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Title: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 26, 2010, 12:25:58 PM
Well, after striking out here in WA for the first time in 7 years, it was off to Montana last week to redeem myself.  Drawing a Montana Deer A Tag 2 years in a row had me worried that I had already used up most of my luck, but I loaded the truck (no crazy-1970's-camper, trying to pull the truck off the road everytime a gust blew.  We packed the wall tent and stove this year), packed all my warm clothes, and headed out east Tuesday after work.  
I pulled an all-nighter to get to Great Falls, the passes weren't too bad, even though they were getting snowed on pretty hard when I came through.  I came down off Roger's Pass just as it was getting light, and was treated to quite a sight; mule deer everywhere!  It was the first big snow of the year, and the migration was in full swing.  Between the last trees at the bottom of Rogers, and the first prairie town I hit I must have seen over 100 deer, including at least 8 bucks 3 point or better.  And they were rutting HARD.  Noses up, chasing does, bucks chasing each other off, posturing, etc...  What a sight.  I should have tried to get some pictures, but was nervous about being stopped on the icy highway (not much shoulder on Hwy 200), and that someone coming up behind me suddenly might not be able to stop in time.  I did see 2 whitetails also, and they were both big (140-150ish), but both clearly on private property near the Dearborn River.  None of the mulies looked enough like shooters at a glance for me to pull out the maps and start figuring out if they were on huntable property or not, so I kept going.
I made it to Great Falls at about 8:00 am and met up with Montana Tom.  Tom is originally from Walla Walla, left 6 years ago to get his degree in Wildlife Biology from the University of Montana, and never came back, which I think makes him officially the smartest person I know.  Last year he got a bit frustrated with the seasonal work and pay of a wildlife technician, so he went back to school to get his pilot's license.  We hunted together last season and had a great hunt, so this year we were looking for a repeat, but in a different area.
I had booked a reservation on a large BMA (which will remain nameless, since it was on a tip from another Montana buddy who swore me to secrecy) east of Great Falls, and Tom and I were hoping that the limited access would give us a chance at some of the older age-class bucks that had eluded us the year before on the BLM land we had been hunting.  
We checked in at the ranch after lunch on Wednesday and were told what part of the ranch we would be "assigned" to.  The rancher showed us 3 large drainages on the map, 4 to 6 miles long that ran from the highway to the foothills at the edge of the ranch.  
We noticed that he was cleaning off the skull cap of a nice, wide 3x3 mule deer.  "My wife shot this one this morning." He told us.  "We thought it was bigger, but the spread fooled us."  Then he pointed to a skull up on the roof of a nearby shed.  "That one is mine.  Got him last week."  Tom and I looked up.  A 28 inch rack sat on the shed, obviously being picked clean by birds, a mainframe 4x4, with some extras.

Now, if that isn't enough to get you going, I don't know what is...

