Stories Written  The Way The Hunters Lived Them

Page:

  1. Gary's First Traditional Harvest

  2. Cal's First Traditional Harvest

  3. What I Did On A Friday After Work

  4. My Carrot River Bear

  5. An Unforgettable Afternoon

  6. Longest Moose Hunt

  7. Buck's Bog

  8. Didn't Duck Quick Enough

  9. The Last Hour Of The Last Day

  10. Ten Year Bull

  11. The Mickey Mouse Buck

  12. Buckie The Wonder Decoy

Ten Year Bull

     

   Dave gave me an enthusiastic thumbs up, but I wasn’t so sure. I had just flung an arrow at a bull elk only to have it deflected by an unnoticed limb. Dave was smiling but I was just sick inside knowing that I had wounded such a majestic animal. But then I heard something that gave me a glimmer of hope.

   2002 was going to be a different year. I had a new elk hunting partner after having the same one for 10 years. 10 years was how long I had seriously hunted elk. I had taken a cow that first year but had come up empty for the next 9. Something always seemed to go wrong and I just could not connect. This was also the year I decided I wouldn’t put so much pressure on myself and just have some fun out there. With each unsuccessful year that went by I had become more negative and I found I wasn’t having fun anymore.

   I had met Dave the year before at the local archery range and we found that we both had a passion for hunting elk. We also found out we had some other things in common as well as being neighbors. Dave and I hunted elk a little differently, but we each thought we could learn a thing or two from the other.

   Dave had a property that he had permission on but had never scouted. September 10 was the day we picked to scout this rolling hay and bush quarter.  As we parked the truck Dave told me if we happened to get into a bull and we were together, he wanted me to have first chance since I had never shot a bull before. (I still admire the selflessness Dave displayed that day.) I was not, under any circumstances, to shoot a cow!

   It was early in the evening when we left the truck so I was surprised when we heard a bull bugle almost immediately. He was across the field and up on a big hill to the east of us. As we hurried across the field we noticed a lot of sign in the form of rubs and tracks. When we got to the edge of the bush we decided to look for the most beaten game trail coming off the ridge into the field and wait there quietly for him. We were not going to call unless he was no longer headed in our direction. As I got into position I thought I could hear some cow calling and soon I was sure of it. We had a whole herd of elk coming down to us! As I waited, those negative thoughts were starting to rear their ugly heads. ‘What’s going to go wrong this time?’ ‘The winds good now, but it will change!’ ‘The cows will spook…’ ‘SOMETHING WILL GO WRONG!!!’

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     When the first cow stepped out of the bush my heart rate went through the roof. This might actually happen! I watched cow after cow parade by at 20 yards and head over a small rise into the alfalfa. The urge to shoot was only subdued by the memory of Dave’s strict instruction, “DON’T SHOOT A COW!” Suddenly a calf appeared directly downwind. This was not good! It didn’t spook for some reason and followed the quad trail it was on right to ten feet of Dave’s hiding place. It stared at Dave for 30 seconds or so and then peeled toward the cows. The cows paid no attention to the youngster’s barking but continued on their way to the smorg. Two more times the calf came and stared at Dave, ran and barked, and two more times he was ignored. Things seemed to be going right for me on this scout/hunt. The second to last cow came out on a trail that was just out of my shooting range. I was somewhat concerned that the bull would follow her; only somewhat concerned though, because my partner had that trail covered. The next cow came out on my trail, but then I waited an antagonizing five minutes until I heard another elk coming. I thought this was probably the bull. Finally I saw him threading his rack through the dense cover. I could tell right away that he was at least the required 3 points and then my attention turned to a spot behind his shoulder. He stepped into my shooting lane and Dave whistled, stopping him perfectly. I had to shoot through a basketball size hole in the brush about halfway to him. As I watched my arrow’s flight I heard a sickening tick and saw my arrow deflect. ‘There it is! The thing that was going to go wrong!’ The bull spun and ran along the bush and then into it. There was a lot of crashing and then things slowly went silent. I knew I had hit the bull and I also knew I had not hit him well. I was just sick. That is when Dave gave me the thumbs up but I just shook my head in disgust. And then I heard it! The glimmer! A gasping, gurgling noise from the direction the bull had run! Could my luck be both bad and good at the same time? We gave the bull some time and after a few minutes we could hear a quad coming up the trail. It was the landowner out for an evening cruise. Had he shown up a few minutes earlier it could have been disastrous for us.

   After another 20 minutes we tried to find a blood trail. It was hard, initially because the bush was so dense. Finally Dave whispered that he had found a “speck” of blood. What I saw when I got there was crazy. It looked like someone had poured blood out of a five gallon bucket! By the time I followed the trail to my bull I had blood from my boots to my hips, but I didn’t care. I finally had my bull! I have never been on such a high as when I found that bull. Between hunting and growing up on a farm I’ve dressed near a hundred animals but, I was so excited, I had no idea where to even start on this guy. As Dave grabbed the knife out of my hand he was laughing at me.

   While we had been waiting the half hour for the bull to expire Dave said that he thought the bull was a good one. I never even noticed until the next day that he was indeed a decent bull. The 6x6 scored and even 273” but his frame is bigger than that. The fact that he has one short 3rd point and one broken 3rd point hurts his score, but next time you see me ask me if I care!

   Some say the more effort you put into something the sweeter it feels when you are finally successful. I guess that is part of the reason some of us hunt with stickbows and it would certainly explain why that bull is my most treasured trophy!      

Written by: Randy Herman   

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