Nunyacreek
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2013
- Messages
- 310
The recent post looking for a Knapp saw reminded me of this story. The story was secondhand when I got it.
Sometime in the early ‘80’s in an outfitters camp at wolf lake on the Snag River on the North side of the Wrangells near Northway AK. I’m fairly sure it was Doc Taylor’s camp. I’ve been to the spot and Wolf Lake is tiny, Bud Conkle use to operate out of there on floats, it must have been a pretty big pucker factor on floats.
Anyway the guides were preparing trophies and a younger fellow fired up the chainsaw and was cutting the skull off a set of ram horns when he misjudged and cut about a third off of the off side horn off the ram. I’m not sure what the reaction was but I don’t think it was appreciative.
My sense was that Doc Taylor was at least as interested in horses as hunting so maybe this was just the way it was. I loved hearing those stories when we were hunting out of old outfitters areas. Bud Conkle wrote a lot about that country in his books, and when I was there I was with an outfitter named Matt Owen who wisely operated on wheels farther down the snag. I was also with a close friend and outfitter named Dave Leonard who had trapped out of the wolf lake cabin in the early ‘80’s. He taught me most of what I know about Alaska. There was a small wood cookstove and sheet metal stove as well in the cabin. I remember him telling me about getting to the cabin in winter and he’d fire up both stoves to warm it up, a fact that always stuck with me. He was trapping on foot..and that was cold country!
Sometime in the early ‘80’s in an outfitters camp at wolf lake on the Snag River on the North side of the Wrangells near Northway AK. I’m fairly sure it was Doc Taylor’s camp. I’ve been to the spot and Wolf Lake is tiny, Bud Conkle use to operate out of there on floats, it must have been a pretty big pucker factor on floats.
Anyway the guides were preparing trophies and a younger fellow fired up the chainsaw and was cutting the skull off a set of ram horns when he misjudged and cut about a third off of the off side horn off the ram. I’m not sure what the reaction was but I don’t think it was appreciative.
My sense was that Doc Taylor was at least as interested in horses as hunting so maybe this was just the way it was. I loved hearing those stories when we were hunting out of old outfitters areas. Bud Conkle wrote a lot about that country in his books, and when I was there I was with an outfitter named Matt Owen who wisely operated on wheels farther down the snag. I was also with a close friend and outfitter named Dave Leonard who had trapped out of the wolf lake cabin in the early ‘80’s. He taught me most of what I know about Alaska. There was a small wood cookstove and sheet metal stove as well in the cabin. I remember him telling me about getting to the cabin in winter and he’d fire up both stoves to warm it up, a fact that always stuck with me. He was trapping on foot..and that was cold country!