The rancher showed us where we could pitch the wall tent, an old corral with a warm-spring water trough, right at the mouth of the main drainage we would be hunting.  We got camp set up, and took off on a scout.  Driving around before dark, we spotted a few deer, including one shooter buck, but he was on adjacent private property, so all we could do was watch him chase does until dark.  In the headlights on the way back to the tent we also saw a masher whitetail cross the road in front of us, close to the river bottom.  We didn't get a good enough look to score him, but he was tall and heavy.  
The next morning we were up by 5:00 and hiking up the drainage by 6:00.  The walking was fairly easy in the dry creekbottom along the farm road (this BMA is Walk-in hunting only.  The only folks allowed to put tire tracks of any kind on the ranch were the ranchers), and by shooting light we had covered almost 3 miles.  Before long, we started spotting deer.  Does at first, then, as the sun came up and it started to warm, we spotted a cruiser buck.  Not a big one, a medium-sized 3x3, but it was encouraging.  
We kept spotting groups of does, but nothing with them, and the does generally ignored us as though we didn't exist.  As we hunted our way towards lunch-time, we evidently grew careless and around 11:00 we crested a hill, fully sillouetting ourselves, faces into the sun, standing fully upright... :bash:
And of course, you know there was a big buck on the other side.  He was alone and cruising, about 450 yards away, in the shadows, and of course, since we were being idiots, he saw us before we saw him.  We promptly flopped down in the middle of a cactus patch  :yike: and tried to ignore the spines as we glassed him.  He was a mature deer, about ears-wide (23 to 24 inches), and very tall with great forks front and back and some extras on both sides, making him a 6x7 if you count the eyeguards, about a 160 mainframe buck, not counting extras. Having spotted us though, he was moving in the other direction, alternating between a walk and a trot.  We barely had time to get out the spotter as he crested the opposite ridge into the next drainage.  Sorry, again, no pictures.  Didn't have time to get out a camera.
As we made plans to try to follow/intercept him (this we would later find was impossible, due to the terrain on the other side of that ridge-there was NO way to tell which way he went :'(), we noticed the sky clouding up behind us.  We knew from weather forcasts that something big was blowing down from Canada, and that is was supposed to come in that afternoon.  As the wind started to kick up, we bailed off into the canyon to try to run a wide circle on where we thought the buck might have gone.
As we fought our way to the top of the ridge we had seen him go over, we got hit with a blast of wind that nearly knocked us off our feet.  I don't mean that in a metaphorical sense.  I am not *censored*tin', it nearly knocked us both down.  Looking back to the north, we could see the storm coming.  It looked like a huge, gray carpet unrolling in our direction.  The icy wind that had come out of nowhere had us immediately bundling up.  We bailed off into the drainage where we had seen the buck go, more to get out of the windstorm than with the intention of catching up to the deer.  Our first look into the canyon showed us the futility of catching our deer.  The next drainage was not simply a canyon, it was a maze of hills, rocks, sagebrush, blind draws and more mini-drainages.  We walked down off the crest, and decided that the only thing we could do was leave one guy on a vantage point with binos and the spotter and send the other guy bird-doggin' down into the canyon-maze.  Since Tom is younger and in much better shape he volunteered to bird-dog.  Turns out he got the better end of the deal, since the walking kept him warm.  I had sweated coming up the ridge, and within 10 minutes of sitting I was frozen solid.  
Tom did kick out a couple of deer, one of which was a young 4x4, but not a shooter.  More accurately, he kicked out a doe, and the buck came following her out like a puppy.  I don't think he ever knew that either of us where there, but she did.  A good sign, but our big buck had disappeared, never to be seen again.
By the time Tom got back up to my vantage point the storm had fully blown in, and it was snowing.  Actually, more like pelting ice crystals.  We climbed back up over the ridge (almost getting knocked over again a couple of times on the slippery crest), and headed back to camp to warm up and refit.
After an hour by our glorious, life-giving barrel stove, it was approaching the last three hours of daylight.  We peeked out the tent door.  It was snowing sideways.  Withdrawing back inside, I will confess a moment of weakness.  We almost talked ourselves out of going back out that evening.  Crazy talk like "Nothing's gonna be moving anyway", and "Probably won't be able to see 100 yards", and "Is it worth frostbite?" started flying around the tent like angry sharks.  
Then, we came back to our senses.  "You know, we wait all year for this", and "We've only got 4 days to hunt this ranch", and "Who knows what we'll spot hunkered down in a draw".  By 3:00 we were geared back up, and fighting back out into the teeth of the storm.

Actually, our first instincts were right.  Nothing was moving.  We could barely see 100 yards.  We very nearly got frostbite.  And we didn't see a single, living creature that evening hunt.  Nuthin'.  So, at dark we hiked back to camp, restoked the fire and had a good laugh at how our bravado had overcome our common sense.  :chuckle:

...more to come....
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: BIGMIKE on November 26, 2010, 12:28:37 PM
Congratulations. Where the pics....I told you I will keep tabs on this one. :IBCOOL: I am looking forward to see the pics. Hurry...this is torture. :)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: boneaddict on November 26, 2010, 12:37:10 PM
Good stuff....
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Austrian Hunter on November 26, 2010, 01:00:11 PM
I wan't more...I wan't more  8)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: CoryTDF on November 26, 2010, 01:08:40 PM
You STILL have not called me!!!!!!!!! WTF>>>>>>>>>> :bash: >:( >:( >:( >:( >:( >:(
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: ser300wsm on November 26, 2010, 01:26:38 PM
Good story now need some pics please...  ;)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 26, 2010, 02:20:05 PM
Day two of our hunt dawned looking a lot like the night before, but by the time we had hiked our 3 miles back into where we had seen the buck yesterday, the wind had died down to a bearable level, and the snow was only spitting intermediately.  As shooting light approached, we decided to split and watch different drainages.  The weather forcast had put the high that day a 4 degrees, not counting the windchill, so I only lasted about an hour past shooting light before I had to get up and move to get my blood flowing and feel my extremities again.
We hunted until noon seperately, then located each other and had lunch.  We were seeing lots of does (I counted 16 that morning, but only 1 buck, a confused, horny spike x 2 that couldn't figure out if he was supposed to be hanging out with the ladies, eating or cruising the gut for chicks.  We spotted him 4 seperate times that morning, doing something different everytime.  No mature bucks though.  It was wierd, full rut and all, and NO bucks anywhere near all those does.  No bucks that is, except for that wierd spike.  We decided that he was being paid by the mature bucks to keep tabs on our location, hang around "doing deer stuff", and report our whereabouts to the shooters.
Tom had spotted a 6x6 bull elk, bedded in a draw near three mulie does.  We had nothing else to look at, so we sat there, eating our frozen sandwiches, trying unsuccesfully to thaw out the drinking tubes on our camelbaks, taking digi-scope pictures of the elk, and trying to figure out where the hell all the bucks were.  Finally, in frustration, we pulled out our maps.  There was one drainage in our area that we had not hunted yet.  It looked large, and was the furthest one away, nearly 6 miles as the crow flies from our camp.  We were within a 2 mile hike of it, so we decided to peek into it.  
Well, as you can probably guess, that's were everything was hiding.  Our theory is that since this was the third week of the deer season, most of the deer had been pushed off into this drainage.  And we had underestimated it's size on the map.  It was friggin' HUGE.  We crept out to a vantage point, settled down, took out the binos and started glassing.  It was over a mile to the other side of the drainage, and we were perched on top of a 100 foot cliff, looking down and across.  Immediately, we started spotting game.
We saw over 50 head of elk up in the foothills at the head of the canyon (this was a draw-only unit, so all the elk we saw that day were safe from us).  Scattered all over the hills were groups of antelope (bucks all shed), including one impressive herd of about 70.  We started seeing groups of deer, most of which had small 3x3 or 4x4 bucks with them.  Even most of the cattle it seemed had been pushed off into this isolated drainage.  Then, almost straight across the canyon, in a small draw near the top of the next ridge, I spotted a group of deer.  A quick look with my binos showed that a couple of them had antlers, so I dig the spotter out of my pack.  When I focused it on the herd, I just about fell off the cliff.
In the center of the herd, keeping the three younger bucks at bay, was a very large mulie buck.  Tall, wide, heavy, deep forks, thick, everything you think about when you fall asleep at night.  And there he was, about a mile away, neck stretched out, lip curled, looking like a magazine cover in the snow.  I hissed for Tom to take a look.  Immediately, we started coming up with a game plan.  
The stalk would cover over 2 miles, walking about a 1/4 mile up the drainage to an area where we could cross.  Then it would be down into the canyon, up a high ridge that ran down the middle of it, down that, then up the other side, staying hidden in a draw that would bring us out just a couple of draws short of where the herd was tucked out of the wind.  We had less than two hours of shooting light to accomplish this, so we packed up and took off as quickly as we could.  
Except for stopping to pull some cactus thorns out of my ass once, we made it to the opposite side of the canyon in a bit over an hour without a glitch.  As we worked our way up the last rise, we spooked a herd of cattle that stampeded off to our right (the opposite direction of the deer).  As we gained the top of the ridge, still two draws away from where we had last seen the deer, we saw something that stopped us in our tracks.  Two bull elk, a raghorn 4x4 and a 2x3, spooked out of their beds by the stampeding cattle, trotted nervously past us at 100 yards, in the direction of the deer.  We hunkered down in the snow, and let them pass, even though were sticking out on the side of the bare hill like a turd in a punchbowl, they largely ignored us and kept trotting.  We knew there was no way they would not alert the deer.  
After they trotted out of sight, we picked up and moved to our intended draw.  
Peeking over the lip, we saw nothing but tracks.  Lots of tracks, with, of course, two big sets of elk tracks running right through the middle of them.  At this point, we had less than 30 minutes of shooting light.  We were about to start following tracks, when we noticed a deer standing in the sage that we had not seen before.  It was a spike x 2, and he was looking curiously at us.
Now, I am not going to imagine that it was the same spike that had been dogging us all day, but it sure as hell looked like him.  And it sure as hell looked like he had been left as a rear-guard by the big boy to fight a "delaying action" with us while the rest of the herd got away.  We had a 10 minute stare-down with him, the temperature dropping by the minute, loosing more shooting light everytime he blinked.  Finally, I guess he figured he had earned his pay, and he walked slowly over the hill in the direction of the rest of the herd.  20 minutes of shooting light left, so we picked up as fast as we could and started to follow him.  As we carefully crested the next finger, we saw another buck.  A small 3x3 (one that we had seen with the herd earlier), walking right down the finger towards us.  History repeated itself, and we commenced another staredown.  This one lasted 15 minutes, with us exposed on the finger, not wanting to blink and spook him, the dark growing, the temperature dropping and us squatting in the freezing snow and wind, our legs falling asleep and our hands growing numb (I had switched to light finger shotting gloves at this point, a fatal mistake).  Finally, with only 5 minutes of shooting light left, we decided that it was now or never, so we got up and did our best to walk around him and not spook him back into the draw he had come out of.  Amazingly, he stood there and watched us the whole time, never acting anything but curious.  Not far behind him was another buck, a young 4x4, watching us curiously also.
As we crept over the next finger, we started seeing deer on the opposite side of the draw, milling around in the thick sagebrush.  The does were not nearly as curious as the young bucks had been, and they began milling to leave.  Just from sheer body size we immediately located the big buck, still checking the milling does, unaware of our presence.
Tom and I both flipped out our bipods and sat down.  By prior agreement, I would have first shot, since I had spotted the buck first.  If I missed, or didn't have a clear shot, he was fair game.  Tom ranged the hillside he was on.  "350 yards" he said.
I found the buck in my scope.  The problem was that I was so cold from our 15 minute squat in the snow and wind that I was shaking uncontrollably, and couldn't steady the crosshairs.  Three times I inhaled and exhaled, trying to control my body and stop the shivering.  I had to physically look at my finger taking the safety off, because I couldn't feel my fingers at all.  After the third try, I figured I was as steady as I was going to get, and I touched off a round.  
"I think you hit him" Tom said, looking through his scope.
"I don't think so." I said, chambering another round.  "Go ahead if you can".
I was about to touch off another shot, when I hear Tom's rifle echo next to me.  The tell-tale "BOOM-WHOP" told me that he had hit.  The deer dropped in his tracks, hindquarters first, signaling a broken back.  Because of the angle, the bullet had passed through his lungs also, and he was dead by the time we had made our way to his resting place.
No ground shrinkage here!  After a round of backslaps and some well-earned whoops we got down to the business of trying to figure out how to get him out of there.
Now, I am not going to pretend that I wasn't disappointed that I didn't kill that buck.  He is beautiful.  We later green-scored him at 174 and some change, easily the biggest mule deer I have ever had a chance to kill.  But I can't be too bummed.  My buddy got him.  I got to see him killed, got to be part of the hunt, even got to take the first shot.  The fact is that Tom, being in his mid-20s and in great shape didn't sweat as much climbing thos ridges to get to him, therefore was less affected by squatting in the cold wind for 15 minutes, and was able to make the shot that I missed.  Sucks getting old, but I don't begrudge him that buck one bit.  He earned it.  And besides, I still had two days to hunt.  

