2020 Best Bull Elk Hunt Photo Contest, sponsored by Kifaru

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Huntin_GI

WKR
Joined
Apr 14, 2016
Messages
369
Location
N. Colorado
The Story:

This summer I managed to scout the area five separate times for which I had drawn a muzzleloader tag. I talked to CPW, USFS, and every Rokslide member who was interested. I hung cameras, checked cameras, moved cameras, and started to get an idea of the area. Then two days after my last scouting trip, the Cameron Peak Fire melted my southernmost pair of cameras to a tree and shut down the entire area I had spent all summer scouting.

I began to scramble. I was calling CPW trying to prod the tag exchange process along as this trip is not only mine but a family member's from back east. After the tag exchange became official, I immediately went back to the drawing board. It is mid-August at this point.

Step one: Forget the muzzleloader, break out the archery tackle. The problem being, I hadn't shot my bow at all as I was planning on the ol' smoke pole. To top it off, end of last season I adjusted my draw weight down to 55ish lbs after a shoulder injury. I had zero confidence in my equipment. Not to be deterred, I hit the range at Lon Hagler religiously. After a few weeks, I was back on the wagon. Four to six-inch groups out to 75 yards. I still didn't know where we were going to hunt.

Again, phone calls to all the agencies regarding areas of interest. Hours upon hours pouring over maps. After bouncing a few ideas off a good buddy, my partner and I settle on an area.

This area doesn't have any trails depicted with several chunks of private along the road to deter anyone not willing to put in the work. Upon arrival, we realize we were incredibly wrong and find multiple trucks and camps scattered about. We decide to press on with our plan and get packed in. The camp is 4 miles deep. Day one becomes what will always be remembered as the day that water on the map is a damn lie and now we are feeling screwed.

After a 10 mile day, we manage to find aqua, load up with almost 10 liters, and head back to camp. The next day we will try something new.

Wake up, cut out of camp with what's left of our water in our packs. Decide to head in deeper, cross a 600yard rockslide, and find our first fresh wallow. It is 10am. Decide to rip a bugle and to my surprise, we get a response. Not the I am gonna whip your ass response but the yeah I hear ya, shut up type of response. The bull is above us several hundred vertical feet and has limited space due to a rock field behind the nearest bench. I turn to my cousin and tell him we can kill this bull because that's what I learned on the internet.

I break into the best @ElkNut1 breeding sequence I can muster and remain patient. An hour later, I am realizing that I am no Paul Medel. Our thermals are beginning to shift so we decide to swing out and around the point and climb up to the bench the bull is on, hoping the sunny side of the point will keep our wind pointed in the right direction.

We finish the climb through the thickest vegetation we have seen during our trip. Upon arriving at the bench, I give a clean location bugle. Nothing happens. As I sit there on a log, feeling like Hilary Clinton on Nov 3, 2016, I decide I am gonna give it a nasty roar and see what happens. As I finish my bugle and look at my cousin, less than 100 yards away, the bull begins chuckling.

I start shitting myself, while my cousin is saying knock a damn arrow! We slowly stand up as Corey begin's to lift his binos and says "I see him, he looks good." At this point, we have moved 20 yards in the direction of the bull. Corey hits his range finder and says 80 yards. I channeled my inner @Aron Snyder and whispered if there is carbon in the air there is hope and dialed my Tommy Hog to 80 yards. I then realize that if I tell anyone I killed a bull from 80yards with a 55lb bow, I will be banned from Rokslide and have to start using some other shitty forum. So I start sneaking up.

Sneaking would imply I was quiet. I felt like each step managed to be the loudest steps of all time. A blind man riding an electric Walmart cart with a squeaky wheel would have been making less noise. Either way, Im moving forward.

Corey has remained in place and I can hear him saying he is still at 80... After what feels like 700 steps I turn and ask Corey how many yards I am in front of him, only to find out I had made it 5 yards. WTF! He keeps calling my yardage I move up, 7 yards, 9 yards, 12 yards, 15 yards, I freeze. I can do this. I dial my sight down to 65. I go to draw my bow and I am shaking like a dog shitting razor blades. Bull starts chuckling. I see him moving into an open lane. I attempt to look through my peep. Where the hell is my peep, what is going on, is this a stroke? Ooppp there it is. Peep check, grip check, pin check. At this point the bull is broadside. His head is to the right and rump to the left. I can see from 3 inches behind the front shoulder and up. It feels tight. Pin settles. Corey says he moved up, he's at 74. Too late. Brain cannot compute. Punch. Arrow sails. Looks good. Damn 55lb throws a slow arrow. Is it every gonna get there? Thump!

