. He was not part of the mix and we had just worked in the opposite direction to the wrong side of the ravine from him. I chose to keep after the first two. We worked around two cow elk at the top of the hill and got back after the Bulls. As we worked up the next hill over, the bulls were approximately 450 yards up the mountain and bugling loudly. I was using the cow call as we caught our breath and I tried to get one of the bulls to come down to us. They seemed to be holding there at the top of the hill and the next thing I knew, I heard a bull bugle on the opposite side of the hill going away about 700 to 800 yards out. I figured both of them were on the move again. I did not even un-sling my rifle thinking we were back on the chase. We slipped on to an old overgrown fire break road and started up the hill. Just as I had a clear view of the top of the hill a bull stepped out and looked right at us at what I estimated to be 80 yards. I think he was confused thinking that we were some dam ugly looking cow elk. I dropped to my knee, shouldered my Kimber .300 WSM took a deep breath settled the scope and squeezed the trigger and let loose a 180 grain Barnes TSX. His left shoulder was covered by the fluffy top of a jack pine so I picked a spot where I knew his vitals were. He lunged forward at the shot and was out of sight. We walked to the top and searched for blood. We found nothing! There was a tall stand of pine with a thick run of jack pine in it in the direction he ran. In Africa I shot 10 animals. A few of the larger animal’s left very little blood after a good solid heart/lung shot. But not one animal went more than 60 yards. So I decided to make a 60 yard circle in the direction we saw him bolt. As soon as I cleared the pines I spotted my bull with his nose in the dirt dead. It was a huge relief.

The bullet passed thru and we had to search to find both the entrance wound and the exit wound. There was no blood to speak of at either hole. The shot hit him just slightly to the forward part of the shoulder. After gutting him we found that the bullet destroyed both lungs and took the arteries off the front of the heart.

I could not think of a person that I would rather have killed my first Elk with. Tony and I have been fast friends since the early 90’s in the Marines and try to hunt together every chance we get. He was a huge help in the recovery and a great motivator in the chase. In all my GPS tracked two miles of chase and we had my Bull down in under two hours on the opening day of the hunt. He is not a monster bull like some of the bulls taken this year but man is he good eating. The tender loins are excellent. And I love him!!!

Now I can hardly wait to get the chase on with my son in unit 4A this November. We were both fortunate to draw tags this year. We spent three days scouting my sons unit and got up on seven bulls in 4A one was slightly bigger than my bull the rest equal or lesser.

This has been the absolute best year. Turning 40 has been great!!!

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The bull where I found him
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Me with my first Rocky Mountain Elk.
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Tony with Chevlon Canyon in the back.
 
Posts: 583 | Location: Mesa, AZ | Registered: 08 May 2006Reply With Quote
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Nice write-up, and big congrats! It's always special when success comes when hunting, but to share it with a dear friend is something really, really special.

Thanks for sharing.

KG


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Posts: 2897 | Location: Boston, MA | Registered: 04 January 2005Reply With Quote
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What a terrific story -- not to mention a happy ending!

Congratulations are definitely in order! thumb


Bobby
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Posts: 9379 | Location: Shiner TX USA | Registered: 19 March 2002Reply With Quote
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Outstanding!

Looks like the season treated you well. Which unit were you in?

Ken....


"The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they are ignorant, but that they know so much that isn't so. " - Ronald Reagan
 
Posts: 5386 | Location: Phoenix Arizona | Registered: 16 May 2006Reply With Quote
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Congrats Will! Great hunt report. Fine looking bull. Great picture off of the Rim, I love that country! There are some very respectable bulls running around 4A right now. Best of luck to your son on his hunt.

Kind regards,
Mary


Taxidermist/Rugmaker
 
Posts: 904 | Location: Phoenix, Arizona | Registered: 12 April 2007Reply With Quote
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Well done, and hope it's just the first of many more wapiti for you sir!
MM


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Set Free Ministries MT.

7 days with out meat makes one Weak!
 
Posts: 422 | Location: Fort Benton MT. and in the wind! | Registered: 06 June 2008Reply With Quote
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Congrat's on a nice bull...and Thanks for a great story!

FN in MT


'I'm tryin' to think, but nothin' happens"!