We knew there was no way we could get him out of there 6+ miles that night, so we gutted him, slashed his armpits, opened up his hips and hiked out, intending to come back the next morning with pack frames.
It took us an hour and a half to work down the canyon we were in to the nearest road, and then after hitting the road estimated that we had 5 to 6 miles of road marching back to our tent.  It was blizzarding again at this point, we later heard on the radio that they put the windchill at -20.  As we walked/stumbled happily down the highway, a pair of tailights passed us, then stopped.  We were still easily 3 miles from camp, so the sight of brakelights in the blowing snow were a more than welcome sight.  Turned out it was the rancher's father in law (they manage the ranch together), and he figured we were the two idiots camped in the tent, so he gave us a ride.  
We told him about the buck and where we had killed it.  He was quiet for a moment.  
"You mean you guys hiked all the way back into the head of (name withheld) Creek?"
We nodded.
He shook his head.  
"Well, you guys are probably the first ones to do that this year, except for my son in law.  No wonder you killed that buck."
When he dropped us off, he rolled down his window.  
"Look," he said, "You guys will be hauling that thing out of there all day if you take it out on your backs, and you only have two more days to hunt.  Why don't you swing by the ranch tomorrow morning after chores, and we'll help you get it out.  We've got pickups and a 4 wheeler."
"I don't know." I said.  "Can you get a truck back there?"
The old fellow rolled his eyes.
"Did you see a fence back there?"  He asked.
"Yes"  I said.
"Well, whaddaya think, we pack those posts out there on our backs?" :chuckle: :chuckle:

Stay tuned for more...

(sorry about the lack of pictures right now.  My camera wouldn't fire in the cold weather, so Tom got all the pictures.  He only got a few to come through the email, but he burned a disc that he put in the mail Wednesday night.  I should get them anytime.  I'll add them as soon as I get them.)
 
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: boonerboy on November 26, 2010, 02:22:31 PM
sweet! great buck
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: 180-GRAIN on November 26, 2010, 02:30:03 PM
good looking buck, congrats.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Michelle_Nelson on November 26, 2010, 02:35:31 PM
When he dropped us off, he rolled down his window.  
"Look," he said, "You guys will be hauling that thing out of there all day if you take it out on your backs, and you only have two more days to hunt.  Why don't you swing by the ranch tomorrow morning after chores, and we'll help you get it out.  We've got pickups and a 4 wheeler."
"I don't know." I said.  "Can you get a truck back there?"
The old fellow rolled his eyes.
"Did you see a fence back there?"  He asked.
"Yes"  I said.
"Well, whaddaya think, we pack those posts out there on our backs?" :chuckle: :chuckle:
 

