SDHNTR

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This hunt did not start off so well. I got in to work early Friday, was really busy, and had to wire funds to close escrow on my first home. Stress does not even begin to describe it.

I hit the road midmorning and headed north to go pick up Zeke on the way in Santa Barbara. Somewhere south of LA I spot a gal on the side of the road with a flat tire. Then my mind starts wandering. You know, when all sorts of thoughts start going through your head. Thoughts you wouldn't normally think of. Well I thought to myself that I've been really fortunate and have not had any tire blowouts in quite a while. In fact, I've never had a freeway blowout (no joke, I really thought that). About the time I hit LAX, I think it would be a good time to call Deedy and give her an ETA. We are BS'ing on the phone and traffic starts to slow down. As I am coasting to slow down to the brake lights ahead of me, I hear a noise that sound like a jake brake. No big, there is a truck right next to me. The truck's lane gets stopped and mine starts to go again. I hear the noise again but this time look over to see the truck still stopped. Then it dawned on me that my back corner is sagging. Oh crap, I jinxed myself, flat tire. Pull over, call roadside assistance. They say to expect 1-1.5 hrs, screw that, I got a hunt to get to. I am fine with changing my own tire but didn't want to risk my life aside a crazy LA freeweay. A few minutes later a CHP shows up and says he'll send one of his tow guys. He calls on the radio and says the guy will be here in 15 min. I figure I'll start the process, but by the time he shows up, I'm all changed out and pulling back onto the freeway. I give the thumbs up and I'm on my way. Swap trucks at Zeke's and we are only about 20-30 minutes behind schedule.

We 3 more hours and we pull in to Bryson Resort. Cool place, a secluded shady location with nice litte cabins. Just as we start unloading, Deedy's daughter Karin shows up and says her Mom will be right there. We suit up and are after it. The only problem is it's hot, I mean Arizona hot. A balmy 95 degrees at 5:15 pm.

A short drive away and we are on a hill overlooking a large barley field that is the only source of good feed for miles away. With the heat we knew the pigs would be late coming into the field, and they were. A nice group of 20+ showed up about 10 minutes before dark. We beat feet over there and get set up to stalk. The stalk worked just fine, we simply ran out of light. We got to about 75 yards and it was dark. Bummer.

The next morning we see the same group in about the same spot right at first light. Again we haul butt over there, but as we pop up over the rise, they are nowhere to be seen. They could not of seen, heard or smelled us, they just moved into the brush and bedded somewhere as we were out of sight moving into position.

We go check out another area. As we stop to open a gate, I notice that there are ground squirells all over. I grab my bow with a judo arrow and whack two. After the second one, the arrow bounced into oblivion. Zeke and I are scouring the area looking for my lost arrow. I glance up the canyon and see a large black spot. Sure enough, a hog, and it looks to be in a stalkable location. Since I already had my bow in my hand. I ease up on the stalk. Zeke heads up the hill for a better vantage and to signal me in. I get to where I can see the area where the hog last was, and it must have dissapeared into the brush. Boots off, I kept closing in. I heard some rustling and saw some weener pigs squirt from one brush patch into another. I close the distance and wave Zeke down the hill. With him 30 yards behind me I give him the internationaly recognized hand signal of "throw rocks into that brush patch to scare the pigs out so I can shoot them". He does but nothing comes out. I know they are in there so I close in further. I'm now no more than 10 yards from this thick patch and it starts shaking. Next thing I know hog after hog after hog is bailing out of this brush patch. I couldn't get around it fast enough to get any clear shot. They bust up the hill. Zeke said there were 20-25 pigs in the group. Bummer again. We look around some more and drive some canyons to no avail.

We decide to go play with the turkeys since it is mid day and really hot. First spot, no love. Second spot we spot a nice tom. Problem was, he spotted us first as we drove up over the rise. He ran off into a brushy canyon. Thinking it was futile but willing to try anyway, Zeke bailed out with his bow. I grabbed my box call out of my pack and hit it. Instant gobble about 150 yards down the canyon. I hit the call a few more times and he kept gobbling, but getting closer each time. Holy crap, this dumb bird is coming back. We pulled him all the way back to about 35 yards from Zeke, but he hung up behind a big tree. When Zeke tried to move around to get a shot angle, the bird busted and ran off for good this time.

