2025 - A Season to Remember (or forget)

Big Fin

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2025 – A Season of Distractions

When we were getting ready for the 2025 season, I was very excited. After a long summer of too much politics/policy/DC travel, I wanted to get to the business of ignoring business. That excited feeling seems like twenty years ago.

For those who adhere to TLDR, the summary is this – I never fired a shot on camera this season. Lots of younger animals, some shots presented that experience told me to pass, and more than our share of unusual events and incessant distractions.

For those who will read, I’ll give a bit of a summary. All started well with an early archery mule deer hunt. Cool place I’d hunted back in the 1980’s and one of the few places that seems to be mostly untouched by the landscape changes I’ve seen elsewhere in the west. I got the morning stalks and Jace got the afternoon stalks; his stalks outnumbered mine 5-0.

Things got interrupted in early September when an archery elk hunt was delayed for a Congressional hearing that I was told, “You have to be there.” Ok, I got ready, cleared the calendar, told Marcus to go hunt elsewhere, only be told two days before that I wasn’t needed, and a different witness would be taking my place. Fine by me, I had an elk tag to take care of.

Marcus and I finally got on that elk hunt. On day four I hit a great bull. Thought we was dead on his feet with a quartering 30 yard shot that seemed to be a perfect hit. After following blood until dark and leaving the trail, three additional days of Marcus and I split up and gridding the place confirmed something went wrong.

An early high country deer hunt was cut short to spend another weekend searching for that bull. Found someone else’s bull, but no mine. I shot a large 6x6. This was a 6x4. I shoot FMJs and a fixed blade. This was a different arrow brand with a mechanical.

Cut that week short to get back to Montana to be a panelist as County Commissioners and some State Legislators convened on topics of concern. My presentation was on Conservation Easements, how they worked, when they don’t work well, and debunking the myths. Suffice to say, it was not a homefield audience, equally polite as they were opposed to CEs based on a lot of bad information. It was probably one of the more effective places to make my case. Given the follow up in-person meetings with attendees I left there feeling I was worth the two-day disruption in the middle of the elk rut. I guess we will see if any progress was made when the MT Legislature reconvenes in January 2027.

When I got home from that presentation, I learned that Marcus’s brother had broken his leg on the mountain goat hunt we were filming. He got out, thanks to serious grit and pride. Over eight miles out with a MacGyver’d splint and trekking poles. Two days later he had surgery and now carries some fresh orthopedic hardware in his leg.

From there it was to the Yukon for a mountain caribou migration hunt. Warm temps don’t provide much migration; in this case, none at all. Knowing that might happen the outfitter handed me a grizzly bear tag on my way out the door, warning me that there might be a shortage of caribou. One good bull was found in 12 days. Bruce made the long steep hike to tag him. I spent my days glassing in between periods of fog and clouds, shooting ptarmigan, and trying to get close to a grizzly that was a big and fat as Jabba the Hutt. A long drive home with only some ptarmigan and spruce grouse taken. Oh well, my unsustainable mountain caribou luck was bound to dry up someday.

Then it was back to look for that archery bull during rifle season. Four days of more scouring, gridding, and glassing. With Marcus’s three days, and my nine days, of gridding a total of 70+ miles were covered. The bull was never found, dead or alive. Finally, I had to return home. While down for those four days, the bulls must have known I was still 100% confident I was looking for a dead bull. I saw a LOT (40+) of very nice bulls in those four days. Close inspection of each of them showed they were not the bull I hit. Maybe he’s still alive and moved off. Or maybe he made it to private and the birds and bears devoured him there. Or maybe another hunter shot him. Whatever the result, it still haunts me. The shot seemed perfect, but it obviously wasn’t. No arrow ever found. Once he left his bed of the night I hit him, no more blood was ever found. Might be some great archery gear for sale, cheap if I can’t reconcile why it is that the only two bulls I’ve ever lost have been in my 30 years of archery hunting and why I’ve never lost a bull in rifle season. Both of my lost archery bulls were very easy shots with no excuses.

From there I helped Ted Roosevelt tag a bull in Montana on the opener. Four days with Ted is worth a lot of stories, history, and perspective from someone who has been there and done it. I think I was more excited than he was when that bull hit the ground.

More calls, meetings, and politicking kept me from getting out for a Montana elk hunt. Hope was that I could get three or four days in during the middle of the week. Nope, too many distractions that seemed more important than an over-the-counter elk tag. With Montana's long seasons I still had days to get out for elk.

(Oops, to many characters. Will split into two posts)
 
After that, it was all deer seasons. First was my attempt to take a mountain whitetail in the thick stuff. Three days produced four small bucks. Not what I came to chase. Hopefully they grow to be something another hunter will tag in five years. A few grouse took it on the chin, but my hope for a mountain whitetail is still an open tag.

A peak rut mule deer tag seemed like a slam dunk. I’d hunted there before. The storyline was to hunt the lower country BLM grounds that would have been sold under the Mike Lee proposal of July. So often I hear, “It’s only 600 (or 400, or 200, or…) acres, why are you so worked up.” I wanted to show that these small parcels might be a local person’s go-to place. Or most likely, is the parcel that gets them access to the larger 50K acre public chunk that would otherwise be inaccessible.

More warm weather complicated that lower country hunt. Saw plenty of deer, but again, nothing over 3.5 years old and only two that might have been that old. Probably should have moved higher, but we’d already determined the storyline was going to be parcels likely to be sold by politicians, so that tag is in a drawer, unpunched.