I drilled him! 12 ring. Golden triangle. 30 seconds later big crash. Corey is asking what happened, apparently, my power fists into the sky failed to relay I smashed him.

500 grain arrow with an @ironwill riding on front had blown through. By the time I run up to the arrow I can see the bull dead not 40 yards away.

This was my first elk. The second-year chasing them. Archery. OTC. 8 miles from the car... Butchered for 6 hours. We now have 4oz and 6oz of water respectively. Packed the first load of meat to the tent once again crossing the rockslide bridge dubbed "bridge to Narnia". We arrive back at our tent thankful to find a group setup 100 yards away. After we approach and inform them of our water situation that let us know we both look like shit and gabe us each a bottle of water that I am convinced saved my life. We spent the entire next day packing to get everything to the coolers before 10 PM.

Now I can never cut my mullet as I give it all the credit for my success.IMG_0990.JPG
 

ChrisAU

WKR
Joined
Jan 12, 2018
Messages
6,087
Location
SE Alabama
The Story:

This summer I managed to scout the area five separate times for which I had drawn a muzzleloader tag. I talked to CPW, USFS, and every Rokslide member who was interested. I hung cameras, checked cameras, moved cameras, and started to get an idea of the area. Then two days after my last scouting trip, the Cameron Peak Fire melted my southernmost pair of cameras to a tree and shut down the entire area I had spent all summer scouting.

I began to scramble. I was calling CPW trying to prod the tag exchange process along as this trip is not only mine but a family member's from back east. After the tag exchange became official, I immediately went back to the drawing board. It is mid-August at this point.

Step one: Forget the muzzleloader, break out the archery tackle. The problem being, I hadn't shot my bow at all as I was planning on the ol' smoke pole. To top it off, end of last season I adjusted my draw weight down to 55ish lbs after a shoulder injury. I had zero confidence in my equipment. Not to be deterred, I hit the range at Lon Hagler religiously. After a few weeks, I was back on the wagon. Four to six-inch groups out to 75 yards. I still didn't know where we were going to hunt.

Again, phone calls to all the agencies regarding areas of interest. Hours upon hours pouring over maps. After bouncing a few ideas off a good buddy, my partner and I settle on an area.

This area doesn't have any trails depicted with several chunks of private along the road to deter anyone not willing to put in the work. Upon arrival, we realize we were incredibly wrong and find multiple trucks and camps scattered about. We decide to press on with our plan and get packed in. The camp is 4 miles deep. Day one becomes what will always be remembered as the day that water on the map is a damn lie and now we are feeling screwed.

After a 10 mile day, we manage to find aqua, load up with almost 10 liters, and head back to camp. The next day we will try something new.

Wake up, cut out of camp with what's left of our water in our packs. Decide to head in deeper, cross a 600yard rockslide, and find our first fresh wallow. It is 10am. Decide to rip a bugle and to my surprise, we get a response. Not the I am gonna whip your ass response but the yeah I hear ya, shut up type of response. The bull is above us several hundred vertical feet and has limited space due to a rock field behind the nearest bench. I turn to my cousin and tell him we can kill this bull because that's what I learned on the internet.

I break into the best @ElkNut1 breeding sequence I can muster and remain patient. An hour later, I am realizing that I am no Paul Medel. Our thermals are beginning to shift so we decide to swing out and around the point and climb up to the bench the bull is on, hoping the sunny side of the point will keep our wind pointed in the right direction.

We finish the climb through the thickest vegetation we have seen during our trip. Upon arriving at the bench, I give a clean location bugle. Nothing happens. As I sit there on a log, feeling like Hilary Clinton on Nov 3, 2016, I decide I am gonna give it a nasty roar and see what happens. As I finish my bugle and look at my cousin, less than 100 yards away, the bull begins chuckling.

I start shitting myself, while my cousin is saying knock a damn arrow! We slowly stand up as Corey begin's to lift his binos and says "I see him, he looks good." At this point, we have moved 20 yards in the direction of the bull. Corey hits his range finder and says 80 yards. I channeled my inner @Aron Snyder and whispered if there is carbon in the air there is hope and dialed my Tommy Hog to 80 yards. I then realize that if I tell anyone I killed a bull from 80yards with a 55lb bow, I will be banned from Rokslide and have to start using some other shitty forum. So I start sneaking up.

Sneaking would imply I was quiet. I felt like each step managed to be the loudest steps of all time. A blind man riding an electric Walmart cart with a squeaky wheel would have been making less noise. Either way, Im moving forward.