Back out for the evening hunt. We see what we think is the same group of hogs from the night before and the morning, WAY up high on a distant ridge above the barley. We have about 20-25 minutes of light left. The hogs are moving down, looking like they would come into the field the same way they did the previous night. We hauled butt over there beating the pig's arrival and got set up in the field's natural funnel. The wind was perfect and the set up was ideal. We just had to wait for the pigs to show up. This was a slam dunk! One problem, the pigs never showed up. They ducked into an unseen canyon and never came into the field. Day one done.

Sunday morning we are up on the ridge overlooking the barley again. Right at first light we spot a group of pigs in a perfect spot to stalk. As we begin to gather our things, they start moving out. Up the barley and into the brush they go, not 5 minutes after light. The heat was really killing us. We had VERY little good hunting time each morning and evening. As we were getting set to stalk the brush patch they went into, Deedy went to check a nearby canyon since it was close and since we figured the pigs we spotted would hole up in that brush patch and stay put for a while. Sure enough Deedy finds pigs.

We set up for the stalk. By this time it is already warming up, fearing this was likely to be our last good opportunity of the trip, I had to take drastic measures. We started our stalk, and had to negotiate around some more turkeys in fear of them blowing our stalk. We worked our way side hill, staying in the trees until we can finally spot the pigs. Thinking the pigs were closer than they were, we had taken our shoes off a 1/4 mile ago. We come around the last bush and there they are, but still a nice poke at 50 yards. The plan was for Zeke to take a half step to the left so I could have some room to kneel down and shoot from low, while he shot standing. As we position ourselves, and as Zeke is just about to draw, the closest pig busts our movement and the whole group starts jammin' for the wall of brush 25 yards away from them. I manage to get two shots off before the biggest one entered the brush and one more right as she hit the brushline, but this time with my .243. I had brought it with the hopes of tagging out early and popping some yotes. The first two shots hit and pretty much did her in. We found her just a short distance into the brush. A nice sow about 165 lbs. So we had meat on the pole, albeit bittersweet.

We went back to the brush patch where we initially watched the other group of pigs bed up in at first light. We worked it hard but the pigs must have moved out. We looked at a couple more spots as mid morning turned into midday.

I left to go take care of my pig and to start packing up. Zeke made one last ditch effort at the turkeys and got some response but ended up getting busted again.

So we headed home with one in the cooler. Cool, but somewhat bittersweet as it did not meet its demise from my favored weapon. Oh well, next time.

Deedy's place is great. Lots of hogs and great accomodations. It will only get better too. Deedy has some great plans to set up some stands on wallows and seeps for archery hunters. With as dry as this year has been, this should be a successful tactic. As as the surrounding hillsides continue to dry out even more in the next couple weeks, the pigs should really come in to hit that barley hard as it will be the only source of food around. The place has it going on.

I'll put a review in the outfitter section but Deedy has a good thing going there at Bryson Resort.

Did I miss anything Zeke?
 

BrysonHesperiaResort

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Excellent write up, thank you VERY much for coming. SD, Bearclaw and I were multi-tasking, trying to figure out the best spots for the tree stands at the pig hot spots. Or if we should just do blinds. Or no tree stands at all.
I think we've got a few of the treestand spots figured out- thank you so much you guys for all your expert help.

And then I wanted a photo for the brochure of dead pig/happy hunters/with lake in background. Thanks SD & Bearclaw, I got my photo! Turned out excellent. That photo shoot bit in to your hog hunting hours as well. We found a great spot with the lake in the background, and you guys are very photogenic. Thanks Bearclaw for chopping the grass that my camera always focuses on instead of the hog/hunter. Turned out great.

In retrospect, both SD & Bearclaw would have gotten hogs (with their bows) if they'd have just stuck on several of the hoggie spots, but we were trying to do a little more than just kill pigs. Thank you again for all your help, sorry about the heat- it's gone now (of course). Rare to have 98 degrees this time of year, in the summertime when it does that we have an extra two hours of hunting because it stays light longer during those prime time piggin hours.

