Had a great time at the January Tejon POR. Saw plenty of pigs the first day but the fog blew in and 4pm and visibility was down to about 20ft. It rained, snowed, sleeted, hailed and every other form of precipitation that you can imagine that first night. Woke up to white on the ground (mainly ice) and super thick fog leaving the visibility about 20ft.
Drove around looking for an opening in the weather and giving it our best effort but glassing across a canyon wasn't going to cut it when you couldn't see past the hood ornament on the truck. Stopped by the gate and ran into one of the guides taking a small group (4 trucks) out to the desert area. They said it was really windy but at least clear. They weren't kidding about the wind. 50-60mph sustained (yup, measured on one of those little wind machines). Air temp was about 30F without the wind so it made for a nice pleasant winter day if you're from Saskatchewan.
Managed to actually get into a group of pigs out in the desert and take two of the smaller ones in the group (not me, second buddy shot the second pig). Nothing huge, about 80lbs but when you have to carry them out like this up about 1000 vertical feet, 80lbs is plenty big.
Tejon Desert Pig
The #1 in .375H&H shooting a 300gr partition to the head of the pig in the picture seemed to work pretty well. I didn't want Specmisser to bring up that whole "under gunned" thing again so I figured I'd allow for a fair margin of error. Don't loose too much meat when you shoot them in the head either
All in all, great time. Tejon folks are definitely first class. Ron was particularly helpful and just an all around good guy to talk to.
Drove around looking for an opening in the weather and giving it our best effort but glassing across a canyon wasn't going to cut it when you couldn't see past the hood ornament on the truck. Stopped by the gate and ran into one of the guides taking a small group (4 trucks) out to the desert area. They said it was really windy but at least clear. They weren't kidding about the wind. 50-60mph sustained (yup, measured on one of those little wind machines). Air temp was about 30F without the wind so it made for a nice pleasant winter day if you're from Saskatchewan.
Managed to actually get into a group of pigs out in the desert and take two of the smaller ones in the group (not me, second buddy shot the second pig). Nothing huge, about 80lbs but when you have to carry them out like this up about 1000 vertical feet, 80lbs is plenty big.
Tejon Desert Pig
The #1 in .375H&H shooting a 300gr partition to the head of the pig in the picture seemed to work pretty well. I didn't want Specmisser to bring up that whole "under gunned" thing again so I figured I'd allow for a fair margin of error. Don't loose too much meat when you shoot them in the head either
All in all, great time. Tejon folks are definitely first class. Ron was particularly helpful and just an all around good guy to talk to.