MS 9x56
AH elite
Only if you stand up to shoot.Hah! Had a tree lounge! Great for rifle I suppose, but scariest stand ever for bow. Easy to fall out.
Only if you stand up to shoot.Hah! Had a tree lounge! Great for rifle I suppose, but scariest stand ever for bow. Easy to fall out.
My gawd! How much was the sign language course at U of Alaska? I guess being deaf is better than being scalped.When we lived in Alaska I had a great spot for blackbear hunting. There was an old makeshift wood cabin/hut that provided just enough shelter to provide a dry spot to sleep at night.
I flew in (drop off) on a Friday after work and packed to the cabin for the night. Once I had my bedroll positioned and my 44 layed out next to me it was time to rest. Something special about falling asleep to the sound of loons and swans. Sleep can fast and I was out like a light.
At some point that night I awoke to what I can best describe as a vacuum by my ear.
Once I opened my eyes and tilted my head I found out what the vacuum noise was.
A blackbear had worked his head through a hole in the boarded wall and was sniffing my head. I shot him at about a foot with my 44 and had to pull his head out of the cabin. Good sized boar and the easiest packing trip of my hunting career to date.
I had a premonition that my brother had fallen out of his tree stand. It was strong enough to act on, and was about 11:00 am, so I went to the truck to go check on him. He drove up right then, saying he had just fallen out of his tree stand. He had moved it and was stomping on it to make sure it was set tight when the chain around the tree broke and he fell, facing the tree. He rolled back like a parachuter landing, but rolled so hard his head hit the ground and flung his glasses 10 feet. Said he was OK, but years later still has an achy middle of the back in bad weather.Last day of an Ohio bow hunt several years back. Drove from camp to the spot where we were parking, about 5 miles. We got out and started to get our climbers out as well as our bows. I then realized that I had neglected to put my Hunter‘s Safety system vest back in my bow case. Crap. No biggy, I can do without it for one hunt. Got about 50 yards into the woods, then told my partner
to go ahead, I’m going back to camp for my harness. Wasted about 30 minutes. Long story short, we had agreed to get down when the church bells in the valley next to us tolled noon, as we had to get on the road back to Texas. I used the lightest, easiest carrying stand on the market at that time. Coming down at 11, the upper snapped in half at 20 plus feet. I plunged headfirst toward the ground, my right foot stuck in the lower section. The straps grabbed me between the shoulders. Thank God for that moment of clear headedness earlier.
Was able to pull myself up to the platform by sheer adrenaline only, as I was doing a full split down the tree, with right foot still hung in the climber over my head. Ordered the beefiest stand on the market as we drove home. Summit Goliath , at the time. Still use it.
Ahh Bud, you were hunting with my buddy Jan then I suppose ?In 2015 I was hunting for Spotted Hyena in Namibia. We hung a Baboon carcass I had shot earlier about 100 yards from an elevated blind. My P dropped me off at the blind and drove the truck out of sight about 400 yards away. Minutes later a shot rang out. A hyena had followed my PH in the truck and approached to within 6 YARDS . Luckily he packs a .44 Magnum and shot it a 6 yards to end our Hyena hunt.
I know a "friend of a friend" who had to return fire all night long in Mozambique about 15 year's ago during a period of civil unrest.
One guy took an AK-47 round through the calf, but they managed to fend off the tribe until the tribe disappeared the next morning.
For those south of the border, F and C thermometers cross paths at -42. Coldest I have hunted moose, also solo, was -30 C. Sprained ankle can kill you in those conditions. Simply cannot stop moving or I'm dead.I was hunting by myself in the remote and unpopulated Saskatchewan river delta. Late season moose, mid-December. It had just snowed, knee deep and fluffy, and was very very cold, -42° that morning when I set out walking from my overnight camp. The kind of cold that hurts inside if you breathe too deeply. There was no hint of wind. I was making good time, slogging through heavy snow and trying to cut a moose track, when I found a big, lone wolf track instead. Decided to follow it.
A few hundred meters along, the track started to curve, and with no moose tracks to keep me occupied I followed it around. I eventually cut my own track, with the wolf track on top of mine. the wolf was now following me ... Time to reassess the situation.
So I circled in a wide arc, and picked up the wolf's track again, and tried to set up an ambush. There was hardly any sound in the bush, just the odd crack of a distant tree trunk exploding from the pressure of frozen sap in its trunk, and the groan of thick ice shifting in the river channel. The snow was too soft to reveal the sound of a moving animal. But it hid the sound of my steps too.
I couldn't wait long in the intense cold, so after a few minutes when the wolf didn't show up, I set out once more, making my way through the thick willows and spruce in a big arc in the opposite direction. But I had an odd feeling, and on a hunch, backtracked for a bit, then turned in the opposite direction and around back behind a dense bluff of stunted spruce where I again intercepted my own track. The wolf's tracks were on mine again.