Get some rest- that was a busy schedule for sure. I appreciate everything you guys did- Deedy. Karin says thank you too. Bearclaw, that toad calico is still waiting for you too.
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BDB

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Bummer about the heat, congrats on the nice pig and the great write up
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. Bryson sounds like a great place, I'll have to get down there one of these days
 

SDHNTR

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Thanks to you too Deedy. I have some more ideas too. Let me catch up and I'll be in touch.
 

Kentuck

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Sounds like a good hunt and hunt location. I'm sure the bright moon didn't help things either.
 

BrysonHesperiaResort

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Good guides dread the full moon
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as much as the hunters do. I had some hogs stay in one nice spot (out in the open) for almost 2 hours before it got dark on Thursday. By Sat. night it was a little different. That makes us all hunt the water and the beds, I think, as the alternative to evening hunts during the bright/full moon times. Funny though, Sunday morning those hogs were out until 8:00-9:00 AM and weren't on their way to bed or anything, they just met their maker.

I think archery hog hunting is pretty tough stuff, not for the weak of heart. My hat's off to all of you that archery hunt
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My rifle hunts are at 100% (everyone has gotten their shots in at 75-100 yards). I think the success rate for good archery hunts are somewhere around 30%-40%. You guys just like to torture yourselves. Pigs say hello by the way.
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switch

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Guys, great sounding hunt and great write up! I'm looking forward to visisting The Bryson Resort soon. Sounds like a top knotch operation!
 

billrob

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Congrats on a good hunt.
It's a great spot with excellent people.
 

BOWUNTR

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Very nice. Congrats on the sausage. I wonder what it's like in December??? Sounds tempting. Ed F
 

Zbearclaw

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I am going to get my version of the story up this evening, chasing Bearclaw junior and junior-er around the house, when they are in bed I will wow and kapow with my exquisite prose.
 

BrysonHesperiaResort

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<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (BOWUNTR @ Apr 30 2007, 06:16 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}></div>
Very nice. Congrats on the sausage. I wonder what it's like in December??? Sounds tempting. Ed F[/b]



December is hog 'n pigeon season. Dec 16th - the 24th is pigeon season.The Bandtail pigeons were so thick this last year that the trees were gray. Not kidding. You can shoot them off the porch of your cabins. Not legal of course, we'd have to move everybody 150 yards away from the cabins. Too much fun, you'll bag out every day on the pigeons. Hogs are not going anywhere.

All hog hunts come with free pigeons... and coyotes... and squirrels ... bring lots of ammo.



One Track- I think they wished you were here too ... I think as we speak they are putting together a master plan for the hogs...
Bearclaw, can't wait for your story ... you & SD's pix (very frame-able photos) are on the way too - via e-mail.

Billrob- my neighbor Jim wants to take you fishing
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Then you can take my boat and take him fishing. I'll find the hogs - deal?
 

Speckmisser

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Deedy, you have SO got it going on down there.

I just drove by your place to go hunt one of the Golden Ram properties down near Paso Robles (Cholame), and thought about the fun ya'll must be having and wishing I had turned your direction instead of heading into the barren wastes of Cholame.

Actually, my hunt could've been really good if the Golden Ram maps were worth a hoot... but I passed on three different, very stalkable groups of hogs, because I thought they were off-limits.

So tell me more about these treestands...that should be a very productive tactic in the summer months.
 

BrysonHesperiaResort

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Speck you are SO in trouble-
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you were in Paso Robles and didn't come to hunt with us? Heck, that's only 45 little minutes away. You were almost here. We sure would have loved to hunt with you. Could have put you next to a pig water spot under the shade. Next to the piggy beds. With a beverage.
We're kinda kicking ourselves for not doing just that. It's hard to wait at one spot though. Especially when you've got pigs at the other spots.

How are the hogs looking in Cholame?- we're worried about all the game this year with no water/no feed situation. I used to run cattle there in Shandon/Cholame in all those hills around HWY 41-46. This year is going to be hard on everything I'll bet.