Personal complications of my own, of Mrs. Fin’s health, and her failing mother took out the week of Thanksgiving. Oh well, with all that Mrs. Fin puts up with, I’ll always open my calendar for times she needs help in those instances.

Prior to my four days in Vegas volunteering for the RMEF Hunter and Outdoor Christmas during the NFR week, I was again in Arizona. Basking in the sun, glassing for Coues deer, and wishing I didn’t have coverage that could distract me with the stupid ideas coming out of DC. Marcus and I always make our second AZ deer choice one of the easiest-to-draw deer tags in AZ. I put in with a friend and Marcus applied with his Dad. None of us drew our first choice (I’ve only drawn first choice once in 30 years of applying in AZ). By coincidence, both our apps had the same unit for second choice and both parties drew.

That turned out to be the highlight trip of the season. No big bucks were taken, though three out of four tags were filled, with me being the one who did not take a shot. It was fun to wrap up a season with fun people, hunting an area where any buck is fair game, and starting to change our luck for what I hope will be a better season in 2026.

This was the season I was supposed to get Uncle Larry out for another hunt. His cancer is back in a big way. He’s fighting like hell, as he always does and if anyone will win the battle my bet is on him. Suffice to say, with blood clots, brain bleeds caused by chemo, and the overall sickness that comes with those treatments he wasn’t able to go. In August, he told me to tear up the tags he drew and to surrender any points I’ve built for him in other states. Talking to him recently, he’s doing better. He asked if I’d still keep his Arizona sheep points intact. Sure thing. We even discussed a pronghorn possibility for 2026 if he keeps improving. I do agree that his elk and deer hunting day are in the rearview mirror. He motivates me and keeps me from sniveling about thing in my life that are merely a minor inconvenience compared to the last eighteen months that he has been through.

Some highlights and excitement come with every season. In spite of some hard days in the field, this season had some of those highlight day. First ptarmigan (six of them in total), a new easier-than-normal elk spot discovered (multiple days I could have shot a legal bull) when I only had a deer tag, helping Ted Roosevelt get what he thinks was his final elk a few weeks before his 83rd birthday, a mid-season detour to hammer some Oregon mallards with Matthew and his friends, stalking a huge grizzly with a tag in my pocket, and some great stories about public lands and the importance of those lands (even if we didn’t fill any tags in the process).

It will be interesting to see what the audience thinks of this season. We’ve never had so much material to work with on the public land issue, given how Mike Lee & Co continue to come up with stupid ideas. I had chances to shoot some deer, but if a deer is not 4.5 or older I’m not shooting. Which explains why I have so many Montana deer tags in my box of unpunched tags. Some think it is about seeking a huge set of antlers. Well, if a deer was 4.5 and had huge antlers, all the better. I’ve shot plenty of 4.5+ YO bucks that don’t have much for headgear.

It was also a season of reflection on what I could have done wrong with that archery bull. It haunted me, even while on other hunters. It was a slightly downhill angle. The arrow hit the opposite shoulder and never exited. Maybe it hit an inch or two lower than I think, which combined with a downhill angle, could have taken the arrow under the near lung. I’m still convinced he’s dead and I am going back spring bear hunting to try find what’s left of him.

Working on the draft of that archery elk episode is challenging I know some will reject the message of me passing so many other bulls that I could have shot in the days of gridding and searching. I’m aware that I have way more hunting opportunity than most watching and thus they might view my decisions differently. I’m trying to craft the story as a lesson learned; even when it seems perfect and is the shot you dreamed of something can still go wrong.

Short of stumbling upon that bull dead, or with a wound, there is no way to know for sure if he is dead. I know it was not a flesh wound that he walked away from and started chasing cows ten minutes later. He b-lined to the thickest stuff around and bedded for the night. On that mountain he was the boss, noisy and conspicuous, never to be seen again after I shot. Maybe age has taken ability from me. Even with a range in my yard and shooting multiple times each day, it seems that messing up a 30-yard shot on a quartering bull should cause me to reconsider if archery is in my future.

I haven’t posted much over the last four months, for many reasons. All of which I am grateful for in some strange way, all giving me perspective and helping tweak my priorities in life a little finer.

Wishing all of you a very Merry Christmas and may 2026 be the best year you and your family has ever experienced.

I'll try to post some pics of the season.
 
Some pics of the season.

Looking for mule deer. A few around. The lack of cheatgrass and the quality of the range was surprising. Hope to be back here soon.
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Without these guys, my backcountry days would be closing a lot faster than they are. Happy to take the small time and effort to keep them prepped.
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A shady oasis to avoid the heat of September's sun.
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Amazing night time lightning shot by Marcus. The associated rain is worrisome when you'll be back on the blood trail in the morning.
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Who would have known that not long after this would be an eight-mile trek on a broken leg that would require orthopedic hardware. Yikes. Goat country can be unforgiving.
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2.5 years old. Last evening and all downhill to the truck. Hope he grows to be a big one.
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A first for me. Note, if you post a video about ground slooshing birds, which is my preferred way to clip their noggins off, expect a huge backlash.
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Lucky for Bruce that one bull decided to migrate before we left.
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Thanks @Big Fin for all the great work you and the crew do for conservation and helping us live vicariously through your adventures!

Merry Christmas to you, your crew and all your loved ones!
 
A mid-season distraction that was a welcome break from cameras and politicians.
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If the caribou aren’t migrating, the spruce grouse will take it on the beak.
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A picture and story I never knew of even though I was Trustee for this ranch over a decade. Post-Presidency (circa 1910-1912) hunting trip of President Roosevelt on the front steps of “The Big House” at the ranch where his great grandson would shoot an elk in 2025.
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