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Pine Donkey

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Everything posted by Pine Donkey

  1. Pine Donkey

    Friends, Family and Good Times

    Thanks for posting this great story! That is a nice bunch of bucks.
  2. Pine Donkey

    Are the elk confused?

    A couple of buddies are on the November archery bull hunt right now and are in the middle of crazy rutting activity. The bulls are bugling like crazy, they are sparing, and tearing up the trees. The bugling is going on all day long? these are the big bulls, not the small ones. They are not coming to calls and they do not have big groups of cows, but they are active and vocal. What is happening is year? Hope it is still going on in two weeks.
  3. Pine Donkey

    Thankful...

    I am thankful for wonderful family and friends, the beautiful outdoors, and having the health to enjoy it all.
  4. Pine Donkey

    November Archery Bull

    A bull with a bow in November is quite an accomplishment! Congratulations!
  5. Pine Donkey

    stuck cases in my resizing die

    +1 on the brake clean and also a little lube inside the neck.
  6. Pine Donkey

    Drumsticks

    Looks delicious!
  7. Pine Donkey

    Unit 22 Bull Elk

    Those late archery hunts are tough! Great elk!
  8. Pine Donkey

    Unit 8 November Archery

    Let's see the pics. Congratulation on te kill .
  9. Pine Donkey

    Az Muzzy elk hunt

    Nice bull, congratulations! I have had pigs run my way and even brush my leg as they scattered...it was pretty intense, but they were just pigs. Elk running at you must have got the blood pumping pretty good!
  10. Pine Donkey

    goofy buck

    I bet he gets teased by all the other young bucks!
  11. Pine Donkey

    Humpty Dumpty

    That is a great buck. I have seen some mounts where Wellers had repaired the horns...you will be very happy. You will have a beautiful trophy on the wall in no time. Look at the bright side, you didn't ruin any meat. Congratulations on a great buck!
  12. Pine Donkey

    A hunt to remember with my mom and brother

    Great story. I love the hunting families! Congratulations to all!
  13. Pine Donkey

    New video up on YouTube

    Great video!
  14. Pine Donkey

    06 Chevy rear end problem

    I have a 06 Chevy 3/4 ton duramax with only 68,000 miles. It has a small gear oil leak where the right axel housing is pulling out of the rear differential. The dealership shop tells me the only fix is to replace the entire rear end. $2000 plus. I have read on the internet that some have had success welding the tube back in, although it is difficult to weld the steel housing to the cast pumpkin. Has anybody experienced this problem? Any suggestions?
  15. Pine Donkey

    Team Young Gunz Women's Coues Camp

    Carl, that is a very impressive hunt you put on. What a great time it looks like everybody had. Congratulations to all the hunters!
  16. Pine Donkey

    Wife's first Coues

    Great job. I love the fact she wanted you to buy a new gun. Good stuff!
  17. Pine Donkey

    Back from 13B

    Great story Coach! Not sure how I missed this post? You had a Great hunt and showed such a strong will to stickit out so long in the face of diversity. Thanks for posting the story and pictures, and congratulations on the stud buck!
  18. Pine Donkey

    3A-3C General Mule Deer Hunt Success! Big Bucks!!

    Great bucks!
  19. Pine Donkey

    Blew My Chance

    Don't be too hard on yourself. True education comes from experience and from mistakes. This makes you just a little smarter hunter than you were before. Thanks for posting the story.
  20. Pine Donkey

    Great Mule Deer Hunt

    Those are a couple great bucks! Thanks for taking the time to write the story up. Congratulations to both of you!
  21. Pine Donkey

    My camera didn't make it....burned up.

    I would rather have it burned than stolen. Still sucks either way! Nice to see the area recovering so nicely.
  22. Pine Donkey

    elk tag giveaway

    +1 on oefa
  23. Pine Donkey

    Are the elk confused?