Corey has remained in place and I can hear him saying he is still at 80... After what feels like 700 steps I turn and ask Corey how many yards I am in front of him, only to find out I had made it 5 yards. WTF! He keeps calling my yardage I move up, 7 yards, 9 yards, 12 yards, 15 yards, I freeze. I can do this. I dial my sight down to 65. I go to draw my bow and I am shaking like a dog shitting razor blades. Bull starts chuckling. I see him moving into an open lane. I attempt to look through my peep. Where the hell is my peep, what is going on, is this a stroke? Ooppp there it is. Peep check, grip check, pin check. At this point the bull is broadside. His head is to the right and rump to the left. I can see from 3 inches behind the front shoulder and up. It feels tight. Pin settles. Corey says he moved up, he's at 74. Too late. Brain cannot compute. Punch. Arrow sails. Looks good. Damn 55lb throws a slow arrow. Is it every gonna get there? Thump!

I drilled him! 12 ring. Golden triangle. 30 seconds later big crash. Corey is asking what happened, apparently, my power fists into the sky failed to relay I smashed him.

500 grain arrow with an @ironwill riding on front had blown through. By the time I run up to the arrow I can see the bull dead not 40 yards away.

This was my first elk. The second-year chasing them. Archery. OTC. 8 miles from the car... Butchered for 6 hours. We now have 4oz and 6oz of water respectively. Packed the first load of meat to the tent once again crossing the rockslide bridge dubbed "bridge to Narnia". We arrive back at our tent thankful to find a group setup 100 yards away. After we approach and inform them of our water situation that let us know we both look like shit and gabe us each a bottle of water that I am convinced saved my life. We spent the entire next day packing to get everything to the coolers before 10 PM.

Now I can never cut my mullet as I give it all the credit for my success.View attachment 217920

Go ahead and give away the story telling award, this is gold! Congrats!
 

Drew@selway

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 10, 2015
Messages
147
submitting this on behalf of my best hunting partner, my Dad. 25 years of chasing these beasts in the mountains, lots of encounters but he was never able to notch his tag till this fall. I feel so blessed to have been the one that called in his first bull with a stickbow. The call in was something out of a primos video, a half mile to 18 yards.

Never give up on your dreams folks.
IMG_8819[1].jpg

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
 
Joined
Sep 24, 2019
Messages
937
23 Sept, 2020.
First archery elk. Non-resident Wyoming General tag, unit 37. Eight days without seeing an elk or hearing a bugle, hiking an average of ten miles a day and becoming less optimistic about even getting an opportunity, I finally see two bulls grazing in a meadow a hundred and twenty yards away. Unresponsive to a bugle, my partner and I slowly close the distance to 68 yards. Then all of a sudden a cow mews behind them and they immediately lock antlers and start fighting. I draw back and whispered to my partner to shoot in 3, 2, 1.... He doesn’t hear me. Our chance at a double is lost. However, my arrow sails in front of the hind quarter and enters perfectly as the bull is quartering away. He doesn’t know he was hit. He steps and slightly stumbles. He then takes off as my partner cow calls in attempt to get the other bull to stop so he can get a shot, which never happens. We hear a crash in the timber outside of the meadow. Knowing how tough these animals are, we think he may have just stumbled over some deadfall. My partner convinces me to wait thirty minutes to investigate. That half hour feels more like an hour. We find good blood at the location of impact, then walk to the edge of the meadow where we heard the crash. Less than forty yards, he’s piled up, dead right there! My arrow threaded the needle perfectly and got lung and heart!

It was such a great feeling after days without seeing an elk in locations that I just saw herds less than a month prior. I’m so thankful for another year of elk in the freezer! Not a giant, but he’ll eat well!
65c7bf6dc0fd5adcc3f2ec23047f84f6.jpg
 
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Messages
446
Location
Montana
My dad flew out last week to run around the woods with me, we got into a few screaming matches but nothing close. This week I went back in solo to one of the spots and this bull was down right suicidal. We were aggressively bugling back and forth, I was hiding behind some terrain and he came in less than 10 yards. I awkwardly tilted through some brush to find a window and let an arrow fly, he died within 50 yards, in eye sight of me. Glad I had the garmin handy to call for help with the pack out.


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NorthernHunter

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Mar 16, 2020
Messages
176
The Story:

This summer I managed to scout the area five separate times for which I had drawn a muzzleloader tag. I talked to CPW, USFS, and every Rokslide member who was interested. I hung cameras, checked cameras, moved cameras, and started to get an idea of the area. Then two days after my last scouting trip, the Cameron Peak Fire melted my southernmost pair of cameras to a tree and shut down the entire area I had spent all summer scouting.

I began to scramble. I was calling CPW trying to prod the tag exchange process along as this trip is not only mine but a family member's from back east. After the tag exchange became official, I immediately went back to the drawing board. It is mid-August at this point.