Curly Howard
Definitive Stooge
 
Posts: 350 | Location: Cascade, Montana | Registered: 26 October 2005Reply With Quote
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Congrats!! Great bull. Thanks for shareing.
 
Posts: 121 | Location: Western North Carolina | Registered: 10 February 2008Reply With Quote
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Lovely bull! third times the charm eh?


If you think every possible niche has been filled already, thank a wildcatter!
 
Posts: 2287 | Location: CO | Registered: 14 December 2007Reply With Quote
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now I'm envious!!!!....I leave in a week.....


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Winston Churchill
 
Posts: 28849 | Location: western Nebraska | Registered: 27 May 2003Reply With Quote
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clap Thanks for sharing and Congrats on a fine Bull beer


" If ye love wealth better than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, go home from us in peace. We ask not your counsels or your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand which feeds you. May your chains set lightly upon you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countryman " Samuel Adams, 1772
 
Posts: 1117 | Location: Helena, MT, USA | Registered: 01 April 2001Reply With Quote
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Sounds like a great hunt. Nothing wrong with that bull at all. I'm sure lots of folks are envious!


"There are worse memorials to a life well-lived than a pair of elephant tusks." Robert Ruark
 
Posts: 4780 | Location: Story, WY / San Carlos, Sonora, MX | Registered: 29 May 2002Reply With Quote
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Huge bull I don't know but he sure looks like a nice 6x6 to me...

and how many of us would pass up a 6x6????

none I am thinking


Mike

Never under estimate the internet community's ability to reply to your post with their personal rant about their tangentially related, single occurrence issue.



What I have learned on AR, since 2001:
1. The proper answer to: Where is the best place in town to get a steak dinner? is…You should go to Mel's Diner and get the fried chicken.
2. Big game animals can tell the difference between .015 of an inch in diameter, 15 grains of bullet weight, and 150 fps.
3. There is a difference in the performance of two identical projectiles launched at the same velocity if they came from different cartridges.
4. While a double rifle is the perfect DGR, every 375HH bolt gun needs to be modified to carry at least 5 down.
5. While a floor plate and detachable box magazine both use a mechanical latch, only the floor plate latch is reliable. Disregard the fact that every modern military rifle uses a detachable box magazine.
6. The Remington 700 is unreliable regardless of the fact it is the basis of the USMC M40 sniper rifle for 40+ years with no changes to the receiver or extractor and is the choice of more military and law enforcement sniper units than any other rifle.
7. PF actions are not suitable for a DGR and it is irrelevant that the M1, M14, M16, & AK47 which were designed for hunting men that can shoot back are all PF actions.
8. 95 deg F in Africa is different than 95 deg F in TX or CA and that is why you must worry about ammunition temperature in Africa (even though most safaris take place in winter) but not in TX or in CA.
9. The size of a ding in a gun's finish doesn't matter, what matters is whether it’s a safe ding or not.
10. 1 in a row is a trend, 2 in a row is statistically significant, and 3 in a row is an irrefutable fact.
11. Never buy a WSM or RCM cartridge for a safari rifle or your go to rifle in the USA because if they lose your ammo you can't find replacement ammo but don't worry 280 Rem, 338-06, 35 Whelen, and all Weatherby cartridges abound in Africa and back country stores.
12. A well hit animal can run 75 yds. in the open and suddenly drop with no initial blood trail, but the one I shot from 200 yds. away that ran 10 yds. and disappeared into a thicket and was not found was lost because the bullet penciled thru. I am 100% certain of this even though I have no physical evidence.
13. A 300 Win Mag is a 500 yard elk cartridge but a 308 Win is not a 300 yard elk cartridge even though the same bullet is travelling at the same velocity at those respective distances.
 
Posts: 10097 | Location: Loving retirement in Boise, ID | Registered: 16 December 2003Reply With Quote
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Great hunt, great Bull, and great story.
Thanks for the posting.

Don




 
Posts: 5798 | Registered: 10 July 2004Reply With Quote
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Outstanding write-up and great bull!
 
Posts: 47 | Location: Palm Harbor, Florida | Registered: 28 May 2006Reply With Quote
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