    They are hunting in 27
  24. Pine Donkey

    The Red Ryder Buck

    Great story, one of he best in a long time. That is a great buck...has the neck of rutting buck.
  25. Mark (MJE1) and I had a couple left over tags for this past weekend. We, along with my son Garrett, scout year around. Most of the off-season work is done by Mark and Garrett with their network on game cams spread across three units. The off-season work always seems to pay dividends. On our last scouting trip, the Sunday before the season opener, we watched 12 bucks, 4 of them were likely shooters. I was interested in the heavy 3 x 2 that we had watched for a couple years, Mark wanted to get a better look at the narrow buck with good tines. Opening day finally arrive. As first light began to glow it found Garrett, Cody, and me on top of a favorite classing point after a hike in the dark, and Mark in bed trying to kick a stomach bug. From the hilltop we were able to find seven bucks, as we got soaked by wave after wave of rain. Finally, Garrett spotted a buck with a heavy frame, but it was not one we recognized. At a long distance, without direct sunlight and through the rain we were not able to put points on him so we moved in for a closer look. Well all we did was bump him and sent him running out of the country. Saturday Garrett and I again hiked to the hilltop in the dark, only to sit in fog with less than 100 yard visibility. After about three hours it began to break up and we were able to find a few small bucks, but nothing that looked too good. Mark spent the morning with his son Jon glassing the same area from a different direction. Sunday arrived, and finally the weather was clear. Mark, Garrett and I were again at the glassing point before first light. By sun up we had found over twenty deer, including 9 bucks, but none of the big bucks we knew were in there. Jon joined us about 10:00 after getting off work at 8AM. Jon is a firefighter and this was the begining of his 4 day break. About 11:30 Mark spotted a good buck feeding high on the mountain. As we watcher through the spotting scope we determined it was the good 3 x 3 that we always see with the heavy 3 x 2, but we never see him alone...where is the 3 x 2? We watched the buck feed around the mountain, but never saw his buddy. After a while of scratching our heads and exploring possibilities Garrett decided to get on the ridgetop behind the mountain the 3 x 3 walked around. He would glass and try to find the 3 x 2. I did not like this idea because it meant Garrett climbing over 1000 feet up one of the steepest, roughest ridges anywhere. Once up there, he would have to move along the ridge top, rock slides and out croppings all the while if he finds the buck, I am not going to try to get up there. All of this fell on the deaf ears of a teenage boy being advised by his dad. Garrett made his treak of several miles and sure enough he found the 3 x 3, and his scent caused him to get up and move back around to our side of the mountain. As he did, he picked up the heavy 3 x 2. How could we have missed him...he was there all the time. These little deer sure disappear when the lay down. At over a mile we really did not have a chance to see him until he stood up. We watched them work their way down hill and then bed again. While they moved, so did Garrett. He sent us some pictures of the bucks. The 3 x 2 must be regressing. His G2's are quite a bit shorted than last year, but he is still a good buck. With the bucks bedded Mark and I decided to try to get into position. Garrett was on the mountain top above them and Jon was staying on the glassing hill as spotters. It took us about an hour to move across the valley to our shooting spot. The shot would be 360 yards at a very steep uphill angle. We were set up and waiting for him to stand. The wait was only about 10 minutes. He stood up, we analyzed the shot then I squeezed one off. "You hit him, but he needs another", Mark said. Jon and Garrett were both able to watch where he went down after he was hit again. Now we had to climb up there through the jungle of growth, huge boulders, and steep angle. The 400 yards took us 45 minutes. In the pictire you can see I am actually laying down so I don't slip on the hillside. I shot the deer at just after 3:00 and it was after 7 when we made it back to the truck. Garrett and Jon did all the packing of the deer, Mark and I only carried our gear. Daybreak on Monday found Mark, Garrett, James (son of another hunting buddy MCElk) and me on the same hilltop. What the heck, where did all this wind come from? At first light we found three small bucks, then Garrett said, "Mark I got your buck" He stayed in the open for less than 2 minutes then dropped into a thick cut long before the sunlight could light him up. We made a plan that sent Garrett and Mark toward a little hilltop that would allow them to look into the cut...hopefully. This would be a long shot so they took the rainmaker (Jon's .300 RUM) with them. As they moved withing 1500 yards they slowwed down and glassed often. During this time Mark spotted him as he ran over a small ridge towards them and dove under a tree. We are not sure why he decided to move or why he did so at full speed. There were no other hunters in the area; maybe he just needed to get into a better spot with all the wind messing with his senses. Mark and Garrett made a new plan and found a new place to set up. They were 575 yards and could not get any closer. they did not have much wind where they were, but they could see the trees swaying violently above the deer. How much bullett drift would there be...half a mill dot? a full mill dot? it was a hard call to make. They could only see the buck from his brow and up. Now they just needed to wait until he stood up. Mark was prone behind the gun, Garrett was in his Kaibabs set on the tripod, surely the buck would stand soon. Two and a half hours later he finally stood up briefly, stretched and began to lay down again. Mark saw his chance and fired...the buck came rolling down the hill. Again, Mark and I only had to pack out the gear as Garrett and James packed the deer to the truck. All those years of taking these kids out hunting is now paying off big time. This was a very difficult hunt in rough country, but what a great time we had. I am just not sure how many more years I will be willing to hunt coues in vertical country. We made a trip to St. David to drop the deer off with our taxidermist Stacy Tompkinson. Now its time to start working for January and for next year.
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