 :chuckle: ROTFLMAO
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: rosscrazyelk on November 26, 2010, 04:19:13 PM
That thing is a pig.. great job pathfinder
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: kramer on November 26, 2010, 04:23:37 PM
awsome buck. good job.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Austrian Hunter on November 26, 2010, 04:39:55 PM
WOW, that's all I have to say!!!! I wan't more....I wan't more!!!!! 
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Ironhead on November 26, 2010, 04:45:20 PM
STUD!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 26, 2010, 04:48:07 PM
The next morning we showed up at the appointed time, and Tim, the rancher was waiting for us.  Tim is a pretty serious mule deer hunter, and I think he was actually excited to get the morning "off", see the buck, and probably most importantly, see where we killed it.
He loaded the 4 wheeler in the truck, and we were off.  Along the way Tim told us that almost everyone else that had been scheduled to hunt the ranch had either cancelled or not shown up because of the weather.  Only one other group was hunting.  We passed through the edge of their area.  Tim told us that they had drawn elk tags, and they were chasing the herd that we had spotted the day before, as well as deer.  When we passed their pickup, there was a nice mulie buck in the back, probably a 140-150ish buck.
We did spot a couple of nice bucks on the way out to Tom's deer, but they were at the base of the foothills, in the area that the elk hunters were hunting, so we drove past them.  One looked like a shooter, at least I think so.  I could see antlers pretty clearly on him at about 500 yards in a bouncing truck.
We drove ther truck as far as it would go.  We parked, and Tim and Tom got on the 4 wheeler.  I slung my rifle and plugged along behind on foot, hoping to spot something worth shooting.  I caught up to the parked 4 wheeler just in time to help drag the buck to it.  
On the drive out, Tim said the same thing his father in law had said.
"I am not suprised you found him way back here.  No one hikes back this far.  Besides me, you guys are probably the first ones back here this year."
Then he told us that he had seen us hiking out into that storm Thursday night.  
"That was crazy." He chuckled.  "That's why I had my wife shoot hers on Wednesday.  I didn't want to be out in that stuff."
When we got back to the ranch, Tim's wife Cory and her dad came out to admire the buck, take a few pictures, then she ordered us inside the house for chili.  
Tim said "She's been worried sick about you guys out in that wall tent."  He laughed  "She keeps making me drive past there to make sure you are still alive I guess."
As we sat in Tim's kitchen gratefully eating hot chili, another blizzard started to blow in.  We all stared for a while out the kitchen window at the sideways blowng snow.
"You guys still got another tag to fill." Tim said.
We nodded.
"You gonna go out in this mess?"
We said that we were planning on it.
"Well," he said, looking out into the storm.  "I know where they'll be in weather like this..."
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: runamuk on November 26, 2010, 05:24:55 PM
Nice...thanks for sharing.....
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: slinger on November 26, 2010, 05:28:08 PM
Your story is awesome!! Keep it going..
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: 400out on November 26, 2010, 06:50:28 PM
That is some great reading!  I enjoyed every minute of this story! I hope there is more to come  :drool: you have a way with words, I could engulf myself with it all day  ;)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 26, 2010, 08:46:12 PM
Tim pointed out the kitchen window into the blowing storm.
"No one else is hunting the ranch, so you can hunt this side now."
Although we couldn't see far in the clouds and snow, we knew where he was pointing.  On the oppostie side of the highway from where we had been hunting was a row of chalk cliffs.  The map showed them to be just over 1,000 feet high, with fingers that ran down onto the valley floor.
Tim showed us one of the fingers on the ranch map. 
"You have to climb this one" he said.  "If you climb any of the others, you will run into the face of the cliff and you'll have to climb back down.  But this finger will lead you to a cut in the cliffs.  Climb through it, and you will come out into a bowl on the other side.  When the weather gets like this, that is where you will find them.  If you guys sack up and do it, it might be worth your while."

