THE ACCURATERELOADING.COM AMERICAN BIG GAME HUNTING FORUMS


Moderators: Canuck
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
First Antelope -Colorado
 Login/Join
 
one of us
posted
Hunting with Atkinson Expeditions in Northern Colorado again. Had such a great time hunting with them last year and taking my First Mule Deer I decided that hunting antelope looked like a lot of fun. And being still so new to hunting I am fortunate to be on many of my 'first hunts'. So I booked a three day Antelope Hunt with Wes.

Wes and his lovely wife Rachelle run Atkinson Expeditions in northern Colorado out of Wellington. I arrived Friday mid day. Staying at the appropriately named 'Comfort Inn' which is new and very nice. In three weeks I will be on a business trip in the UK paying four times as much to stay in a $#@! whole which, unlike the $59 a night Comfort Inn, does not have free internet.

I'm a little behind on my postings and have already had a great season taking two blacktail deer in B zone, Humboldt County California. Those hunts were great fun and I shot both deer flawlessly with one shot at 100 and 200 yards from my old trusty Remington .270 win. Everyone was telling my how fun antelope hunting would be, that it's easy and relaxed.... but for some reason I just went a little nuts on this one. Or seemed to be extremely 'amped' as Wes charitably described it.

Wes and I met at the motel and did some scouting friday night. We went out to some of the ranches he had seen good bucks. At one point we found about four does and he said a good buck should be with them. Sure enough out from behind the rolling hill emerges my ideal of what an antelope should be. He looks great to me although as a fairly new hunter I'm often eager to shoot many lesser specimens, however I seem to get that this is a good one. Wes points out his better qualities to me. I tell him I'll shoot this guy tomorrow which is opening day in the season. We are in unit 87. We see some other does and smaller bucks. As the sun has set one lone buck makes a black silhouette against a ribbon of red and orange light just above the horizon. This is beautiful country.

We're hunting with another guy from Georgia. Terry Eby who is national sales manager from BPI Products. He's brought a new Electra muzzle loading rifle. It's pretty cool using only a 9v battery to provide an arc to ignite the powder directly and with a trigger that functions with practically immediate effect. I get to try it after he shoots his buck.

Terry and I meet Wes the next morning at 6am and we're off to the ranch. Wes says that we're going to try and get me the buck I scouted last night and Terry agrees. Thank you Terry! We drive around a bit before finally locating him again and he's still with his four does. We're able to drive our truck through a grassy pasture and watch them across some rolling hills. This land first appears flat but actually holds a great deal of contour for making stalks.

The buck and four does are about five or six hundred yards away. There is a little dry creek to our right with a small hill above it. While we're sitting watching Wes notices a lone smaller buck approaching far in the distance to our right. Our buck has noticed him too and stares intently at the interloper. Wes says he looks pissed and he does. Then unbelievably to me our buck sprints straight for the new buck closing the distance to us on his way. Halfway there he's at about 300 yards. Wes suggests I might want to get out of the truck and shoot him. So I step out, have my stix ready, plant them about the right width and then promptly sit down right into a bunch of little barrel cactus! Was not expecting that. Now I'm trying to steady without putting my full weight into the cactus. The buck has stopped but I still miss him. He starts running left and for no reason I can think of now I try and hit him running. I hold a length ahead and shoot but don't even see an impact, which Wes showed me on video later was perhaps two lengths behind him.

This is the first time Wes suggests perhaps I need to relax a little. The buck has run back to his does but doesn't seem particularly spooked by my attempts at his life. Lucky for me it's opening day and he's still interested in his does. We decide to drive off and let them settle down a little bit and perhaps let me settle down a bit too. We drive around, talk to the landowner who has drove by in a pick-up. Very nice guy, we recount the story. Take our time. Finally we drive up a different road a ways and decide to walk up on them. We hike in for a ways until we get to a small rise where Wes is pretty sure they are just beyond us. He has me come up next to him. Terry has lent me his knee pads so now I can at least kneel down without fear of any painful distractions. Wes is setting up his video camera on a tripod to the left of me and tells me to get ready. The antelope are now in an open field looking right at us from about 450 so we decide to back off and try another approach later.

