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The Mountain gave one up #9140502 11/18/24 06:05 AM
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This is going to be a more condensed write up than some of my last hunts but did want to share the story:

My last couple of travel hunts have taken place outside the U.S. While I thoroughly enjoyed them, as well as getting to visit other cultures, I wanted my next hunt to be a little closer to home and not so reliant on air travel.

I really missed hunting mule deer the last several years, so when an opportunity came available for a 6 day fall hunt, I took it.

Preparation for the trip was pretty standard; make sure your gear and equipment are tight, you are in shape physically and mentally and after that, you should be ready to rock. Back in July, after a beach vacation, I noticed I was a little doughier than what was acceptable to me, so I cut out all the sugar and started limiting my calories and really got back into prime shape. The area I was hunting in offers not only the opportunity for a shot at some distance but a high probability.....this area is comprised mostly of open, steep country with few trees and little cover. So, I ended up spending much more time behind the rifle than I usually do before a hunt. A week or so before the hunt, I experienced a scope malfunction that eliminated any trust in the unit; it was promptly replaced and re-zero'd with the new scope. Time was limited and after then initial zero, I only got to exercise with it one time before the hunt and I didn't shoot great, so confidence wasn't extremely high with my rig going into the hunt. Still, I had few options and even less time, so I cased it up along with the rest of my gear, loaded the truck and headed north. God was with us on the trip and we dodged some major storms that would have surely impeded our travel. The trip was long but thankfully uneventful. We pull into base camp, unload and get ready to hunt the next day.


The following day we wake up around 4:30am, grab a quick bite and head out....our outfitter has a captain friend who had spotted a large buck on several occasions as he was navigating the river. This area is accessible via a 7-8 hr. horseback ride, but a 30 min ferry had been arraigned for us for the day. Plan of action was to glass from the river bank and make a stalk if we spotted the deer. We meet at the landing and take off, a short while later we beach the boat, climb out and start glassing. Day breaks and we immediately see several deer; does and small bucks. At about 7:30 am we spot a bruiser of a buck WAAAAYYYY up on top of the ridge sky lined about 1500 yards away. We set up the spotter and see this buck is Tall, Heavy and Wide. He has great front forks, but to our surprise he is not split on his G-2's. He is a hell of a buck, just not one to burn 3 hours walking to, so we keep looking. A small herd of elk grazing along the riverbank keeps us entertained in between deer sightings.

At around 7:30, we decided to move. My guide Micah, conferred with the Captain and they agreed that someone should check a drainage that is not far from our initial landing but impossible to see from the river. We pull up to the bank and as I start grabbing my pack, was informed that "we are just taking a quick stroll, just bring your rifle". So I bail off the boat with just my rifle and my bino's and follow Micah and his dog up the trail (you know it's just a stroll when you bring the dog) with plans to meet back up in an hour at the landing. We start off down the trail that parallels a creek going away from the river. We spot one small 3x3, around 75 turkeys and one spruce grouse, but additional mule deer were not seen. About 45 min later we reach a point where if we go further we will A. not make it back in time, or B. get in an area that even if we did see something, it would be unreachable on foot, so we turn around and start making our way back. We start having a discussion about overlooking deer, how well they can hide, etc. when shortly after Micah spots a deer about half way up the adjacent ridge. We take a quick look and can make out a small 3x3, a decent 4x4 and a handful of does. Glassing over the area he sees a wide buck coming in from the right ( he has 16x bino's and can judge a deer from that distance, which is approx. 1000 yards) and after switching bino's we agree we need to get closer to this buck for a better look. We shuck our jackets and take off up the ridge face.

After a few hundred yards in I'm starting to struggle a little bit. This ridge is about at a 45 degree or better angle and covered in loose rock, short grass and cactus. We stop every 50 or 75 yards to take a better assessment of the buck and to give me a breather. Around the 600 yard mark, we make the call to continue pursuing him....we know his forks are not super great (This is a trophy rut hunt and on this trip, I'm looking for the big boy, as I've killed some decent desert mule deer but nothing great) but he is wide and looks like he has good mass. We keep going and I'm dying, I'm breathing heavy, my legs are locking up and every step is a chore. Now I can walk some miles here on flat country or even rolling terrain, but this is something I have not experienced before. We get to the 400 yard mark and we re-assess....at this point I'm gonna try and kill this deer out of principle regardless of what he looks like, just because I had to partake in this death march. Shot distance is starting to be considered so I elected to use the terrain to sneak just a little bit closer, Micah, the dog and me move from rock pile to rock pile to close the distance another 75 yards. At 320 yards, we set up behind a rock face and look at the scenario. The two other bucks have vanished ( during one of our stops we saw the two other bucks get into a fight and then the victor headed in the direction of the big buck, so I assume he ran them both off before joining the does) and the does are starting to notice our party of 3 (the black dog probably more than anything) and are starting to slowly move from right to left. They cross a ravine and this allows us to move forward to another rock pile, but that's as far as our game of hopscotch is gonna be able to go. We range it at 215 yards. I drop the bipod legs, throw in my ear plugs and get settled in behind the scope. I am breathing heavy and since they are fairly calm and in wide open country, I take a few minutes to get my breathing down. I crawl back behind the scope right as the buck beds down. We take another minute and discuss the buck....he is not huge, but certainly a shooter and although bigger deer do exist in the unit, its highly possible that I won't see a better one. Add to the fact that the boat ferry is pretty much a one time thing and we won't be able to get back in this area more than likely, further tips the scales to go ahead and shoot this buck.