Step one: Forget the muzzleloader, break out the archery tackle. The problem being, I hadn't shot my bow at all as I was planning on the ol' smoke pole. To top it off, end of last season I adjusted my draw weight down to 55ish lbs after a shoulder injury. I had zero confidence in my equipment. Not to be deterred, I hit the range at Lon Hagler religiously. After a few weeks, I was back on the wagon. Four to six-inch groups out to 75 yards. I still didn't know where we were going to hunt.

Again, phone calls to all the agencies regarding areas of interest. Hours upon hours pouring over maps. After bouncing a few ideas off a good buddy, my partner and I settle on an area.

This area doesn't have any trails depicted with several chunks of private along the road to deter anyone not willing to put in the work. Upon arrival, we realize we were incredibly wrong and find multiple trucks and camps scattered about. We decide to press on with our plan and get packed in. The camp is 4 miles deep. Day one becomes what will always be remembered as the day that water on the map is a damn lie and now we are feeling screwed.

After a 10 mile day, we manage to find aqua, load up with almost 10 liters, and head back to camp. The next day we will try something new.

Wake up, cut out of camp with what's left of our water in our packs. Decide to head in deeper, cross a 600yard rockslide, and find our first fresh wallow. It is 10am. Decide to rip a bugle and to my surprise, we get a response. Not the I am gonna whip your ass response but the yeah I hear ya, shut up type of response. The bull is above us several hundred vertical feet and has limited space due to a rock field behind the nearest bench. I turn to my cousin and tell him we can kill this bull because that's what I learned on the internet.

I break into the best @ElkNut1 breeding sequence I can muster and remain patient. An hour later, I am realizing that I am no Paul Medel. Our thermals are beginning to shift so we decide to swing out and around the point and climb up to the bench the bull is on, hoping the sunny side of the point will keep our wind pointed in the right direction.

We finish the climb through the thickest vegetation we have seen during our trip. Upon arriving at the bench, I give a clean location bugle. Nothing happens. As I sit there on a log, feeling like Hilary Clinton on Nov 3, 2016, I decide I am gonna give it a nasty roar and see what happens. As I finish my bugle and look at my cousin, less than 100 yards away, the bull begins chuckling.

I start shitting myself, while my cousin is saying knock a damn arrow! We slowly stand up as Corey begin's to lift his binos and says "I see him, he looks good." At this point, we have moved 20 yards in the direction of the bull. Corey hits his range finder and says 80 yards. I channeled my inner @Aron Snyder and whispered if there is carbon in the air there is hope and dialed my Tommy Hog to 80 yards. I then realize that if I tell anyone I killed a bull from 80yards with a 55lb bow, I will be banned from Rokslide and have to start using some other shitty forum. So I start sneaking up.

Sneaking would imply I was quiet. I felt like each step managed to be the loudest steps of all time. A blind man riding an electric Walmart cart with a squeaky wheel would have been making less noise. Either way, Im moving forward.

Corey has remained in place and I can hear him saying he is still at 80... After what feels like 700 steps I turn and ask Corey how many yards I am in front of him, only to find out I had made it 5 yards. WTF! He keeps calling my yardage I move up, 7 yards, 9 yards, 12 yards, 15 yards, I freeze. I can do this. I dial my sight down to 65. I go to draw my bow and I am shaking like a dog shitting razor blades. Bull starts chuckling. I see him moving into an open lane. I attempt to look through my peep. Where the hell is my peep, what is going on, is this a stroke? Ooppp there it is. Peep check, grip check, pin check. At this point the bull is broadside. His head is to the right and rump to the left. I can see from 3 inches behind the front shoulder and up. It feels tight. Pin settles. Corey says he moved up, he's at 74. Too late. Brain cannot compute. Punch. Arrow sails. Looks good. Damn 55lb throws a slow arrow. Is it every gonna get there? Thump!

I drilled him! 12 ring. Golden triangle. 30 seconds later big crash. Corey is asking what happened, apparently, my power fists into the sky failed to relay I smashed him.

500 grain arrow with an @ironwill riding on front had blown through. By the time I run up to the arrow I can see the bull dead not 40 yards away.

This was my first elk. The second-year chasing them. Archery. OTC. 8 miles from the car... Butchered for 6 hours. We now have 4oz and 6oz of water respectively. Packed the first load of meat to the tent once again crossing the rockslide bridge dubbed "bridge to Narnia". We arrive back at our tent thankful to find a group setup 100 yards away. After we approach and inform them of our water situation that let us know we both look like shit and gabe us each a bottle of water that I am convinced saved my life. We spent the entire next day packing to get everything to the coolers before 10 PM.

Now I can never cut my mullet as I give it all the credit for my success.View attachment 217920
That is hands down the best hunting story I have read. Great write up.
 
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