SC Living Outdoors
Well-known member
Day 3 - September 3rd
I decided on the third morning I'd head to a glassing point about 600 yards farther up the basin than the spot I glassed the first afternoon. As I neared the glassing location I looked up in front of me 100 yards or so and standing on the skyline was a lone doe. I took some pics and continued to move. About 10 seconds later a buck appeared. He was a tight racked 2x3. Nothing too impressive, but it was the first buck of the trip, so I took that as a good sign. 10 minutes later I settled into my glassing location to start to pick apart the head of the basin. Periodically I would hear a bugle out in front of me and after 30 minutes or so I began to see some elk all the way up in the head of the basin 1200 yards away. Soon after I found the bull and he was a great bull! This was the best bull I'd seen in CO in a while. I didn't have an elk tag, but if I had I know exactly what bull I'd be chasing. I watched this bull push his cows around and one in particular had his attention and he even attempted to mount her a couple times. I took alot of pics and videos. Eventually he bedded and I continued to glass the far side of the basin and picked up 3 deer. 2 bucks and a doe. One of the bucks was the one I jumped so I'm guessing the doe was the one I saw as well and there was just another buck that I never saw. They had dropped way down into the valley then back way up the other side. They were close to 13k feet in some gnarly stuff continuing to go up. I definitely thing I'd spooked them hard. Both bucks were about the same size and neither were real big so I wasn't overly concerned.
I headed back to camp for some food before heading out for the afternoon. That afternoon I hiked 2.5 miles up to 12,520' to glass another bowl. I heard bugling and cows in the woods below the closer I it got to dark. In the last hour or so they all started filing into this bowl. I think there were about 20 elk and 3-4 bulls. The biggest bull was a decent 5x5 that was definitely in charge. They were making all kinds of sounds. I knew there were some hunters down below in the valley and eventually one pushed up trying to sneak in on the heard. They knew he was coming. That biggest bull began to bugle and all the cows ran to him. They looked exactly the direction the hunter was coming from and all headed out. I could see him coming out of the trees from my perch. He was only 80-100yrds from the elk, but he never saw them. I'm guessing the wind burned him. It sucks for the hunter, but it was cool to see unfold and how the elk reacted. I'll store that memory and info away for the future (I have a couple elk tags this year). I didn't see any deer.
The deer that morning.


The bucks up high on the far side and the big bull.




I didn't even know there were ptarmigan in Colorado until I saw this one.

There was a wallow in this bowl and this smaller 5 point was enjoying it. The bigger 5 point above him was the current herd bull.



Dinner

I decided on the third morning I'd head to a glassing point about 600 yards farther up the basin than the spot I glassed the first afternoon. As I neared the glassing location I looked up in front of me 100 yards or so and standing on the skyline was a lone doe. I took some pics and continued to move. About 10 seconds later a buck appeared. He was a tight racked 2x3. Nothing too impressive, but it was the first buck of the trip, so I took that as a good sign. 10 minutes later I settled into my glassing location to start to pick apart the head of the basin. Periodically I would hear a bugle out in front of me and after 30 minutes or so I began to see some elk all the way up in the head of the basin 1200 yards away. Soon after I found the bull and he was a great bull! This was the best bull I'd seen in CO in a while. I didn't have an elk tag, but if I had I know exactly what bull I'd be chasing. I watched this bull push his cows around and one in particular had his attention and he even attempted to mount her a couple times. I took alot of pics and videos. Eventually he bedded and I continued to glass the far side of the basin and picked up 3 deer. 2 bucks and a doe. One of the bucks was the one I jumped so I'm guessing the doe was the one I saw as well and there was just another buck that I never saw. They had dropped way down into the valley then back way up the other side. They were close to 13k feet in some gnarly stuff continuing to go up. I definitely thing I'd spooked them hard. Both bucks were about the same size and neither were real big so I wasn't overly concerned.
I headed back to camp for some food before heading out for the afternoon. That afternoon I hiked 2.5 miles up to 12,520' to glass another bowl. I heard bugling and cows in the woods below the closer I it got to dark. In the last hour or so they all started filing into this bowl. I think there were about 20 elk and 3-4 bulls. The biggest bull was a decent 5x5 that was definitely in charge. They were making all kinds of sounds. I knew there were some hunters down below in the valley and eventually one pushed up trying to sneak in on the heard. They knew he was coming. That biggest bull began to bugle and all the cows ran to him. They looked exactly the direction the hunter was coming from and all headed out. I could see him coming out of the trees from my perch. He was only 80-100yrds from the elk, but he never saw them. I'm guessing the wind burned him. It sucks for the hunter, but it was cool to see unfold and how the elk reacted. I'll store that memory and info away for the future (I have a couple elk tags this year). I didn't see any deer.
The deer that morning.


The bucks up high on the far side and the big bull.




I didn't even know there were ptarmigan in Colorado until I saw this one.

There was a wallow in this bowl and this smaller 5 point was enjoying it. The bigger 5 point above him was the current herd bull.



Dinner














