30 minutes later, with bellies full of warm chili, we were standing at the base of the finger.  Tom had traded his rifle for the spotting scope.  The weather on the radio claimed that the high that day was 1 degree.  20mph winds buffetted us as we locked the truck and started across the valley floor towards the finger.
One hour and 1,000+ vertical feet later we snaked through the break in the cliffs.  In the swirling snow the chalk formations were surreal.  We passed one that looked like a giant throne, and another that looked like some sort of prehistoric fish.  Another few hundred yards of climb and we eased up over the rim and looked into the bowl.
Tim was right.  The first thing we spotted was a herd of deer on the opposite side of the bowl.  A quick look with the binos revealed a buck, so we backed off and snuck into a better position for glassing.  The buck turned out to be a young 4x4, about the size of the bucks we had harvested in Montana last season. 
I will admit a moment of weakness.  For a second, lying there in the snow and wind I considered ending the hunt right then.  It would have been an easy shot, and a respectable buck.  Tom brought me back to my senses.
"Nope." He said from behind the spotter.  "Not what you're looking for."
And that was that.  Off we went in search of another buck.
Working our way around the bowl we spotted another buck and a doe, heading away from us.  He was so close in size to the one we just saw that we are still not sure if he was the same one we were just looking at.  And we couldn't tell if they saw us and were leaving, or if he had just cut her out of the herd and was taking her "back to his place" for a couple of wine coolers and some slow dancing.  Either way, we passed him up and kept hunting.
After about an hour we had worked our way all the way to the opposite side of the bowl, looking directly across to where we had originally come out when we had come through the cliffs.  And there, just 150 yards below our tracks in the snow, was a herd of deer.  From the criss-crossed tracks all around them, it was obvious that they had been there for a while.  Tom and I exchanged rolled eyes.  If we had just looked down past our feet when we first came out into the bowl, we would have seen them right below us.  We had been too fixated on the herd across the bowl  :bash:  Oh well, lesson learned.. :dunno:
Unfortunately, when we had spotted the last deer I had forgotten to replace the cover on my binoculars, and when I went to put them to my face, I realized that the eyecups had completely filled with snow.  As I frantically tried to clean them out, Tom set up the spotter.  With the naked eye I could tell, even at 400+ yards that at least one of them was a buck.
"3 bucks" Tom reported.  "You probably want to look at this one".
I scooted over in the snow and peered through the scope.  I was looking at a large bodied buck.  He had a narrow spread, but was tall and deeply forked, with decent mass.
"I'll shoot that one, if we can get on him".  I said
And therein lay the problem.  The herd was over 400 yards away, too far a shot in the wind and snow.  Tom and I were exposed on the side of a snowy hill, several of the does had already spotted us and were standing alert.  Of course, none of the bucks had seen us, as they were preoccupied with the does.  The two younger bucks, a 3x3 and a small 4x4 were trying to behave themselves, obviously mindful of the bigger buck, and hanging around the edge of the herd, sneaking in every little while for a sniff, then backing off.  But the bigger buck was running from doe to doe harrassing them like one of them had his wallet.  He was acting very agitated, and at first I thought maybe he had spotted us.
As we sat there in the snow, trying to figure out how to get close enough for a shot, the buck did us a favor.
He sectioned a doe off from the rest of the herd and, like a good cutting horse, RAN her (not walked, or trotted or stotted, but RAN her) up into a draw behind the herd and out of site.  That's why he had been acting so agitated... he had a "hot one", and he didn't want her running off with one of the young'uns. :chuckle:
Now we were finally able to move.  We backed off a little and worked our way back along the edge of the bowl, back the way we had come.  The does watched us and milled around a little, but at that point we probably just looked like we were "going away", so they didn't bust. 
As we started working our way back towards them they started getting nervous again, and lined up to leave.  Not wanting to kick them out of the bowl too fast (we were afraid they would pull the bigger buck and the doe out of their bedroom before I was in position to shoot), we slowed our pace, mindful of the fact that is was starting to get dark fast.  The tactic worked, and when the deer finally did leave, they did so at a walk/trot.  We watched the draw, but the buck and the doe didn't follow.
Tom and I were now on the lip of the bowl, parrallel to the cliffs, being blasted by wind and snow.  As we neared the spur with the draw holding the deer on the other side, I slipped my .270 off my shoulder and prepared for the shot.  Quietly, I tried to pull out my bipod legs.
Nothin' doin'.  They were frozen shut.
I was NOT happy about that.  I ALWAYS shoot off my bipod.  I have shot every deer I have killed since 2003 shooting off my bipod.  Even if I jump a deer I flip out my bipod legs, flop down on my ass, and find the deer in the scope for a steady shot.  This was NOT cool.
I blinked through iced-up eyelashes at Tom. 
"You could shoot off a piece of sagebrush" he whispered, shrugging.
He was right.  There was plenty of that, so I vectored in on a bush, got on my knees, crawled to the crest of the spur and slowly peeked over the top. 
I didn't see the buck for the first full 2 seconds.  To be honest, I was looking right past him, down into the bottom of the draw.  Then the doe moved, and suddenly there he was, less than 70 yards to my left front, staring right at us.  No bipod (or sagebrush) needed.  I snapped my rifle up to my shoulder, found his chest with my crosshairs and touched off a round.
Tom whooped something between a cheer and a sigh of relief when we heard the bullet hit flesh.  The buck sprinted about a hundred yards behind the fleeing doe, slowed to a walk, then slowly piled up in a large patch of sage, his deep back forks plainly visible against the deepening snow.
After a round of whoops and backslaps, as we walked down the steep spur to claim him, Tom asked me why I had hesitated to shoot.  Evidently, he had seen both deer right away.  He said that the three seconds it had taken me to acquire my target and shoot had seemed like an eternity. 
I knew the feeling.  Last year had been an almost identical switch between Tom and I, me with the spotting scope, him with the rifle, easing over a spur to get a shot at a suddenly alert buck directly below him.  I remembered lying there, WILLING him to just shoot, as the buck nervously made ready to take flight.  Yup.  Three seconds can seem like forever.

