asaxon

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Assault team KORO terminates a Tule elk with extreme prejudice but we are left with a profound mystery*.

My troubles began in June with a letter from the CA DFW. I figure, “another damn fishing survey” I throw it unopened on my desk but fortunately not in the trash. A week later, I open it. “Congratulations! You have been drawn for the 2018 elk hunt listed above.” Holy Tartar Sauce Sponge Bob, I had won the lottery to get a tag to hunt one of California indigenous Tule Elk. Below is a picture of the letter for all of you hunters who have applied for decades and no longer believe this is real. Yes, such a document actually exists. The area I was to hunt, “Goodale”, is about 150 square miles of the Eastern Sierras, NW of Independence, CA. I would be the only elk hunter permitted for 16 days. At the Admirals command, I had applied for a cow elk hunt; they are better tasting and much smarter than the boys – so what else is new. For this hunt, I was required to use a muzzleloader; yup one of those ram black powder and a bullet down the barrel firearms and use iron - open sights. What fun.

I immediately meet with my Commander-in-Chief, The Admiral. We set out an operational plan and assembled a crack assault team for Operation Koro; Koro is Maori for “old guy or grandfather. The team consisted of: the CIC - The Admiral, the Shooter - me = Koro, the Spotter and Head of Black Ops - PJ a former CA game warden for 17 years, an Undercover Operative - Agent X (his identity is protected) who works on the property where the elk hang out, a Weapons Officer - GD, a black powder specialist, a Scout Sniper Team Leader - MJ who lives near Independence and has great local knowledge, a Point man, Grunt, and Morgue detail man – ZA who is young, has a strong back and is good with knives, and finally a Logistics Officer - RK who was going to bring his 29 foot trailer up to Bishop, CA. Air-conditioned? Yes! Temperatures during the day may reach 100F+ at “Goodale” so AC was important for the team to be in peak operational condition.

GD (remarkably he looks a lot like ltdann) provided an “in-line” TC Omega muzzleloader. With some practice, I was able to pretty much hit center target out to 100 yards using a rest. But with “iron sights”, more than 100 + yards was problematic in terms of the sight picture. I did NOT want to just hit the animal “somewhere”, I wanted to hit it a vital spot and knock the animal down. Chasing some damn wounded elk for hours or days – NOT a plan. I also practiced in my backyard at 10[SUP]th[/SUP] size elk targets using an air gun to get comfortable with the sight picture at distances. Then one day a BPOE (Benevolent Protective Order of Elks) sign shows up on my target board. No doubt the elk spying were spying me with the help of the Russians #russiansdidit. That will teach me to wear my Putin t-shirt in the People's Republic of Santa Monica.

With a week to go, PJ checked with the Agent X and began monitoring our target(s). About seventy elk were coming into some alfalfa fields at night and, at first light, going back up into the rocky mountainside to the west. Driving up to Bishop the day before the hunt, I got a text from PJ giving us directions where to go and glass. Sure enough, we get there and see a couple groups of elk sitting, standing, and feeding in the boulders a mile or so up the mountainside. We are excited…

That evening, RK, ZA and Koro went to the fanciest restaurant in Bishop in our hunting clothes. All was OK until RK misbehaved so I had to take him to the local slammer. After he paid his bail and got bandaged up from the beating I gave him for insubordination, we jumped in the air-conditioned trailer, (aah, cool air) and turned in.

Morning, 4:30 am and Team Koro is headed out with everything we thought we needed. While driving, I noticed that the road signs looked a bit hazy to my right – shooting eye. Thinking it was just a dirty contact; I cleaned it a few times but that didn’t seem to be help. I could see but objects were simply not crisp. Huh? Just before shooting light, we moved into the area where we thought the elk would come from to head into the mountains. We soon heard elk bugling and then saw groups of elk moving. But we were too farther north. We high-tailed it toward them and finally got close to one last small group. Seeing us, they stopped and looked about like; “Now what we were supposed to do?” I quickly cocked my muzzleloader, aimed at a cow elk about 100 yards away and squeezed the trigger. “POP.” WTF, a freakin’ misfire! The primer fired but failed to set off the main powder charge. Nothing came out of the end of the firearm. In contrast, all sorts of interesting things came outta my mouth. If words could kill, all living creatures in a half a mile radius would have dropped dead instantly. The elk trotted away up the hillside. I took the breech out, unloaded the firearm, reloaded it and made sure it fired.

