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After two days of driving I am in Colorado on my 1st elk hunt here. It is the last week of archery season with ends 9/27. Today is September 19th and all efforts to catch some sleep have failed. I am hunting with John (DoWorkSon) and am doing my best with 5 hours of sleep in 3 days. The altitude quickly makes its ominous presence known and my lungs cry for oxygen not 75 yards from the vehicle. I’m worried now but fortunately my hunting partner can drop his pace a couple of decades so my old tired butt can keep up. Thanks John.
400 yards into the woods we come across our first elk but he’s a spike and therefore protected from bipeds by bipeds. Pretty cool to be within 60 yards of elk right off the bat. Adrenaline hits me hard.
We press on and I am so alive it’s like electricity is coursing through my veins…might be the sleep deprivation but when a couple of grouse take flight from the ground right in front of us I swear my heart stopped for a few seconds. Before I can recovery John is at full draw and drops one of the damn birds with a perfect shot. It’s the coolest thing I’ve seen in the field.
The morning hike quickly warms me up and I am stripping off layers and perspiring now. The wind is beyond impressive but seems to be coming in odd bursts…and from different directions regularly. Not a good thing for us. We start spotting wallows and elk beds everywhere. Seriously! We’re walking through WallowWorld! All of em have fresh sign from 3 to 1 day old. I stopped taking photos of em because we saw so many.
John throws out a call and we hear our first bugle. BOOM! Game on! We’re running a few hundred yards to close the distance and set up. I peel off my pack and binos and conceal myself on a bench with a 40 yard kill zone. The elk have to walk up to me so I will see them before they see me…an ideal set-up that will enable me to come to full draw without being seen. 30 minutes passes with few vocalizations then at about 40 minutes I tremble at the sound of a bugle a stone throws distance away. This is instantly followed by a series of chuckles and mews and I think a whole friggin’ herd is just below me, not more than 60 yards from being visible. I am seeing the scenario everyone talks about unfold and it is exhilarating. I have no doubt that I’m about to arrow my first elk and resolved to take the first shot opportunity I have, knowing the bull will be in the rear. A cow is fine with me. This is a meat hunt. I brace myself for what feels like an eternity but in reality is more like 45 seconds when it happened. The oddest sound I have ever heard makes my brain go blank. It sounds like a long freight train getting closer and closer, louder and louder until it is deafening. Fifteen second later the Jetstream hits my back and the elk go silent, never to be seen or heard again. Auggghhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The muscles in my arms ache from holding the bow up ready to draw. It was the most frustrating and wonderful moment ever.
To be continued…
400 yards into the woods we come across our first elk but he’s a spike and therefore protected from bipeds by bipeds. Pretty cool to be within 60 yards of elk right off the bat. Adrenaline hits me hard.
We press on and I am so alive it’s like electricity is coursing through my veins…might be the sleep deprivation but when a couple of grouse take flight from the ground right in front of us I swear my heart stopped for a few seconds. Before I can recovery John is at full draw and drops one of the damn birds with a perfect shot. It’s the coolest thing I’ve seen in the field.
The morning hike quickly warms me up and I am stripping off layers and perspiring now. The wind is beyond impressive but seems to be coming in odd bursts…and from different directions regularly. Not a good thing for us. We start spotting wallows and elk beds everywhere. Seriously! We’re walking through WallowWorld! All of em have fresh sign from 3 to 1 day old. I stopped taking photos of em because we saw so many.
John throws out a call and we hear our first bugle. BOOM! Game on! We’re running a few hundred yards to close the distance and set up. I peel off my pack and binos and conceal myself on a bench with a 40 yard kill zone. The elk have to walk up to me so I will see them before they see me…an ideal set-up that will enable me to come to full draw without being seen. 30 minutes passes with few vocalizations then at about 40 minutes I tremble at the sound of a bugle a stone throws distance away. This is instantly followed by a series of chuckles and mews and I think a whole friggin’ herd is just below me, not more than 60 yards from being visible. I am seeing the scenario everyone talks about unfold and it is exhilarating. I have no doubt that I’m about to arrow my first elk and resolved to take the first shot opportunity I have, knowing the bull will be in the rear. A cow is fine with me. This is a meat hunt. I brace myself for what feels like an eternity but in reality is more like 45 seconds when it happened. The oddest sound I have ever heard makes my brain go blank. It sounds like a long freight train getting closer and closer, louder and louder until it is deafening. Fifteen second later the Jetstream hits my back and the elk go silent, never to be seen or heard again. Auggghhhh!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The muscles in my arms ache from holding the bow up ready to draw. It was the most frustrating and wonderful moment ever.
To be continued…