• Help Support TNDeer:

3 months until a duodecennial….

IMG_6505.webp

It wasn't all just herd bulls either. I blew my fair share of chances at satellite bulls too. One evening, we were in our honey hole and had the herd bull fired up. But, there was a nice 5x5 satellite bull that was between him and us. This smaller bull wanted to play. AT was setup 60-70 yards behind me and the satellite bull kept coming to within 35 yards broadside, but he just wouldn't clear a small thing of brush and give me a shot. He was completely silent the whole time, but he sure loved raking the pine trees in the area. He tore every one of them to shreds. Eventually, it got too dark and we had to lay off the calling so we could slip out of there.

The next day was the last day of bow season, so we returned to the same spot hoping to make a play on one of the 2 bulls. While glassing, we looked across the ridge and Mr. Blue Hat was glassing the same basin as us. Only his scent was blowing straight into the honey hole. We never heard a bugle. Just before legal shooting light AT urgently whispers "nock an arrow". I nock an arrow. AT, "look left". Me, "I don't see nothing". He lines his hands up on each side of his head and gives me the ole tunnel vision signal. Just then, the 5x5 steps out from behind a pine tree at 40. He's coming straight at us. We were in a basin surrounded by desert. He had no option but to cut to my right and walk right by us. Elk are elk and for some reason, he cut up over the ridge and started to walk out into a barren desert. I run up to the ridge but he caught my wind and blew out of there.

Just like that, bow season was over............

IMG_6536.webp
 
Herd bulls become herd bulls because they don't screwup very often. For instance, the second morning, we were hunting in one of our little honey hole pockets that had a herd with a nice 6x6 in it. AT was setup behind me to call. I had a nice clearing to my left and it was the perfect runway for the bull to come down. The bull must have read the script. The bull came into the clearing and him and AT bugled back and forth with each other for about 10 minutes. The bull finally had enough and came through the opening like he was being pulled by a string. That is, until he got to 15 yards from me. Then he decided he wanted to cut through the pine thicket I was setup in. This was going to put him to my right and on my downwind side. I had to reposition myself while drawing. He was having none of it and busted out of their. A bugle by AT stopped him at 40. He was slightly quartering away. A shot I could make in my sleep. Except there was a dead pine tree with all it's branches running the length of its body.

Or, the next day. We called another 6x6 in a different area. He had a decent herd of cows with a couple spikes harassing them. He was working his way up the meadow towards us when a satellite 6x3 came in from the side and challenged him. The satellite bull had a typical 6 on his left, but his right had 2 spikes and a big club coming out of his left side. Super cool bull. The herd bull charged him and ran him off, but chased him up into the woods. When he finally showed back up, he herded his cows up and ran them up an adjacent mountain. 2 days later we did glass this herd back up as they were returning their pocket we initially encountered them in.

The morning after we glassed them up, we made another play on them. This morning, they were silent, but we spotted them coming up and area they'd cut some timber out of and were working towards us. Remember those spikes I mentioned? Just as the herd was coming into a shooting lane, the big bull finally had enough of them. He charged them and run them into the next county. Just as he returned, the cows got downwind of me and they all buggered out.

View attachment 246456
Yes sir. It's always exciting hunting elk. They are a breed of their own and you just never know what they will do at the last second. Where I live I see a nice herd almost on a daily basis. A very majestic animal. Sounded like a very enjoyable and productive hunt.
 
Not where we were at. We have been breaking high temp records for a few weeks now. We are still 10 degrees above average.
Supposed to break another 80 degree day time high temp tomorrow. No moisture or cold front in sight. 😟
In this part of the west like anywhere else sometimes you get warmer temps than usual, sometimes colder than usual.
 
Bow season may have ended, but the fat lady hasn't sung.....

On October 1st, I woke up to the smell of fresh coffee, loaded up the .308, closed the bolt on an empty chamber and headed up the mountain.

I'd decided I wanted to hunt a big meadow that requires a stiff up hill hike to get to. I'd previously had an encounter with a 5x5 bull that I'd forgot to mention, in this spot. This whole area was just elky. It was a north facing slope, a big meadow with lots of smaller meadows around it, deep creek bottoms and plenty of dark timber. There was tons of elk sign, wallows, rubs, and trails. At some time, there were a bunch of elk in this area. Just not that day. It actually looked like the elk vacated the area about a week earlier. Tellico was with us and didn't want to climb a big ridge AT and I did, so he took the low trail back out. AT and I, no elk. Tellico, videoed a bull at 50 yards. I should have taken the easy way.

This makes 2 days in a row we haven't heard a bugle. I wouldn't think much of it, in a normal elk unit, but here, it was odd.

Day 2 of rifle season found us road hunting in the far southern end of our unit. Now, this isn't the typical TN style of road hunting. We would drive to any high point we could and glass miles and miles of desert. Even with spotting scopes, we would see something wayyyy off in the horizon and have to drive closer just to glass it up again and see if it was elk. It never was, it was always moo cows or wild horses. This style of hunting is not my cup of tea, but most people who draw this tag hunt this way. They tell me there are elk out here. Idiots.

20241002_133556.webp


We did find a random a$$ moose wandering around the desert.

20241002_082403.webp
 

Latest posts

Back
Top