Posts Tagged ‘mountain’

17
Apr

Alaska Mountain Goat Hunting Success

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

Our Alaska Mountain Goat Outfitter sent us his year end report:

The Alaska Mountain Goat season is over and was 100% success.

Hi All,
The goat season is over and was 100% success. We had hunters from Italy, Hungary, and Norway. (By way of Texas) This year was very smooth and all of the goats were scouted and patterned before the hunts began.

We did harvest the exact intended goat for each of our hunters and as usual the goat hunting portion of each trip was but 1-2 days with the remainder spend lounging on the yacht, black bear hunting or sight seeing beautiful Prince William Sound. Weather was not bad with alternate rain and sun but nothing lingering for long.

Our prices next year remain unchanged and I expect 100% success for a long time to come as the goat population is very strong and we have the routine perfected. Get with us ASAP for a spot next year..

See the original article at GotHunts.com

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We don\’t have porcupines where I live. We also don\’t have many bears, so when the occasional one is spotted, the 6 o\’clock news reports about the posse that stalked the poor bruin through a ritzy neighborhood.  So if I want to hunt bears or see porcupines, I go somewhere that seems exotic to me, like coastal British Columbia.

Upon arriving in a B.C. bear camp years ago, I noticed all the guides had porcupine quills in the tops of their caps. Minutes later, as my hunting partner, our guide, and I headed out for the afternoon\’s hunt, a porcupine waddled across the road in front of us. Snatching my cap from my head, the guide ran for the porcupine and slapped its back with the crown of the cap. And that\’s how they all got quills in their caps and I became one of the guys. Nice.

A few days later, we were on a logging road on the side of a mountain that felt like the top of the world. Although there was leftover snow on the ground, it was a warm, shirt-sleeves day. My hunting partner spotted a large black bear about 300 yards away. It was a shootable distance for him, and he had a gun with enough oomph to do the job from that range, but between us and the bear were a vertical rock cliff, a patch of thick alders loved by grizzlies, a wide creek raging with the waters of the spring thaw, and a large snowbank. Getting the bear back to the logging road looked difficult, if not impossible. He shot it anyway, and we started plotting its retrieval.

The route would be circuitous, through, around, and over the obstacles between us and the bear. Without the aid of GPS units, radios, or any other electronics, we realized just staying on course would be challenging. So the plan was that I would stay on the mountain where I could see both the bear and my fellow hunters and direct them as needed. How did I get so lucky?!

I watched the scene below as the two men navigated their way to the bear, occasionally pointing left or right to get them back on track. Finally, they reached the dead bear, and the guide turned to me with both arms stretched overhead, waving in a criss-cross manner to let me know they had found the bear.  I acknowledged him with the same signal – and suddenly pain seared through my head. I had bumped my hat while waving, and a porcupine quill had nailed my scalp.

“&$%@#*!!!” I yelled, reaching for the brim of my hat to remove it. The cap wouldn\’t budge. I tugged a little harder, but the pain was worse by the second. My head hurt, my ears throbbed, every individual tooth in my mouth pounded. I sat in the logging road with hands on each side of my hat, tugging firmly but gently. It was nailed to my head. I reached for the quills and thought I could somehow figure out which ones were pinned to me.  Every one I touched made the pain worse and still didn\’t budge.

Finally, there was no choice but to be more aggressive, like ripping a bandage off quickly. With both hands, I pulled my hat as hard as I could. This time it came loose, every little fish hook quill end attached to a chunk of bloody scalp. I later counted 84 bloody quills.

I dropped my head into my hands, my fingers massaging my aching scalp, my eyes clenched. Soon I realized my arms felt strangely warm, and I opened my eyes to find my hands and sleeves soaked in blood. My head was gushing, and I needed to stop the bleeding. I recalled that just down the logging road was a small waterfall, the runoff of the spring thaw. I walked there, blood streaming into my face and over my clothes, and stuck my head in the icy water.  It worked; in a few minutes, the bleeding finally stopped, and I washed the blood from my hair.

I looked down at myself, seeing that my shirt was a bloody, sticky mess. My hunting partners were still at least a couple of hours from returning. I could see for miles, but there was (probably) no one around to see me. So I took off my shirt, washing it in the waterfall, streams of blood running down the roadside. I rinsed it until the water ran clean, then wrung it out. I found a sunny spot and spread it out on a rock to dry.

In the meantime – combless and mirrorless – I arranged and fluffed my hair with my fingers, trying to get it dry. My shirt eventually dried enough to wear, and I got myself dressed and back together. Minutes later, my partners emerged from the ravine, loaded with bear, and there I sat on the big rock where they had left me.

I could only imagine how shocked my hunting partners must be when they returned to find me in such a mess, especially after they had climbed down a rock cliff, crossed thick alders, waded a raging creek, trudged through a snow slide, field-dressed and skinned a bear, and returned through the same hazards with their first load of bear hide and carcass.

But they didn\’t say a word! “OK, they\’re excited about the bear,” I thought. “Soon they\’ll finish telling their story and will notice.” Not a word. Nada. Nobody noticed.

I guess I could easily attribute their negligence of my ordeal to their being men. I could call them inattentive and self-centered. In reality, they didn\’t notice because, after a week in bear camp, a waterfall shower and mirrorless grooming didn\’t hurt my appearance at all.

See the original article at TheHuntersWife.net

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15
Feb

South Africa, Here We Come!