We quickly gutted him out in the gathering darkness and made a valiant attempt to drag him to the lip of the bowl in the storm.  That idea lasted about as long as we had downhill to drag him.  100 yards into the uphill portion of the drag we decided that it would be wiser to come back in the morning with packframes and take him out in pieces.  He was just too heavy.
As we hiked down past the face of the cliffs into the blasting wind we noticed that the snow that had been ankle deep on the way up, had now drifted almost knee deep in places. 
Back at the truck we decided to stimulate the economy by celebrating with a beer and a hot meal at the only business in the nearest town, a small bar.  Taking up barstools, the bartender informed us that the special was buffalo ribs.  Evidently, the owner had bought a whooooooooole bunch of them, and was trying to get them all sold, because the size of the rib plates that we got could have qualified for an episode of Man Vs. Food.  As we sat and ate, and visited with the dozen or so locals in the bar, it turned out that we were locally famous as the "Idiots camped out in the Wall Tent during this weather".  We were roundly congratulated on our deer, our ability to survive, and someone even bought us a shot.

The next morning was clear and sunny, but well below zero and my diesel truck wouldn't start, so Tom towed me to the ranch so I could plug in the block heater.  When we pulled up, Tim's father in law came out of the barn.
"You guys went out in that crap last night, huh?"  He grinned.
"Uh huh"  we grinned back.
"Didja get anything?"
"Yessir" I admitted, taking our packframes out of my truck and leaning them against the tire.
I looked up at the chalk cliffs, already dreading the climb, boning out a frozen deer, and the pack out.
The old man looked up at the cliffs.  "He still up there?"
I nodded.
"TIM!" The old man yelled.  "I'll do the feeding this morning!"
Tom and I stared at each other in disbelief.  There was NO WAY to get up there in a truck.  Or a 4 wheeler.  Or a damn hover-craft for that matter.  NO WAY.

Tim came out of the barn, grinning and fishing truck keys out of his pocket.

The old man looked back at me and chuckled.

"Now, I KNOW," he said slowly "...that you boys saw that fence up there..."  :chuckle: :chuckle:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Black Ghost on November 26, 2010, 09:09:31 PM
excellent story!  that is one hell of a good hunt!  Good luck on drawing again this year!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: 400out on November 26, 2010, 09:21:56 PM
I think the story is over now  :chuckle: that was the best write up I have read on here in 2 years! thanks and great job Mark  8)

I bet that farmer will be talking about you washingtonians for quite some time   :chuckle:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 26, 2010, 09:23:58 PM
Thanks for all the compliments guys.  It was an awesome hunt, one I'll never forget.  I will add more pictures as soon as the zipdrive arrives in the mail.  Tom says he mailed it Tuesday after we got back.  I should get them any day.  Stay tuned, I think I got a live shot of Tom's buck from across the canyon.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: 400out on November 26, 2010, 09:26:21 PM
Very good can't wait  :hello:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Michelle_Nelson on November 26, 2010, 09:28:43 PM
The whole fence post thing still has me LMAO.  :chuckle:

Those are a couple of great looking bucks!  
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: 400out on November 26, 2010, 09:31:06 PM
The whole fence post thing still has me LMAO.  :chuckle:

Those are a couple of great looking bucks!  
:yeah: and the "turd in a punch bowl"  :lol4:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: BIGMIKE on November 27, 2010, 11:22:38 AM
I felt like I was there with you, just reading your story. :rolleyes: Thanks for the pictures and the very well written story. Montana here I come.  :)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: runningboard on November 27, 2010, 12:50:49 PM
awesome bucks and a great write-up. firsttime I stayed with a multi-part thread clear thru, thanks for sharing.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 09:40:52 PM
OK, just got the rest of the pictures from Tom.  Here is the wall tent, home sweet home.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 09:44:04 PM
Here is me glassing the afternoon that "The Big One" blew in from Canada, and a picture of the 6x6 bull elk that Tom spotted on day two.  The elk pic is through his spotting scope at about a half mile.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Michelle_Nelson on November 27, 2010, 09:47:13 PM
OK Pathfinder101 time to change your AVATAR!  :)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 09:47:38 PM
Here is a picture of Tom's buck, live on the hoof.  Taken through my spotter at over a mile away across a canyon.  Two hours later, this is him up close...
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: jackelope on November 27, 2010, 09:50:56 PM
Congrats to you guys, a couple nice bucks and memories that will last a lifetime.
Way to go.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 09:52:02 PM
OK Pathfinder101 time to change your AVATAR!  :)

Agreed   :chuckle: :chuckle:  I'll get around to that as soon as I work my way through all the pictures of this hunt and pick one out...

