1st Rifle Success

SunnyInCO

Member
Oct 20, 2015
101
2
Highlands Ranch, Colorado
I do not see a new thread so I will start one for posting your successful hunts.

Success with my 1st Elk!!!! Year 4 of elk hunting and hunting in general and unbelievably excited.

We were between Hot Sulpher Springs and Kremmling. I was sitting at about 10.6k feet against a little rock outcropping as the wind was blowing with gusts probably 20-30 mph, coming from my right to left. Only about 15 min sitting there I see something move out of the corner of my eye maybe 150 yards away to my right, looking straight into the wind and walking straight up the steep slope. Its a cow elk. I throw off my gloves and sun glasses as my polarized lenses are not meshing well with my scope today. It looks like a clear shot and she stops moving. I pull the trigger and nothing. She does not move, then from behind the big lone pine tree here come the whole herd, 20 or so and they all keep walking up, including the lead cow. I reload and pick out the 2nd or 3rd lead cow who just then stops. Deep breath and pull the trigger. She falls backwards and the rest of the heard hauls you-know-what down the hill into the timber.

Holy crap, the hands are shaking. I walk to the spot and no blood, nothing, crap. I walk around and find her down the hill in the thick timber 50 feet from where I hit her. My brother in law has a cow down 3/4 of a mile away also. Cannot tell if it was the same herd as his harvest was a few minutes after mine. It takes us all day to get his cow and my loins/backstrap to the truck.

We go back on Monday morning for my quarters and his fur. The winds are crazy and the beetle kill lodgepoles are falling all around us. It was scary and not safe. Luckily I am in excellent shape so the two of us were able to walk out with the fronts on our backs and me pulling the hinds and his fur in the sled, one trip, probably 2 miles. 20 trees have fell on the trail the last mile to the truck so that was fun going over and under those.

I made some mistakes but learned so much. It was and unbelievable experience.

Edit: I should note this was a pure DIY public land hunt.
 
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Slugz

Veteran member
Oct 12, 2014
3,658
2,327
55
Casper, Wyoming
Way to go! I was just doing a RMEF fence pulling project up that way. That beetle kill in there is no joke. Congrats!
 

Matthoek21

Veteran member
Mar 18, 2011
1,904
0
Peachtree City, GA.
Congrats. Great eating is right. I have eaten elk every day this week and it is awesome. Went to the grocery store today and didn't have to buy any meat. A lot easier on the pocketbook. Although I know I paid for it but man it was worth it. My family is loving the organic protein.
 

SunnyInCO

Member
Oct 20, 2015
101
2
Highlands Ranch, Colorado
I greatly appreciate everyone's responses.

Congrats man! Lets see some pictures!
Ha, so one of the part I (purposely) left out of my original post is in the chaos of the post kill and because we were on a very steep slope she ended up rolling down the hill a hundred yards or so trying to get her in position to start to field dress. So somewhere between where I originally found her and where she ended up after the tumble down the mountain, I lost my phone with all the pictures. The two below are what I have left from after the fact. Added to the book of lessons to be learned.

Meat.jpg
Game.jpg
 

Work2hunt

Veteran member
Mar 2, 2013
1,366
11
St. Louis, MO
Ha! Sounds like the bull I shot in 2014. At one point I thought I was going to have to jump on him as he started to slide at me and it was too thick to jump to either side. A couple lengths of paracord definitely need to be in your pack for hunts like this. That darn bull kept wanting to slide down until I remembered I had paracord with me. Plus it acts like a 3rd or 4th hand if you need to hold a leg in a position.
 

ivorytip

Veteran member
Mar 24, 2012
3,768
50
44
SE Idaho
Good job! man, ive harvested a lot of deer and elk. every time I see how much meat comes off of an elk compared to a deer it shocks me.. Good eats for a while!


I greatly appreciate everyone's responses.



Ha, so one of the part I (purposely) left out of my original post is in the chaos of the post kill and because we were on a very steep slope she ended up rolling down the hill a hundred yards or so trying to get her in position to start to field dress. So somewhere between where I originally found her and where she ended up after the tumble down the mountain, I lost my phone with all the pictures. The two below are what I have left from after the fact. Added to the book of lessons to be learned.

View attachment 17671
View attachment 17672