With that hopefully fixed and the sun up, we started glassing the hillsides. Spotting a group of elk a mile or so away, we watched them until they settled down. ZA and I then took off on a stalk up the gullies and through the rocks. From where we started, it looked pretty “smooth” but that was totally deceptive. When we got into it, there were lots of gullies, ridges and big boulder fields. ZA and I could not see the elk as we stayed down in the terrain for if we were seeing them, they would surely be seeing us and would never let us get close. PJ, MJ and RK were spotting and sending us signals as to where the elk were. However, perspective matters. Through the spotting scope at a mile or more, distances seem much shorter than they really are. When PJ thought we were 50 yards or so from elk on flat ground and was wondering why the hell I was not shooting, in reality we were 400 yards from the elk in areas of gullies and large boulders. It sure looks different when you have your boots on the ground. To make a long stalk short, we spent about 3 hours and walked about 3 miles before we finally got close enough to where we could peek across a large bounder ravine and see the animals. A group of maybe twelve were about 190 yards away - too far to take a shot. They had seen us and were moving up toward the mountains. So we went downwind and moved up along the ravine to try to cut them off. When we next peeked over the edge, the elk were walking parallel to us between 115 - 150 yards away. At this point, we had run out of cover so we decided that I should try to take a shot. I crawled to where I could just see the elk. They looked right at me, decided that I was a threat, and began to move away. I aimed at a cow and squeezed the trigger. BOOM. Hurray, it fired. But it was a clean miss - ZA said the shot was low. Fine, no wounded animal to chase. The animals quickly moved off and we were done hunting for the day. But the adventure was not over.

We had to recover the backpack ZA had left by “the big white rock” about an hour before when we had lain in ambush as the spotters thought the elk were about to come over a rise to us. That had been a bust as the animals were actually much further away. Everything looked very different from where we now were. And there could not have been less than 1,000 “big white rocks”. We wandered about as the temperature went up toward 100F. We had no water (it was in the backpack) or food, and there was no shade. After an hour more, I was done in. I needed to walk to the vehicles. About half a mile down, low and behold, there is “the big white rock” and the backpack. Talk about dumb luck. I contacted ZA and in we went. We all had had a wonderful day– a great hunt, no dead animal required. That night, as I head for bed, a surprise. I go to put my contact lenses into their case and hello, there are lenses already there. WTF? At O’dark thirty in the morning, I had put in my old backup pair of contacts that reside in a similar shaped but different color case. No wonder my right eye didn’t have clear vision. Doh!

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asaxon

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PART 2
4 am the
next morning, we have learned. We take extra water, food, the right contacts are ‘in’, no dropping backpacks, and we plan to stalk more from the south because the wind direction (NE) may have given us away. We stationed ourselves south to look for elk. As day broke, we saw only one very large bull elk come by, no cows. Agent X later let us know the elk had all gone out earlier to the north (naturally). Soon we could see elk in two groups already about a mile and a half up in the hills, one group on either side of a small creek that ran down the mountainside – the thin green line in the picture. The decision was to go after the northern group as there was better cover on the approach. We head out with MJ in the lead, ZA and Koro following. PJ and RK are by the vehicles spotting and directing. We’d gone about 3/4 of a mile using the brush along the creek as cover when PJ passed on Intel. The larger group to the north, still a mile away, had been spooked by something and had moved off. OK, we’d go after for the group to the south. These elk, in a much more open terrain, were going to be far harder to get close to. An hour and a half later, we figure we are about 50 to 100 yards from the elk. PJ sends a message; “the cow elk are standing up”. We glanced over a boulder strewn ridge; no cows in sight but a big dominant bull elk. He immediately locks onto us. Crap. We drop down and sit. Five minutes later the scouts peek; the bull is still looking straight at where we are. Down we go again. Fifteen minutes later, a quick glance shows he is looking away. But that the cows are beyond him. We’d never to be able to get to close to the cows by going forward without spooking that big boy. At this point, we had been three hours on this stalk. It is a bit after 10 a.m. and getting hot. So we sneak back down to the south, curve north-west and go up to the next boulder ridge line. We then crept extremely carefully to the point on the ridge where there was a 6 x 5 foot boulder we could hide behind. Once there, we peeked around its edge. Perfect. Cow elk plus the bull were standing about 100 yards away. I cocked the muzzleloader, prayed that the damn thing would fire, put the sights on the chest of one cow standing by herself (a “two-fer” is not part of the plan) and squeezed the trigger all in about 3 seconds.

