Hunting - any luck?

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  • Ken The Kanuck
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 4094

    #1

    Hunting - any luck?

    I hunted about 10 days this year, as did my son and hunting buddy and all we got to show for it was tag soup.

    How about you?

    KTK
  • ddiwd
    Member
    • Aug 2017
    • 32

    #2
    Elk-hunting-in-Colorado.jpg

    Hunting this year was really good and fun filled.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Originally posted by Ken The Kanuck
    I hunted about 10 days this year, as did my son and hunting buddy and all we got to show for it was tag soup.

    How about you?

    KTK
    what game were you hunting.?

    Comment

    • Pete Davis
      Junior Member
      • Nov 2017
      • 25

      #3
      Sir Francis Spikington


      standard.jpg

      PD

      Comment

      • barretcreek
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2013
        • 6065

        #4
        Originally posted by ddiwd
        [ATTACH=CONFIG]42550[/ATTACH]

        Hunting this year was really good and fun filled.

        - - - Updated - - -



        what game were you hunting.?
        What unit? Archery?

        Comment

        • Sunray
          Senior Member
          • Sep 2009
          • 3251

          #5
          "...all we got..."S'why it's called hunting and not shopping. snicker.
          Spelling and grammar count!

          Comment

          • jon_norstog
            Senior Member
            • Sep 2009
            • 3896

            #6
            I went up to hunt with my brother in the Mex Mountain area above the Lochsa River in Idaho. His hunting ground. It was also ground zero for wolf re-introduction and has never been the same. As usual, no animals were harmed. This year we did get enough snow to track - and saw hardly any tracks either. A big storm blew in and we beat it out after a week. I went back alone to check out the Higgins Hump area where locals told us some people got elk.

            I rode that whole area scouting on my bicycle, hunted where it looked likely.elk_hunter_2017a.jpg


            I ran into a big camp of locals who were sitting around the fire in the middle of the day complaining about their luck. The only elk tracks I saw were at fan Saddle, a couple big animals heading for the farm country below. Higgins Hump was kind of weird - you could see city lights in Grangeville, about 50 miles away from where I camped those 2 nights. My own take is the only reason someone got an elk there was it was close enough to the highway below it got more hunting pressure.

            I did some deer hunting around Sandpoint. The only decent deer I saw was a fat doe in an area that had a few houses.

            That was the hunt that was.

            jn

            Comment

            • RED
              Very Senior Member - OFC
              • Aug 2009
              • 11689

              #7
              I wanted a whitetail yearling for the freezer. Whitetails are overpopulated in my local area and I am lucky enough to own a 57 acre strip of prime wooded hunting ground situated located betwen a row crop farm on one side and a dairy farm on the other. I, don't/can't bow hunt and rifle season is only about 10 or 11 days. The first 4 days were spoiled because the row crop guy decided he needed to combine his soy beans. But, I managed to get a little 7 point buck and my son baged a doe. I still have a doe tag rhat I might fill in the BP season... depends on the weather and whether or not I feel like field stripping the sucker... it gets harder and messier every year.
              Last edited by RED; 12-12-2017, 01:21. Reason: typo

              Comment

              • pcox
                Senior Member
                • Aug 2009
                • 386

                #8
                Hunted an island in the Mississippi on opening day of rifle season with my son. He killed a big ten pointer, I still have a tag. Might use the tag during black powder season if the weather cooperates.

                Comment

                • Ken The Kanuck
                  Very Senior Member - OFC
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 4094

                  #9
                  Originally posted by ddiwd
                  [ATTACH=CONFIG]42550[/ATTACH]

                  Hunting this year was really good and fun filled.

                  - - - Updated - - -



                  what game were you hunting.?
                  That is beautiful, well done and congrats. We were hunting mulies and a immature bull moose if we are ever lucky enough to see one. We all put in for moose and elk draws but none of us got drawn. We all put in for a muley antlerless but only I got a draw but I couldn't fill it. All the fires up this way destroyed a lot of our favourite hunting grounds. We saw a fair amount of deer but either we couldn't get a shot off or they were not legal. The hunting regs. up here are pretty complex. In Sept. it's 4 point or better (we only count one side where what is a 4 point to us would be an 8 point in the States) then October is any bone and then Nov. and Dec. is back to 4 point. Unless you get a moose draw in our area you can only take what is called an immature bull, 2 points or less on 1 side and elk in our areas are all draw. My buddy and I were up high in Nov. looking for an antlerless and ran across a couple of beautiful 3 point bucks, a dream shot 75 yards away and broad side, but no matter how hard we counted we could not get them to grow an additional point.

                  Congrats to all that hunted and even more to those who have meat in the freezer.