After we cool down a bit and I relax a little I'm more determined than ever to shoot this buck. We decide another stalk towards where they are with the wind better and some rolling hills that give us cover up to them. We sneak back up staying very low until Wes finally has them in sight. I'm on the sticks now sitting, get the buck in my sights, squeezing, and boom, another miss. They run right and then come back a little left again. They are a little over 300 now. I'm back on the buck standing broadside in some low grass. I try to hold right inside his back, squeezing again and hear this shot impact the buck. He hunches at the shot but isn't down. We watch for a few seconds until Wes tells me to shoot again. At this shot he's down. I can't believe it. After all this we finally got him. We wait for a while now we me periodically asking Wes if I should be ready to shoot him again and him telling me to just relax. I realize hunting with me is probably like hunting with a ten year old. I'm pretty sure I'm having as much fun as one.

We finally are able to walk up to him and he's a great old buck. Really nice cutters and pretty old with some extra points on him and little loose horns behind each of his. I am so happy to have shot this buck. If you want a great experience hunting Elk, Mule Deer, or Antelope in Colorado or Whitetail in Kansas, you really need to look into hunting with Wes Atkinson! They put on a great hunt and are just super people to spend some time with. ( Go Rockies! )






 
Posts: 161 | Location: La Honda, California | Registered: 22 August 2002Reply With Quote
One of Us
posted Hide Post
Nice goat! Any measurments?
........wapiti7
 
Posts: 663 | Location: On a hunt somewhere | Registered: 22 November 2004Reply With Quote
one of us
Picture of Bob in TX
posted Hide Post
Great mass.........

Congrats!!!


There is room for all of God's creatures....right next to the mashed potatoes.
http://texaspredatorposse.ipbhost.com/
 
Posts: 3065 | Location: Hondo, Texas USA | Registered: 28 August 2001Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
a fine pronghorn, sean. congratulations!thumb
 
Posts: 51246 | Location: Chinook, Montana | Registered: 01 January 2004Reply With Quote
One of Us
Picture of Snellstrom
posted Hide Post
Very nice Colorado Antelope!
Congratulations to you and your guide.

I'm not sure if you knew this but there is a doe Antelope sneaking in right behind you in that last photo, I guess she just couldn't leave that buck alone!
 
Posts: 5604 | Location: Eastern plains of Colorado | Registered: 31 October 2005Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
Thanks guys. Wes did measure him but I forgot to copy it all down. I think he was almost 74. The measurement system sure is uh interesting. I was thinking that if he shrank just right he could hit 80... I guess his third circumference measurement was just above his cutter or something like that. The cutters I remember were a little over 6 inches each, they kind of curve in. I was really happy with him.
 
Posts: 161 | Location: La Honda, California | Registered: 22 August 2002Reply With Quote
One of Us
posted Hide Post
Sean, That is a beauty. Are those little horns growing out of the back of is horns? This might sound crazy, but my son shot one with 2 small horns growing on the top of its nose.
 
Posts: 560 | Location: Michigan, US | Registered: 10 April 2007Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
Yes he has two small horns behind each. That's funny about your son's with them on his nose. The other guy hunting with us had been on five antelope hunts without geting one and was calling it his unicorn, too bad he couldn't have shot that one!
 
Posts: 161 | Location: La Honda, California | Registered: 22 August 2002Reply With Quote
one of us
posted Hide Post
Wes and Rachelle sent me a copy of the measurements we took, perhaps someone can review my addition.

RIGHT

LENGTH 13 1/2
H1 6 1/2
H2 6 1/2
H3 4 2/8
H4 2 7/8
PRONG 6 1/8

LEFT

LENGTH 13 5/8
H1 6
H2 6 1/2
H3 3 7/8
H4 2 1/2
PRONG 5 6/8

What do you get? I added it a couple times and got 78? Seem right?

-Sean
 
Posts: 161 | Location: La Honda, California | Registered: 22 August 2002Reply With Quote
One of Us
Picture of Tim Herald
posted Hide Post
very nice - congrats!


Good Hunting,

Tim Herald
Worldwide Trophy Adventures
tim@trophyadventures.com
 
Posts: 2980 | Location: Lexington, KY | Registered: 13 January 2005Reply With Quote
  Powered by Social Strata  
 


Copyright December 1997-2023 Accuratereloading.com


Visit our on-line store for AR Memorabilia