BOOM. A 250 grain all copper sabot screams down range and the cow simply collapses. Yes! The other elk look around like “what the heck just happened? Where did Joan go?” As we stand up, the bull and cow elk look at us inquiringly as I say in jest; “Want me to shoot another?” Then, in no particular hurry, the elk just mosey away. Weird. We go to the downed elk and I put a finishing round in her neck.You can see how far the shot was as I took this picture below from the rock where I fired and ZA and MJ (circled in red) standing over the animal. Their guestimate was that the elk weighed around 350 pounds. ZA quickly set the work gutting and skinning the animal so the meat would not spoil - it is getting toward 90 degrees and there is no shade. We now pop smoke, i.e. plan to extract ourselves. PJ and RK, who saw all via their scopes, bring up the vehicles from down by the green alfalfa fields. As luck would have it, there is a dirt road that runs a 1/4 mile west of us. While not allowed to drive off the road, “don’t crush the brush”, that made it a heck a lot easier carrying the elk quarters rather than hoofing them 1.5 miles in the 90+ degree heat. ZA, the morgue detail, does yeoman’s work gutting and getting hide off the animal, taking off the back straps and tenderloins, and quartering. The meat was put in cloth bags for protection, taken to the vehicles and put into large ice chests. We take the head with my tag on its ear to comply with Fish & Wildlife regulations. Having the head reminded me of a scene from The Godfather - I puzzled about on whose bed I should to put this elk head. Back at camp, we remove the lower front teeth and a piece of tissue and put them the containers - mailers as required by CA DFW. I’m now a qualified elk dentist. As it was Sunday, RK, ZA and MJ decided to head home, they are working stiffs. As a retired Koro, I decided to spend another night and just chill after having dinner with my Spotter/Black Ops chief and his wife. The next morning I head home where I began processing and boning out all the meat. That evening, ZA came over and we finished the job. The steaks and prime cuts were taken off for vacuum sealing with the grind meat was ready to go for sausage etc. Now you may think that elk was lovely but this picture of my granddaughter shows you what real lovely is.Finally, I leave you with a mystery. As I am boning out the left shoulder (the side I shot), I found a lot of blood infused meat on the shoulder blade. I get the meat off and there is a 50 cal. + hole clean thru the shoulder blade. WTF? This is where I was aiming on the left. We did not notice an entry wound on the left shoulder but the animal was lying with her left side down. We’d forgot to take the heart out in all the excitement so we had not opened the chest cavity and thus we don’t know if there was a corresponding wound into the chest. But there appeared to be entry and exit wounds higher up that took out the spine. How can this be? By the time we realized we had this conundrum that night, the hide was wrapped up and frozen so we will have to check later when the skin is back from the tannery to see if we can solve this mystery of where the bullet went. Where ever it went, Team Koro will be eating elk this winter, that’s for sure.
*No animals were harmed unnecessarily in the telling of this tale but the truth got bruised and RK got what he deserved it.
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ltdann

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Great story, Andy, wish I could be there!
 

P304X4

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Great tale as always...congrats on the elk!! :thumbs up2: That's one pretty granddaughter, you'll need the shotgun over the fireplace to keep the boys in line!
 

snoopdogg

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Great read. I've chewed some of that same dirt.
 

asaxon

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Assault team

As you all can tell, having Team Koro is what made this trip into great fun. The excitement was infectious. Yes, our Ordnance officer – black powder specialist was none other than the infamous ltdann. He was off shooting his buck up at Vandenberg at the time http://www.jesseshunting.com/showthread.php/264833-Got-him! But he was with us in spirit. I have also included a picture of MJ with me, he is not black ops so his identity is not protected.

