squirrel
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2013
- Messages
- 736
No doubt a lot of people are out there with way too much time grating on their hands right now. A long story, of a long hunt, to occupy you for this long spring.

In the late 80’s when I started making some decent money I made a decision to start applying in some of the neighboring states for some of the hard to draw species. This would give me some additional chances to go on a hunt for sheep, goats, and moose. I wanted to try for WY sheep very badly and sent off for the packet of non-resident information. Almost as an afterthought I sent an additional $750 for Shiras moose also. The application asked for a “type” of license, in addition to species and unit, this confused me a little and when I got drawn just a few weeks later my first thought was I had screwed up and drawn a nonresident cow moose tag by mistake. This proved to be incorrect and I was a bull moose hunter on my very first attempt.
I was very excited about this and immediately headed off with my girlfriend on a camping trip in the late spring to the unit I had drawn near Jackson Hole. We pulled in to set up camp in the dark next to a creek and early the next morning I let her sleep in while I was off to see the surrounding country. I was very excited to find some “moose eggs” and some old tracks in the willows around the creek I hiked up. When I got back to camp I found my girl had just watched two young bulls walk 10 yards from the tent while she held the dogs. We followed in the direction they had gone and easily caught up with them and they were in no way concerned about us from only 50 yards away as we watched them. I immediately decided to chase these semi-tame critters with a bow, since it would be so easy!
We spent the rest of the long weekend scouting the areas’ roads and trailheads and going on a few short walks up trails all signed to beware of the grizzly bears. Special camping restrictions were in force throughout the unit, specifically food storage rules. We had no issues as we were “car camping” and I figured I could always out run my darling if push came to shove, as long as I pushed and shoved first… We saw no bears, just a lot of elk and beautiful country, but no more moose.
I set up to take the entire season off from work- 2 full months, counting the early archery only part of the hunt. I got everything finished up and was able to head out with my dog, truck, ATV, and camping trailer on about 8-27 for a 9-1 opening day. I set up my camping trailer in the geographic center of the unit and figured if I had need I would spike out to the outer edges of the unit in a tent camp to save gas and travel time. I was delighted to see a cow and her calf come in to the beaver ponds that first evening just a quarter mile from my base camp. I spent the next couple days hiking up the creeks around there and driving some of the main roads during the middle of the day to get the general idea of the lay of the land. Moose sign was abundant and the moose were visible right at first and last light as it was very hot and dry. I quickly figured out that the bulls were still in bachelor groups and in a velvet horn state. I located some clear cuts a few miles from camp that consistently held moose in the evening and I decided to concentrate there.

I had some trouble finding a moose for the first couple days but then on about the third evening I saw 3 young bulls come out to feed on the shaded side of the cuts and I had enough time to make an approach. For the last half hour of daylight I watched in wonder from about 40 yards away as they fed and interacted with each other. I was hooked even though they were skinny horned little guys- they were HUGE. I desperately wanted a moose that looked like a moose, palmated horns with a decent spread were my bare minimums, and of course I would have really liked a monster, if he happened to show up. I continued to poke around these cuts and had trouble seeing approachable moose as they were like vampires in the heat of late summer. As soon as the sun was up they were gone, but there they would be, crossing the road in my headlights on my way back to camp in the evenings. Around the 10th of Sept. the bulls started to shed their velvet and almost immediately it cooled a bit and they were out a bit earlier and later in daylight as the rifle season started. I stuck with my decision to use a bow.
It was about the 12th when I was running a few minutes late to my clear cut spot and a mile before I got there and I saw my first real bull out of the truck window. I parked and came in from the north and found him with 2 other bull buddies- one little guy and a very good bull, but not nearly as big as the best one. I shadowed the group from around a hundred yards back, as they fed up the little gulch without giving me an opportunity to get in bow range. I gave the big one the name “Horny” and his buddy was “Blackie” as he was black as coal. They were all hard-horned and though he would have been an acceptable trophy just a day before, Blackie was safe, as I really wanted Horny badly. They gave me the slip when they disappeared into the timber to bed for the day and I left them without a clue that I had been there. That evening I missed them but the following morning there they were feeding in the tiny creek at the upper end of a long clearing. I made a stalk and just missed getting into range of Horny as he walked to the timber and started beating up a 20 foot tall lodge pole pine. I used the racket to sneak up on him, walking directly in his fresh tracks. I was close to being in position for a shot when I saw Blackie leaving the creek and coming up the exact way Horny had used to get into the timber. This was going to be a problem as I was crouched right in Horney’s tracks; I was crouched next to a little clump of willow brush maybe 3 feet tall and 3 feet around.
I froze and watched Blackie come in behind me and stop dead when he saw me. His hooves were maybe 4 feet from my butt; I could see his left antler out of the corner of my eye and was amazed when it rotated as he stretched out his huge snoot to take a whiff of this strange object in his path. I felt the suction from his inhalation when he sniffed the back of my neck. I watched his shadow snap up as he recoiled his head at the stench but didn’t move, then slowly stretched out and did it a second time more cautiously, as if needing a second take to verify this strange development. This time he whiffed and blew out a huge moose snort, and when he blew, he blew moose snot all over the back of my neck. This scared the piss out of me and I flinched and he ran a small circle around me and went over by his now alert buddy and they both stared at me for a few minutes. I was unable to get a shot as they worked up into the timber and bedded down for the day. I retreated to clean the snot off of the back of my neck and get set up for the evening- as there was no doubt where I would hunt that evening!