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

Well, it\’s official. We\’re headed to South Africa. Africa has been on my Bucket List for a long time. I think every red-blooded American male has dreamed of going to Africa, and I\’m not any different. I\’m excited to say the least. Our trip is in May and guess what? I need some people to go with me. Wanna go?

What we\’ve done is work with one of our South African PH\’s to secure three good blocks of time and some GREAT prices. You could do the whole trip for about the same price as a good whitetail hunt here in the states. It\’s cheap!

But, there\’s a catch… yeah, there\’s always a catch. You have to be willing to let us film your hunt for our pilot show: Outdoors International Presents the Bucket List Adventures. That\’s not too much to ask is it? If you agree to let us film you hunting, not only will you get a deal on one of the great packages below, but we\’ll throw in an Impala and Blesbuck for FREE! So what do you think?

Doak and I are personally escorting all three of the following hunts to South Africa:

  1. Rifle Hunt – Five Animals
    – 7 day hunt for a group 8 hunters
    – May 6-12
    – 5 animal hunt *Kudu, Gemsbuck, Springbuck, Mountain Reedbuck, Steenbuck
    – These animals can be substituted for animals of the same price on price list
    – $4,750 *all inclusive hunt (excluding air and tip)
  2. Archery Hunt – Five Animals
    – 10 day hunt for a group 6 hunters
    – May 13-22
    – 5 animal hunt *Blue Wildebeest, Warthog, Kudu, Springbuck, Impala
    – These animals can be substituted for animals of the same price on price list
    – $6,000 *all inclusive hunt (excluding air and tip)
  3. Archery/Rifle Combo Hunt – Five Animals
    – 7 day hunt for a group 6 hunters
    – May 23-30
    – 5 animal hunt *Kudu, Gemsbuck, Springbuck, Mountain Reedbuck, Steenbuck
    – These animals can be substituted for animals of the same price on price list
    – $5,000 *all inclusive hunt (excluding air and tip)
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11
Jan

Most Popular Calibers For Big Game

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

By the Boone and Crockett Club

.300 Magnums take more North American trophies than any other caliber.

Although the venerable .30-06 and .270 remain among the favorites, Boone and Crockett Club big-game records show that hunters with one of the various .300 Magnums are taking decidedly more North American trophies than any other caliber.

Surprisingly, the second-most-popular trophy-taker isn\’t a firearm — it\’s a bow.

Boone and Crockett compiled the data from its records book entries from 2007 through 2009. This three-year period of big-game trophies, fair-chase hunting and success in conservation and game management will be celebrated at the Club\’s 27th triennial Big Game Awards, June 24-26, 2010, at the Grand Sierra Resort in Reno, Nevada.

Here are the most commonly used calibers (Note: Records do not distinguish specific variations, i.e. .300 Win. Mag, .300 WSM, .300 Wby. Mag., .300 Ultra Mag, etc.) across all Boone and Crockett categories over the past three years, along with percentages of trophy entries credited to each:

Rank Caliber Percentage
1
.300 Magnum 18%
2
Bow/Crossbow 16%
3
.270 12%
4
.30-06 12%
5
7mm Magnum 11%
6
Muzzleloader/Shotgun 10%
7
6mm 3%
8
.338 Magnum 3%
9
.257 2%
10
.30 30 2%
11
.308 2%
12
.375 Magnum 2%
Other 8%

The .300 Magnum appears among the top three calibers in 11 of the following 15 species recognized in Boone and Crockett trophy records. A bow or crossbow appears in 7 of these 15. Species are arranged by frequency of records book entries 2007-2009.

Most popular calibers by species include:

Species Top Calibers
Whitetail deer 1.) Bow/Crossbow

2.) Muzzleloader/shotgun
3.) .270

Black bear 1.) Bow/Crossbow
2.) .300 Magnum
3.) .30-06
Pronghorn 1.) .300 Magnum
2.) .270
3.) 7mm Magnum
Sheep
(bighorn, Dall\’s, desert, Stone\’s)
1.) .300 Magnum
2.) 7mm Magnum
3.) .270
Mule deer 1.) .300 Magnum
2.) 7mm Magnum
3.) .270
Elk

(American, Roosevelt\’s, Tule)

1.) .300 Magnum
2.) Bow/Crossbow
3.) Tie: .30-06, 7mm Magnum
Moose

(Alaska-Yukon, Canada, Shiras)

1.) .300 Magnum
2. ) Tie: 7mm Magnum, .338 Magnum
Caribou
(barren ground, central Canada barren ground, mountain, Quebec-Labrador, woodland)
1.) .300 Magnum
2.) .270
3.) .30-06
Blacktail deer
(Columbia, Sitka)
1.) .30-06
2.) Tie: 7mm Magnum, .300 Magnum
Coues\’ whitetail deer 1.) 7mm Magnum
2.) .270

3.) .300 Magnum

Cougar 1.) Bow/Crossbow
2.) .30-30
3.) 6mm
Rocky Mountain goat 1.) Tie: .270, .300 Magnum
3.) Tie: 7mm Magnum, .30-06, Bow/Crossbow, muzzleloader/shotgun
Brown bear/grizzly 1.) .375 Magnum
2.) .338 Magnum
3.) .300 Magnum
Muskox 1.) Bow/Crossbow

2.) .300 Magnum
3.) Tie: 6mm, .375 Magnum

Bison 1.) .338 Magnum
2.) Tie: 7mm Magnum, Bow/Crossbow

See the original article at GotHunts.com

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