So I tried my best several times to backtrack, cautiously circle and intercept, but no luck. He always knew I was there, figured out my next move, avoided me, and continued his pursuit. Unseen and unheard. This continued for several hours and several kilometers.
I never did catch up to him, and if he did actually see me, he must have been more curious than hungry. At least that's what I tell myself. It was kinda humbling. He was much better at this game than I was.
The next morning, I was back at it again, actually following a moose track this time when a pair of whitetail deer jumped out of a clump of willows and crossed a tiny meadow in front of me. I swung my .308 like a shotgun, and pressed the trigger when the crosshairs passed the nose of the first one. Click. jacked out the cartridge and tried on the buck following. Boom. He skidded on his nose and piled up snow in front of him. I fished the defective cartridge out of the snow. The primer was barely dented. Later, back by my campfire I found out that the oil in the firing pin mechanism had turned into something like molasses in the bitter cold.
I wonder if that wolf was a little more hungry if my rifle would have worked.
That is indeed a bit suspicious. Confirmed they left early?The fact that the PH and the rest of the staff had left camp makes me wonder if that there wasn't a setup of some kind.
I wasn't told the name of the safari company.
That is indeed a bit suspicious. Confirmed they left early?
Excellent write up. I want to be there. Thank you.All of mine came from the same hunt. My adventure of a lifetime in Botswana in 2023.
I "knew" to be afraid of elephants, especially cows, but I didn't "know" it down deep. I'd dreamed of elephant, but had never been on foot with elephant before. First 3 days were calm, we approached several bulls but we never got in their face or pushed anything. Day 4 started off on a bull trail, which was eventually lost on hard ground as we got close to some pans. So we continued down to the pans and surprised a bull at close range. He backed off, then mock charged twice with full vocal effects. Lots of adrenaline, but not really spooked. But starting to learn to fear elephants.
Left that pan, and just had time to calm down and get complacent on the trail, and ran smack dab into two young bulls. I was third in line and following and suddenly the trackers and my PH took off running in opposite directions. I followed the PH, one bull ran, and the other came close enough to see us then ran too. Again, not spooky, but several moments of adrenaline until I was able to figure out what was going on.
Back on a trail, mile after mile. Calm and getting tired. Pretty thick cover now, and suddenly the Trackers stop and point to our right, and there is a cow dusting just 20-25 yards to our right. We step out again and literally take two steps and hear a snore, and then an elephant calf jumps up to our LEFT at less than 10 yards and starts running. We're immediately running too, and the calf is running parallel to us. I now FEAR elephants. A calf that luckily remained silent, running, and we're already in the middle of the herd. Heart in throat, adrenaline overload, it feels like any moment this situation is going to get downright murderous. I'm 4 in line behind two trackers and the PH, and the game scout is behind me. He's unarmed and in such fear that he starts pushing me down to try to get in front and farther away
I now know what it's like to fear elephants. But day 4 isn't over. We relocated eventually and walk in to check some pans. We get in and there's two mature but non-trophy bulls that are fighting. Normally we wouldn't worry too much about mature bulls, but these were aggressive, maybe in musth. And they start to push each other towards the pan where we are. PH feels it prudent to cut the wind and dodge them. Which we do. And run smack into a cow herd heading to the pan. Fortunately the otherworldly trackers spot the cows before we're spotted, and we dodge them. Running again. Downwind. Dodging between the two groups of elephants.
I'm now hooked and love this. The adrenaline and fear is intoxicating. And I've picked up an especial fear of the cow herds. We would dance with them several more times. I think it was day 8 or 9 when we finally caught up with a group of 3 bulls that we'd been following for 10+ miles. They had picked a shady patch to spend the midday, and unbeknownst to us, they'd met up in the shade with a cow herd, and 11 other bulls. We were close to the bulls and were working in slowly when all hell breaks loose and the cow herd gets our wind and starts running away. At the same time there are unalarmed bulls walking around and we're trying to get in for judging. The feeling was almost surrounded by elephant. We're trying to see all the bulls, and the matriarch of the cow herd is coming BACK. We can't see her, but she's trumpeting and screaming and growling and very clearly getting closer. That growl they can do is chilling. We finally get a look at all bulls, most mature but none the right bull, and we get the hell out of there. Not being able to see the matriarch, but hearing her come closer, was probably even scarier than running from the middle of the cow herd that we could see.
I wanna go back
That sounds like an emergency situation. Wonder if @Global Rescue would do an emergency air drop of a resupply of beer and plenty of ice.I had a real hair-raising one last December, but that story will have to hold over for now........
Back in 1989, we were hunting in a real remote part of the African savannah, 3 days drive from any civilisation, late season so it was pretty hot already, a 30 day Safari and on day 15 we ran totally out of Beer.
Now that was hair raising and spooky.........