I get set up on this rock outcropping as good as I can. I'm not super comfortable, there is grass blowing in front of the scope and I'm standing on a rock slightly bigger than both my boots, so I have no room to adjust further. At this point, I'm gassed out...I have zero adrenaline left and am thinking/acting with a clear mind, which is very different than navigating the usual adrenaline dump I get before making a shot. I think at this point we have been on this deer for close to 2 hours. I snuggle up behind the rifle again and get him in the scope. He is standing on a rock, quartering towards me but not at an extreme angle. I put the crosshairs on the point of the shoulder and squeeze off, at the shot the rifle recoils and I lose sight of him.....I hear the impact of the bullet hitting and Micah yells out "you dumped him". I did not feel great about the shot, I felt as though I moved at the last split second and the shot hit farther back that I intended. I rack another shell and get on him, he is starting to kick and he falls off the rock and starts to slide downhills. I stay on him for several minutes and after sliding down about 15-20 feet he comes to a rest. At this point an entirely different set of emotions hits, one of both satisfaction of the completion of a extremely physical hunt and the questioning and doubt of "did I shoot to early? should I have held out for a bigger deer?,etc. We rest for several minutes and then start on our way over to the deer, which includes crossing another ravine and takes approx. 20 min to cover the 200 yards. Micah beats me to the buck and I arrive shortly later.

Lots of emotions, second guesses and what if's but I don't think I could have killed a prettier deer and definitely not in a prettier setting. We took pics, caped him out and broke him down right there on the mountain. Every minute that passed, he seemed to grow and continued to get bigger as the time went on. Everyone loves to hear and experience the last minute, last hour Hail Mary stories, but sometimes that Hail Mary comes in the first few hours on the first day. There is a funny second part to the story as we are up here with no packs, no water and no supplies other than my belt knife (we were just going for a stroll remember) I'll tell that chapter at a subsequent time.

Note: Weather turned bad on us the next day and made hunting very difficult. We hunted a few more days and never did catch a glimpse of a buck close to this one. My hunting partner took a respectable 4x4 buck Thursday morning, but as we headed out Friday the weather was turning bad again. It had snowed up in the higher country, theoretically pushing the deer further down, but we failed to see many shooter bucks in the subsequent days. Sometimes you just don't question a gift.

[Linked Image]

We had spotted the buck from down in the right hand corner along the hardwoods along the creek. Originally we started on foot from the riverbank in the background.
[Linked Image]

[Linked Image]



For it is not the quarry that we truly seek, but the adventure.
Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140519 11/18/24 11:41 AM
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Wow what a great hunting experience and write up! Congrats on a super nice Muley cheers
BTW my legs and back are hurting just from reading about your mountain trekking.

Last edited by Stub; 11/18/24 11:43 AM.

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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140520 11/18/24 11:50 AM
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I don't care who you are, that's a bomber of a mule deer. Thanks for sharing.

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140547 11/18/24 01:21 PM
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Great write up and heck of a mule deer. Sorry if I missed it but where were you hunting?

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140552 11/18/24 01:31 PM
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Sounds like an awesome hunting trip. Congrats on the very nice buck.



A clear conscience is often the sign of a fuzzy memory.
Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140559 11/18/24 01:47 PM
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Great hunt Compadre. cheers


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140565 11/18/24 01:54 PM
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Should have included this in my original comment.

Your hunt epitomizes you tag line. ( For it is not the quarry that we truly seek, but the adventure.)

Last edited by Stub; 11/18/24 01:55 PM.

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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140568 11/18/24 02:02 PM
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Congrats on a nice buck.


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140573 11/18/24 02:07 PM
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Wow, that is a great mule deer in some fantastic country!

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140574 11/18/24 02:08 PM
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Very nice! Thanks for the write-up!


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140578 11/18/24 02:12 PM
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Man congrats!

Like how you can see his forks even when he is facing you. Damn I need to bust my [censored] into better shape!

Last edited by redchevy; 11/18/24 02:13 PM.

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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140579 11/18/24 02:14 PM
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That's quite a trip! Thanks for sharing the story and pics.

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140584 11/18/24 02:20 PM
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I either you didn’t say or I missed it, what part of the world were you in?


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140604 11/18/24 02:42 PM
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Great deer and write up. Thanks for sharing.

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140605 11/18/24 02:43 PM
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Great deer! My legs hurt just looking at that climb

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140618 11/18/24 03:09 PM
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Great write up and excellent buck. The views are amazing in those pictures. Congrats!

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140635 11/18/24 03:50 PM
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Great writeup and a dandy buck. That deer is about as pretty of a buck as I have ever seen. Big congrats up up


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140663 11/18/24 04:54 PM
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Congrats again on a well earned and rewarding adventure


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140683 11/18/24 05:13 PM
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Looks like Idaho? Along the Salmon River possibly?


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140702 11/18/24 05:47 PM
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Beautiful

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140731 11/18/24 06:29 PM
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Congratulations and what a back drop for that picture. Wow.

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140750 11/18/24 07:11 PM
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Congrats! Very nice buck and great pictures!


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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140761 11/18/24 07:21 PM
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Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140777 11/18/24 08:01 PM
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Congrats on a great buck and heck of an adventure.

Re: The Mountain gave one up [Re: txtrophy85] #9140798 11/18/24 08:46 PM
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Definitely a beautiful deer(Like damn, it's 2 times bigger then me), and as you said, in a setting that just adds to the whole thing.

Would love to hear more about the “second chapter” too!

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