Well, I'm back after driving 934 miles yesterday! I'll start off by saying I wish each and everyone out there has the chance do go on an adventure like this one I just experienced! From the start to the end it was an experience from the hunters and non hunters I shared our camp with. I have new friends from Denmark, Peter and his son Jan. Peter took a nice moose and very nice caribou. I also shared my tent the first night with Tim from Visalia Ca, who took a 10 1/2 year old stone sheep on his last day! What an achievement!
My next tent mate was Enrique from Mexico City who took a 9 1/2 year old stone sheep on his forth day of hunting, which we ate the backstraps. Stone sheep is by far the best meat I've ever tasted!
My hunt was a true adventure, we found a nice moose on the first day but weather played a factor in not going after him. This moose turned out to be the elusive one, we hunted him for three days never getting closer than 688 yards. We just didn't want to blow him out. On the fourth day on chasing him, we found that resident hunters had setup a camp in the area and had 15 horses hobbled with bells! We did an about face not happy either. On the ride back after glassing different areas we spotted a nice bull moose across the valley and in a great place to stalk him on a flat spot towards the top of the facing mountain. The bull had two cows with him, so we knew he wouldn't be going anywhere. Then things changed, mister grizzly bear showed up! I know now how fast moose can move! The next day we rode up the mountain to look for the bull and cows, which were not there. Tim, my young 22 year old guide said, no worries we'll just ride over here, then over that way on our way to glass a big valley. We'll we didn't make it another 20 minutes, we're riding along and I'm looking another way and I look forward and Tim is off his horse and telling me quietly to get off my horse and get my gun and be ready. Two moose maybe three. Tim sets up his spotting scope and tells me the first bull which we were after that day was him and he wasn't legal. Then next bull shows himself and he's legal. Legal in this area is either 3 brow points or 10 points on one side. This bull had 3 points, which he asked me to view him thru the spotting scope. Tim made a call to the bull which he started coming directly at us. I moved to the right of Tim, the willows were only about a foot high. Tim told this could get very interesting if he keeps coming straight in, then one more call and he turned broadside and Tim said I could shoot when ready. One thing Tim learned is when someone tells me to shoot when I'm ready the model 70 extreme weather 7mm usually makes a load noise. One shot to the neck and the bull dropped in his tracks. Then Tim commented that he didn't have time to stick his fingers in his ears! It was 10:38 am 9/17/2015

at 2:10 pm we rode away after taking all four quarters, back straps and lions out and skinning this beast!
The next day which was day six of my hunt was spent beating for Tim and Alex our wrangler to go to the kill site to retrieve my meat cape and antlers! They spend the rest of the day fleshing this beast and part of the next morning also. The remainder of my hunt was trying to find a legal bull elk, 6 pts on one side. We never did find one.hers a few pictures I took with my cell phone, the best my wife just downloaded to her computer. That be another day