Here is Tim (the rancher) and I recovering Tom's buck the next morning.  He was frozen solid after the storm that night.  As it turns out, no, as a matter of fact they DON'T pack those fenceposts in there on their backs... :chuckle:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 09:57:02 PM
This is later that afternoon.  A new snowstorm, windchill at around -20.  The Chalk Cliffs that we had to climb to get up to where my buck was.  Also a couple of chalk formations when we got to the top.  The "prehistoric fish" and "the throne".  Another one that Tom took of me, plodding my way up the finger on the way to the cliffs.  As you can see, he was a "few yards" ahead of me... :chuckle:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:00:10 PM
Here is a shot of the herd we saw when we first eased over the lip of the bowl.  We didn't know it, but at the moment this picture was taken, if we had just looked 150 yards or so below our feet, we would have seen the buck I shot, with his own herd.  Instead it took us two more hours of work to find and get on him...
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:01:22 PM
Me, walking up to my buck.   :IBCOOL: 
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:02:18 PM
Meat on the ground!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:05:14 PM
Some grinning trophy shots before the work begins...
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:08:04 PM
Hauling him out the next morning...  Thank God for Tim and his lariat (again)..
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:09:48 PM
The bucks were so frozen stiff, we had to drag them in the tent to skin and cape them.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:10:51 PM
Here's one that Michelle will appreciate... ;)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 27, 2010, 10:22:22 PM
...a few more shots I really like...

a view of the chalk cliffs in the sun the next day.
Tom's deer "the morning after".
Me, right after "the shot".
Tim hauling Tom's deer off the ridge.
The fruits of a successful hunt.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 28, 2010, 08:23:09 AM
A couple more that I liked....
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: whacker1 on November 28, 2010, 07:21:27 PM
great write up, pics, and congratulations to you both.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: MuleySniper on November 28, 2010, 07:39:40 PM
A couple of studs! Nice job guys!
MS
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Dmanmastertracker on November 28, 2010, 07:57:37 PM
 Excellent!, I wish I could have made it over there this year. Gorgeous bucks, trip of a lifetime.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Woodchuck on November 29, 2010, 07:20:24 AM
great job man, and great story
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Machias on November 29, 2010, 08:00:57 AM
Awesome photos and great write up, thanks!!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 29, 2010, 10:02:33 AM
Uh, thanks to everyone that had the intestinal fortitude to sit through the entire novel I wrote.  Sorry about that, I just realized how looooooong it was... :chuckle:
Thanks for all the kind words also.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Hornseeker on November 29, 2010, 12:52:44 PM
Right on Pathfinder! Great Read and you guys took some fantastic bucks!! Wow. Better than I do and I fricken live here!!!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 29, 2010, 07:53:49 PM
Wow. Better than I do and I fricken live here!!!

Uhhh... I just saw your elk Hornseeker.  I am not so sure I am buyin' that one... ;)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: DIGGER69R on November 29, 2010, 08:44:03 PM
what a killer hunt....VERY VERY COOL!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: backpacker on November 29, 2010, 09:18:59 PM
Great story & pics!  I actually stayed up past my bedtime reading it :)
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: WDFW Hates ME!!! on November 29, 2010, 09:19:32 PM
Man i loved the story, i wish i could have been there. The hunt of a lifetime.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: dewandgin on November 29, 2010, 09:29:30 PM
Awesome story and awesome hunt. I love the fence!! :P
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Pathfinder101 on November 30, 2010, 08:42:51 AM
Awesome story and awesome hunt. I love the fence!! :P

Yeah, the rancher had us camp in his roundup corral.  It was convenient for us, as the mouth of the main drainage we were hunting was right across the road from us.  No driving to our "hunting spot", just open two gates and cross the road.
  "You'll be surrounded by the fence.  That way the cows will leave you alone too."  It also had a warm spring running into a cattle trough.  "You can use it to wash your hands, or do your dishes, BUT DON"T DRINK FROM IT." 

There was special emphasis on the idea that we NOT drink the spring water that spilled into the trough.  No explanation as to why, :dunno: but you can bet your A$$ we didn't drink from that spout... :chuckle:
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: Gamblin Guy on November 30, 2010, 08:50:02 AM
Pathfinder,

Great write up, one of the best posts I've seen on here for quite some time.

Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: gtrplr on November 30, 2010, 09:32:09 AM
Excellent Job and story!
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: croix on November 30, 2010, 09:40:03 AM
that was an absolute joy to read. thanks for the writeup and congrats on a great hunt.
Title: Re: Pathfinder's 2010 Montana Deer Hunt (Updated-now ridiculously picture heavy)
Post by: mikelonsford on November 30, 2010, 02:23:49 PM
Congratulations!  Great Story!  Great deer!
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