Free: Contests & Raffles.
The packout is always an adventure when your 4 hours or more from the truck. I usually hunt with my goats, however, I didn't have them with me this day as I was planning on carefully hunting the bedding areas and cliffs, sometimes the goats kick rocks loose or break twigs and make a little extra noise in this particular terrain and I was mainly 'scouting' so I left them home for the day. In most hunting scenarios the goats actually put the animals at ease, I've been able to work my way through 'land mines' of feeding does and even had them walk right up to the goats totally unafraid to check them out before. After boning out the buck I took a portion of the meat and the cape (I packed the cape in the first load because it doesn't fit in a goat pannier) and headed for the truck. It took about 6 hours for me to get back to the truck. Day two I was up at 3 AM, loaded up the goats and headed out to retrieve the rest of the meat. I had a pulled muscle in my hip so I was definitely struggling on day 2. I carried a light day pack and the goats easily carried the rest of the buck out. Day two was about 11 hours round trip and the goats had a lot more energy left than I did by the time we returned to the truck that evening. My two adult goats weigh 213 ibs & 268 Ib. The biggest can carry about 75 lbs max load, 60-65 ibs for a really long trek.
I'm blown away again. Old geezer buck - wide, with tons of mass and a dropper to boot! Such a rare deer in the BT woods! Early success is always bittersweet. A whole year to pass till you get another chance to feel the adrenaline rush of choosing to aim a rifle at a deer with bad intent. Really, it seems the only decision to be made when you see a buck of that caliber is whether you are ready to end your fun for the rest of the current season. No question that this time that you made the right decision though. Once bucks reach that age, they become impossible to compare. They are like rare jewels, each one quite different from others of that class, but at the same time, each impressively beautiful on their own merits. Congratulations on another superlative season! Quick questions: - Do you plan to get a tooth aged? - Do you ever shed hunt in that area. I know, it's a light-year or so away from the trailhead, but what an opportunity to find out what other monsters lurk in that darkness.....