Day 4:
Frigid night, sub zero weather in the morning, our 20 degree bags did not suffice. We had a small propane heater but limited propane so we'd periodically turn it on to warm up then turn it off again to conserve fuel throughout the night. Our morale was pretty low in the morning, neither of our boots had done well in the snow - both soaked thoroughly the day then frozen overnight (Danners really disappointed me on this trip). We warmed up in the truck, did a little glassing but generally puss'd out and didn't do much other than glass until the sun came out. Saw a couple cows and a raghorn in the same field, no bulls.
Hiked back to the draw that had been holding deer every time we'd been by, at this point we both agreed we'd take any buck. I had a graduate school interview on day 5 (via Zoom) so I grudgingly decided I needed to take a shot if it presented. No deer in the draw, lots of prints though. We spent most of the day hiking and slow hunting through the woods. A few does but no bucks. Man did 47 seem to have some terrible ratios!
That evening my buddy was on the ridge that'd we'd spotted the bulls from. I was in the valley near where I'd spotted a forky with does the day before. We pulled out the walkie talkies that afternoon, he radioed me an hour before sunset that there was a group of deer with a small buck in the Aspens near where the elk had been. I hustled my way from the valley up the trail on the backside of the hill and made my way through the dark timber to get to the edge of the Aspens. Through the radio my buddy told me I was within 150 yards of the deer. The Aspen grove was thick though with a lot of saplings and I couldn't see them. I cautiously moved down the hill towards them, trying to pick apart the woods to find an ear or an antler that would give away the buck. I continued to slowly ease my way towards the deer - my buddy telling me that I was well within 100 yards. Using a small pine to hide behind I finally found a single deer's head through the sapplings - once again a doe. I was torn on what to do prudence would dictate waiting behind cover for the deer to move - hopefully towards me, but I was losing daylight and worried that by the time I was able to find the buck through the trees it'd be too late to see him through my optic. I decided to ease in a little closer, using a draw to hide my approach. Within a couple steps I was sliding on a small downed tree that was hiden in the snow. The deer heard me and spooked, I finally saw the rest of the group as they ran up the hill past me. A small doe separated from the group and stopped to look at me from 30 yards away, but I couldn't find the buck.
Defeated and almost out of light I started trudging down the hill to the valley. I had roughly 600' to drop and had forgotten my headlamp so I made quick time, slipping and sliding down the steep slope through the snow. Nearing the bottom I caught movement out of the corner of my eye, a few quick bounds then a doe froze looking at me from 80 yards away. I froze and slowly pulled out my binoculars - we looked at each other for maybe 10 seconds, I couldn't see her well through the saplings, but didn't see anything between her ears. "Come on God, put some antlers on that thing" I thought to myself. Kinda funny thought, but that's what went through my head. A couple seconds later the deer dropped it's head to sniff - antlers!!! Small but definitely there. I had an easy shot, took it standing braced off the tree. The buck ran 30 yards after he was shot then stood, struggling to maintain his balance. I considered putting another round in him, but he looked wobbly enough, so I gave him another 10 seconds then watched him fall.
It was a mixed feeling to see him drop. With him went my hopes of getting a mature mule deer in 2020, but he was the third animal I'd been able to harvest, the freezer would be full, and I'd gotten an antelope buck on a hunt I'd started with low expectations. I radioed my buddy, tried to setup the cellphone for a self-timer shot but couldn't get it to focus in the dark.
Laughing at myself for forgetting my headlamp, I got to work cutting in the dark with my phone light propped up in an attempt to provide enough illumination to work by. 15 minutes later my buddy was there and we made quick work of the buck. It was a short pack out down the hill. We laughed at how I'd spent an hour trying to sneak up on the deer my buddy had spotted and ended up spooking them despite knowing exactly where they were and approaching as slowly as possible, only to stumble in to one as I crashed down through the brush making plenty of noise in my attempt to get to the valley before dark.
In town we grabbed a quick shower then enjoyed a late night with wings and beer in a mostly deserted tavern in Aspen.