So the tree stands are looking pretty good, I think we'll do the big permanent ones with cup holders & magazine racks (Im sure somebody already thought of that). I've got some hot piggy water spots that we can put them at all over - we could put up 7-8 just to get started. Then the biggest thing that makes these hunts so successful is having spotter's up on the ridges- Karin & I are doing it now, but once everybody gets to know the place you guys will have more opportunities, we didn't even hunt a bunch of spots this weekend (we sure tried though- hunted our butts off for the last week). I can't even remember how many hogs we got on. The hogs come in on some fields from miles away- it's pretty cool, you can watch them come in from up high and talk to your guys in the field with radios.
That's kinda what I think is going to work (thanks SD & Bearclaw) but the tree stands should be big producers. The only thing I worry about with tree stands & hogs is the hogs don't pattern like other game. You might have to climb down once in a while. More than once in a while. That's OK, you need to stay in shape so you can drag BDB's hog off the road.
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Speckmisser

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Deedy...what's worse is that not only is Paso Robles 45 minutes away, it's 45 minutes BELOW your place. That's right, I drove right by... but I paid for this damned membership, I guess I ought to use it at least a couple times a year.

The hogs were definitely there, in Cholame, by the way. I saw a bunch. Tons of deer, too.

If I knew the property better, it's almost guaranteed I'd have had at least a couple of shots. As I mentioned, the maps Golden Ram supplies are pretty feeble, and really don't help at all.

In one case, I saw a herd of probably 15 hogs from the road at about 4:00pm. After a long, longing look, I drove on because I thought they were "out of bounds". What I didn't know is that they were completely on the ranch property, and perfectly legal game. The guys in the truck behind me stopped, got out, hopped the fence, and shot three good meat pigs out of the group!
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Anyway, I think we're on the leading edge of a drought cycle, so the next few years don't look good at all. The big population boom that we've been seeing will probably taper off as the food and water disappear over the next couple of seasons.

However, if you've got springs and year-round water, your hunts are only gonna get better as the critters start to concentrate around those sources. Your tree stands are definitely the way to go.
 

Zbearclaw

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Ok here we go, way later than it deserves, but as soon as I could.

Being that I am quite a bit closer to Bryson than SD he was going to be my driver for the weekend, that way old blue could stay halfway clean and we could beat up on his goat for a weekend, well he found out about my plan and made up some story about a near death experience and saving kids and such, anyways after changing his tire along the 5 in his tux he arrives and we load up and are north bound as fast as the other commuters allow, arriving at the resort in pretty good time, considering it ws Friday afternoon.

Once we throw our gear in the cabin I change into killin gear and off we go with Karin to meet Deedy and get the plan of the day, which was to watch the barley from a few locations and get after them when they showed up. The big pot hole of the plan was the additional fifteen degrees we had on the temperature dial, driving up there I was telling Nate how much I didn't trust my temp gauge on the truck, cause it was reading 95, no way was it that hot, well turns out old blue was right and I was wrong, oh well.

We were oh so close on those first pigs, had we been there five minutes earlier, or had the sun stayed out to play five minutes longer we would have had blood on the ground, but seeing that many hogs we a great sign.

After dark Deedy showed us some other spots where pigs come out at and we made plans for the morning, then Nate and I headed to camp to eat and get some Z's, very nice to have an AC and clean bed when it's that hot, the cabins were great.

Next morning we haul up to the lookout above the barley with dreams of barley swollen hogs waiting on us in the field, and just as my 10X40's can make out the hillside a stump moves, with more in tow, Nate and I are off that mountain faster than a duck on a junebug, and are in position mere minutes after first sighting. The pigs were really fast to bed and headed to thick cover out of our line of sight before we were in position to see them, but still seeing pigs was good, we just needed a break to get on them. After that we head to another area where Deedy sees them, though we had to take a short minute at the gate to help out the errosion problem, Nate drills two then loses one of his prized arrers so off we go to find the errant Gold Tip so we can get back to the real business when Nate sees a big ol' pig butt @ 200 yds, I had my bow in the truck which was running, but left all that and off we went to get Nate on this hog, I tried to get high, however the opposite slope wasn't steep enough and the brush blocked my view so I came down and ran into Nate, after his best Navy SEAL hand signal conversation I launched a few rocks into the bush-o-de-pigs and nothing happened, just then I saw the bush move, only it was a huge Calico sow getting ready to move the whole bunch out of danger, I watched helplessly as twenty plus hogs, five or more good sized pigs, walked annoyed up the slope fifty yards from me, having only my inner frustration to sling at them, Nate within thirty yards of the herd but unable to see because of the brush. From there we try and get high to find them again, to no avail.