                  KTK

                  Comment

                  • p246
                    Senior Member
                    • Mar 2013
                    • 2216

                    #10
                    I got a nice older 8 point Buck toward the end of rifle season. We saw a lot of does early on and passed as we were hunting for a 14 point we had seen. He only showed up after dark hence why he's still around. The old 8 came out with 7 does about 10 minutes before shooting hours were over. I put a tag on him a few minutes later

                    Next Afgernoon I used up my two doe tags, and my hunting buddy also tagged one. I donated one of the does and processed the buck and second doe.

                    I want to get some more duck hunting in but the season was terrible early on. Hopefully it ends better.

                    Comment

                    • bruce
                      Senior Member
                      • Sep 2009
                      • 3759

                      #11
                      Originally posted by RED
                      I wanted a whitetail yearling for the freezer. Whitetails are overpopulated in my local area and I am lucky enough to own a 57 acre strip of prime wooded hunting ground situated located betwen a row crop farm on one side and a dairy farm on the other. I, don't/can't bow hunt and rifle season is only about 10 or 11 days. The first 4 days were spoiled because the row crop guy decided he needed to combine his soy beans. But, I managed to get a little 7 point buck and my son baged a doe. I still have a doe tag rhat I might fill in the BP season... depends on the weather and whether or not I feel like field stripping the sucker... it gets harder and messier every year.
                      Good for you! And good for your son! Sincerely. bruce.
                      " Unlike most conservatives, libs have no problem exploiting dead children and dancing on their graves."

                      Comment

                      • jon_norstog
                        Senior Member
                        • Sep 2009
                        • 3896

                        #12
                        My brother Paul called me last night. He is back from a winter muzzle-loader elk hunt down in the country behind Dworshak Reservoir on the N. Fork Clearwater in Idaho. My son-in-law Wesley, his brother and a couple other Brazilians were along. It was like a five-day season. The elk were there, but you had to sort out the legal from the illegal. PaUL got a 175 yard shot at a nice bull, but took a pass n it. Wesley got two chances, both times his gun didn't go off. None of the other guys scored. The elk are there, but you gotta get them into range and you have to have a gun thaT will go off when you pull the trigger.

                        Paul wants me to go hunt with them next year. I dunno ...

                        jn

                        Comment

                        • Pete Davis
                          Junior Member
                          • Nov 2017
                          • 25

                          #13
                          What constitutes a muzzleloader by law in Id.?

                          In Va. we used to have to use a sidelock weapon from 1990 until 1994. Then inline rifles were allowed, next year scopes and saboted projectiles. Now there is a new generation of these rifles that uses smokeless powder and modern primers.

                          I use a Knight Wolverine in stainless, it uses 90 grains of 3F black and a saboted pistol bullet. #11 percussion caps. The prospect of a misfire is pretty much nil.

                          I killed a lot of deer with a CVA Mtn Rifle in .54 I built from a kit wile in Alaska in 1980. Patched ball. I had a misfire with that rifle once but just when unloading. I rebarreled it last year and it's back in action now.

                          Cold temps can make the sidelocks uneven. But still a break from the old atlatl days.

                          PD

                          sb

                          Comment

                          • jon_norstog
                            Senior Member
                            • Sep 2009
                            • 3896

                            #14
                            Pete, in ID a muzzle loader has to have an exposed hammer. Sabots are not allowed. There are caliber restrictions for elk (.50 and deer (.45) and you have to be able to see the cap when the gun is cocked. Oh yeah, you have to load with loose powder, either BP or that modern s**t. Scopes not allowed except you can use 1X with a hadicap exemption.

                            Paul wants me to go out next winter - I was thinking of taking a Hawken or a cut-down 1863 Springfield copy. With peep sights.

                            jn

                            Comment

                            • Richard Turner/Turner Saddlery
                              Sponsor
                              • Jul 2013
                              • 195

                              #15
                              Didn't get a chance to hunt last season, so the venison supply in the freezer was getting low. We are overrun with does in our area, so a few weeks ago, I decided to go over to our pasture and see if I had any luck finding a good size doe since it was the last day of 1st half of doe season. I had never hunted with my Remington Model 8, MFG in 1908 (.35 Rem caliber). This rifle is about 85% finish wise, with an excellent bore. She turns 110 years old in a few days.

                              About lunch, I decided I would head back to the house for lunch, when my old mule walked up behind me and began to low bray. I turned around and saw he was braying at a good sized doe which was at the edge of a large kudzu patch. I fired the old Model 8, and she dropped where she stood. Even though the .35 Remington is a slow moving cartridge, that 200 grain Cor Lokt does a good job. She was about 120 lbs, which is about normal in this area. Maybe the old mule was looking out for me that day.

                              Here is a good site for info on the Model 8 http://thegreatmodel8.net/

                              We had a surprise snow (5+ inches) here, North Central Alabama, Friday a week ago, and I decided to have Camille take a couple of photos of me and the Model 8 in the snow.
                              IMG_5154.jpg

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