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And I even heard from Jindydiver down in Oz. Hey Mick, does the handle “Jindydiver” come from diving in Lake Jindabyne? The water there looks real green to me. I’m off to NZ in late November and the Admiral going to be going after those Aussies “rellies” of yours (bushy tailed possums) while we are there…As for our mokopuna (Granddaughter in Maori), no question she is a corker.

You all be well and have a great fall hunting season. Lobster diving starts at end of this month...

 

jindydiver

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And I even heard from Jindydiver down in Oz. Hey Mick, does the handle “Jindydiver” come from diving in Lake Jindabyne? The water there looks real green to me. I’m off to NZ in late November and the Admiral going to be going after those Aussies “rellies” of yours (bushy tailed possums) while we are there…As for our mokopuna (Granddaughter in Maori), no question she is a corker.

You all be well and have a great fall hunting season. Lobster diving starts at end of this month...



G'day

Yes. I did a project many years ago now mapping and recording the old township of Jindabyne that was flooded when the dam was constructed. There are a lot of old artifacts left behind (including a couple of intact houses) and a friend of mine loves his underwater photography and joined in the project to take pics of the stuff we were finding. I wrote some articles for the Australiasian Scuba magazine and we did some talks for the older residents of new Jindabyne. Yes the water goes through stages and the best time to dive to avoid both algae and turbidity is the beginning of winter.
I have attached a couple of pics for those that are interested.

You wont have much trouble finding possums to hunt. My wife is a Kiwi and we have spent a lot of time over there. It really is a magical place.
 

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asaxon

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A new problem

Nice Mick, Diving a submerged town is sort of interesting in a greenish sort of way… When I married my wife, the idea of a Yank was not favored in the kiwi family but then her sister up and married a POM. All of a sudden, I was the “Golden Boy”.

Yes, Kentuck, I did save the ivories which are teeth that in some past ancestor (or future one), may have been or will be tusks as seen in Musk deer or Water deer - below. Also, when we removed the lower legs to get the quarters into the ice chests, I threw them in the truck. Finding them when I got home, I soaked ‘em in water/salt/vinegar and then dried them while wetting the outside with formaldehyde. So now I have four elk “feet”; my problem is what to do with them?
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skookum

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asaxon,
Great hunt and even better story! Do you suppose the bullet went through the neck and exited the left shoulder? Let us know when the hide comes in. As for the feet, my buddy is a taxidermist in training and is working on a gun rack for me with the feet from my archery blacktail-just one of many ideas. Enjoy that meat and let me know how the smoothie turned out:)
 

asaxon

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Great thought! Maybe the shot in the neck to finish her when she was lying with her left side down and her head on the ground ricocheted off the rocks right into her left shoulder. It was clearly right through the neck at 5 feet away. That is the best explanation I have heard. I look forward to seeing the hide and will post what we find.

asaxon,
Great hunt and even better story! Do you suppose the bullet went through the neck and exited the left shoulder? Let us know when the hide comes in. As for the feet, my buddy is a taxidermist in training and is working on a gun rack for me with the feet from my archery blacktail-just one of many ideas. Enjoy that meat and let me know how the smoothie turned out:)
 

KTKT70

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Great story as always Andy. Diffently needs more cheese, but I understand all the hunts can't be about aged dairy. Lol.
Glad to see you out there having a good time. Thank you for sharing. It's nice to see all the cool stuff you and your crew do. I will be at the Drag races all weekend. Rather be doing gun stuff, although fat cats are cool too.
 

WoodGrain

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Andy,

Great story! It's good to be back after a long break and read a story like this. Congratulations!


WoodGrain
 

TheGDog

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That's one heck of an acupuncture to the shoulder to relieve her sore neck. ;)
 

WoodGrain

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Andy,

Long story short: My family and I temporarily moved back to Michigan. We had to take care of some "family issues". Like most "family issues", they turned out to be complete nonsense with a lot of wasted time. Sorry to all, I had to take a break from here. However, its great to be back! I look forward to rejoining the Forum Family!

Woody
 

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