Leaving in a couple weeks for an antelope/deer hunt.
These poor boys in CO got me thinking about solo hunting a bit more seriously this year and being more cautious than normal.
So let's hear your close calls, I'll start.
Can't recall if I've ever told this story here or not, but anyways, backpacking trip with my uncle, early June, Olympic Peninsula. Mid to low 60's in the low country, but a few miles into the wilderness area and things were chilly and rainy. We were looking for his old hunting camp, complete with cached tent, stove, and drilled eye bolts in the rock for tarps. Right off the bat I could tell my uncle didn't bring a great rain jacket, more of a wind breaker than anything, that by 30 minutes into the slight drizzle was already soaked pretty well through. Being a stubborn Vietnam vet and having spent years in those mountains he didn't want to use my rain coat. Made it into our camp site for the evening, with plans to push higher the next day.
He said something to my daughter the last time we were there reminiscing about the trip about how "your dad saved me" which I thought was a little hyperbolic, but thinking back things definitely could have gone south quick. As soon as we stopped for the night I made him take off his wet "rain jacket" and switch for my down puffy and soft shell. That left me with my raincoat and a merino long john shirt. His fingers weren't working to do the zippers so I had to help get him situated. I stayed plenty warm running around scrounging any bit of dry kindling/wood (no easy feat on the OP in spring time) to start a fire. Fortunately I had some of these little white fire starter nugget things in my pack along with the matches and lighters, so getting a decent flame to start wasn't that big of a deal. I would gather a little pile of sticks, run back, dump them on the fire and check on him, then run back out and grab more sticks and repeat, until the fire was big enough to handle some of the bigger damp stuff. Once he regained his senses a bit and we'd eaten and warmed up, I made sure to help set up his tent and check that his sleeping bag was dry. I could tell he was reluctant only on principle alone when I boiled some water in a nalgene and wrapped it in a wool sock for him to sleep with. The next morning was very similar weather wise, we started another fire to warm up, started up the trail but he was dragging pretty bad. Think the day before took too much out of him. We turned back and called it a trip.
Never seemed like the situation was real out of hand, but I could certainly see how a situation could get there real fast.
These poor boys in CO got me thinking about solo hunting a bit more seriously this year and being more cautious than normal.
So let's hear your close calls, I'll start.
Can't recall if I've ever told this story here or not, but anyways, backpacking trip with my uncle, early June, Olympic Peninsula. Mid to low 60's in the low country, but a few miles into the wilderness area and things were chilly and rainy. We were looking for his old hunting camp, complete with cached tent, stove, and drilled eye bolts in the rock for tarps. Right off the bat I could tell my uncle didn't bring a great rain jacket, more of a wind breaker than anything, that by 30 minutes into the slight drizzle was already soaked pretty well through. Being a stubborn Vietnam vet and having spent years in those mountains he didn't want to use my rain coat. Made it into our camp site for the evening, with plans to push higher the next day.
He said something to my daughter the last time we were there reminiscing about the trip about how "your dad saved me" which I thought was a little hyperbolic, but thinking back things definitely could have gone south quick. As soon as we stopped for the night I made him take off his wet "rain jacket" and switch for my down puffy and soft shell. That left me with my raincoat and a merino long john shirt. His fingers weren't working to do the zippers so I had to help get him situated. I stayed plenty warm running around scrounging any bit of dry kindling/wood (no easy feat on the OP in spring time) to start a fire. Fortunately I had some of these little white fire starter nugget things in my pack along with the matches and lighters, so getting a decent flame to start wasn't that big of a deal. I would gather a little pile of sticks, run back, dump them on the fire and check on him, then run back out and grab more sticks and repeat, until the fire was big enough to handle some of the bigger damp stuff. Once he regained his senses a bit and we'd eaten and warmed up, I made sure to help set up his tent and check that his sleeping bag was dry. I could tell he was reluctant only on principle alone when I boiled some water in a nalgene and wrapped it in a wool sock for him to sleep with. The next morning was very similar weather wise, we started another fire to warm up, started up the trail but he was dragging pretty bad. Think the day before took too much out of him. We turned back and called it a trip.
Never seemed like the situation was real out of hand, but I could certainly see how a situation could get there real fast.