In the late 80’s when I started making some decent money I made a decision to start applying in some of the neighboring states for some of the hard to draw species. This would give me some additional chances to go on a hunt for sheep, goats, and moose. I wanted to try for WY sheep very badly and sent off for the packet of non-resident information. Almost as an afterthought I sent an additional $750 for Shiras moose also. The application asked for a “type” of license, in addition to species and unit, this confused me a little and when I got drawn just a few weeks later my first thought was I had screwed up and drawn a nonresident cow moose tag by mistake. This proved to be incorrect and I was a bull moose hunter on my very first attempt.
I was very excited about this and immediately headed off with my girlfriend on a camping trip in the late spring to the unit I had drawn near Jackson Hole. We pulled in to set up camp in the dark next to a creek and early the next morning I let her sleep in while I was off to see the surrounding country. I was very excited to find some “moose eggs” and some old tracks in the willows around the creek I hiked up. When I got back to camp I found my girl had just watched two young bulls walk 10 yards from the tent while she held the dogs. We followed in the direction they had gone and easily caught up with them and they were in no way concerned about us from only 50 yards away as we watched them. I immediately decided to chase these semi-tame critters with a bow, since it would be so easy!
We spent the rest of the long weekend scouting the areas’ roads and trailheads and going on a few short walks up trails all signed to beware of the grizzly bears. Special camping restrictions were in force throughout the unit, specifically food storage rules. We had no issues as we were “car camping” and I figured I could always out run my darling if push came to shove, as long as I pushed and shoved first… We saw no bears, just a lot of elk and beautiful country, but no more moose.
I set up to take the entire season off from work- 2 full months, counting the early archery only part of the hunt. I got everything finished up and was able to head out with my dog, truck, ATV, and camping trailer on about 8-27 for a 9-1 opening day. I set up my camping trailer in the geographic center of the unit and figured if I had need I would spike out to the outer edges of the unit in a tent camp to save gas and travel time. I was delighted to see a cow and her calf come in to the beaver ponds that first evening just a quarter mile from my base camp. I spent the next couple days hiking up the creeks around there and driving some of the main roads during the middle of the day to get the general idea of the lay of the land. Moose sign was abundant and the moose were visible right at first and last light as it was very hot and dry. I quickly figured out that the bulls were still in bachelor groups and in a velvet horn state. I located some clear cuts a few miles from camp that consistently held moose in the evening and I decided to concentrate there.

I had some trouble finding a moose for the first couple days but then on about the third evening I saw 3 young bulls come out to feed on the shaded side of the cuts and I had enough time to make an approach. For the last half hour of daylight I watched in wonder from about 40 yards away as they fed and interacted with each other. I was hooked even though they were skinny horned little guys- they were HUGE. I desperately wanted a moose that looked like a moose, palmated horns with a decent spread were my bare minimums, and of course I would have really liked a monster, if he happened to show up. I continued to poke around these cuts and had trouble seeing approachable moose as they were like vampires in the heat of late summer. As soon as the sun was up they were gone, but there they would be, crossing the road in my headlights on my way back to camp in the evenings. Around the 10th of Sept. the bulls started to shed their velvet and almost immediately it cooled a bit and they were out a bit earlier and later in daylight as the rifle season started. I stuck with my decision to use a bow.
It was about the 12th when I was running a few minutes late to my clear cut spot and a mile before I got there and I saw my first real bull out of the truck window. I parked and came in from the north and found him with 2 other bull buddies- one little guy and a very good bull, but not nearly as big as the best one. I shadowed the group from around a hundred yards back, as they fed up the little gulch without giving me an opportunity to get in bow range. I gave the big one the name “Horny” and his buddy was “Blackie” as he was black as coal. They were all hard-horned and though he would have been an acceptable trophy just a day before, Blackie was safe, as I really wanted Horny badly. They gave me the slip when they disappeared into the timber to bed for the day and I left them without a clue that I had been there. That evening I missed them but the following morning there they were feeding in the tiny creek at the upper end of a long clearing. I made a stalk and just missed getting into range of Horny as he walked to the timber and started beating up a 20 foot tall lodge pole pine. I used the racket to sneak up on him, walking directly in his fresh tracks. I was close to being in position for a shot when I saw Blackie leaving the creek and coming up the exact way Horny had used to get into the timber. This was going to be a problem as I was crouched right in Horney’s tracks; I was crouched next to a little clump of willow brush maybe 3 feet tall and 3 feet around.
I froze and watched Blackie come in behind me and stop dead when he saw me. His hooves were maybe 4 feet from my butt; I could see his left antler out of the corner of my eye and was amazed when it rotated as he stretched out his huge snoot to take a whiff of this strange object in his path. I felt the suction from his inhalation when he sniffed the back of my neck. I watched his shadow snap up as he recoiled his head at the stench but didn’t move, then slowly stretched out and did it a second time more cautiously, as if needing a second take to verify this strange development. This time he whiffed and blew out a huge moose snort, and when he blew, he blew moose snot all over the back of my neck. This scared the piss out of me and I flinched and he ran a small circle around me and went over by his now alert buddy and they both stared at me for a few minutes. I was unable to get a shot as they worked up into the timber and bedded down for the day. I retreated to clean the snot off of the back of my neck and get set up for the evening- as there was no doubt where I would hunt that evening!