After that we meet up with Deedy to check some wallows and end up hitting her turkey area, we get no answers down in the bottom but up on the flat have a good tom run in front of the truck and bail off the side of the ridge. Apparently Nate is a relative of Ben Lee because even after seeing us and hearing us he was able to call that bird into thirty five yards, just couldn't get Tommy to commit and come out in the open, I try and get ater him but he knwos I am there, only shot I had was at about forty yards walking away, not shot for a bow at a turkey.

After that shower real quick and eat lunch, a very late lunch, and then head to our lookout over the barley.

This time they were coming in from way on high, but heading directly to where the hogs were the first night so we got into position way ahead of them, but somewhere over the last ridge they must have bedded or headed to water because they never showed, but we were still seeing hogs so our spirits were never beaten.

Next morning we see hogs right at first light, only to have them bed before we could even get in the truck, this heat had them hunkered down way more than I liked, but we stayed at it. While we were getting ready to go sneak their beds Deedy wanted to check another area in case we had pigs in the open there, she got on them so off we went, as Nate mentioned we had a pretty good ambush plan, I would take first shot with the bow and as soon as my arrow was loosed, or they bolted, Nate would "Unleash Hell" with the .243. We got in close, close enough for a shot I am very confident in, but got caught while moving so they bolted, Nate dropped and anchored his pig while they ran, then I bailed off after the rest of the pack in hopes of catching up to them, or seeing where the went, however the brush was very thick and I lost them.

I headed back to meet up with Nate and see his hog, a beautiful sow that ws very photogenic, she must have some hollywood blood in her somewhere. After the photo session the plan was for Nate to get his hog in the cooler then meet up with my to birddog the brush patch our hogs went into that morning, we hit it hard and couldn't find them, they must have snuck out prior to our getting there, oh well.

After that we had to get ready to head south so Nate took care o fhis hog while I tried to get a thunder chicken, I made a rookie mistake and called while out in the open in the sun, three birds answered but were on a low limb eighty yards away looking at me like I farted, I tried to convince them I was a hot hen but they just yelled obscenities at me, and then moved off to laugh behind my back.

Nate and I packed up out little home away from home and thanked Deedy and Karin for the hospitality and we headed out.

That place is thick with hogs, with the intel we have after one trip there I am confident my Montecs will be in hogs next time, but we had a blast and I can't think of anything I would rather do in 95deg heat than hunt hogs, well maybe hunt thogs in cooler weather but you get the point.

Deedy thanks for all the hard work, we worked you harder than we wanted to, but truly appreciate everything, and yes we are aleady knee deep in our planning for next time.

Thanks to Karin too, she stayed at it with us all weekend as well.
 

BrysonHesperiaResort

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Bearclaw and SD
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That was excellent- you had me cracking up all the way through that - I loved all your exquisite prose here too, The phrase "they looked at me like I farted" "couldn't get Tommy to commit" "faster than a duck on a june bug" "bush-o-de-pigs" was especially entertaining. This, Bearclaw, is award winning stuff here. Thank you, I am truly honored. Seriously. You too SD. Nice work.

To all our readers:
If it kinda sounds like we hunted pretty much 24-7 and never ate or slept- you are right. We are guilty. Every legal light ray we had was taken, and then at night we plotted & schemed multiple hog massacres at various locations. Very little food or sleep. Man that was fun, huh guys? Took me a whole day to recover. I haven't seen Karin since then (just kidding).
Come back very soon guys, I think there's more than just a few waiting for you...

I don't know if you saw these or not...I think you guys did, in the lead is that big red sow she'll weigh 180ish
[attachment=41606:attachment]

Here's the ones that hid from you all weekend in the spring...you didn't get to see these yet either. Family style, with some nice shooters in the group.
[attachment=41607:attachment]

These are across the street from the resort- in with "Tommy"...
[attachment=41608:attachment]
 

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irishhunter

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[attachment=41614:attachment]heres a few pics i took on our hunt at the resort, all these critters within a mile radius
 

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