2008 Hunting Season Is A Mixed Bag For Many
November 19th, 2008After spending nearly a month afield it seems like the stories from the wild has been either gold rush or bust. As usual weather has played a big roll and an apparent under-estimate of last year bone chilling winter kill plagued many of the states out here in the west.
It appeared that there was extremes in weather conditions. I was in South Dakota in early October chasing antelope and pheasants and we went from unseasonally warm, to extreme rain. The same front that dropped 2 ½ inches of very cold rain on South Dakota dropped two feet of snow on Montana and the northern parts of Wyoming. When you go from very warm and dry to freezing, wet and blowing it usually means the animals will react in a semi-panic mode. They’re up high in the hills and then here comes this storm that could very well trap them in the high country. More than likely you’ll see an early migration, at least from the smaller animals (deer & antelope).
Back in 1992 I got caught in what folks refer to as “the perfect storm.” I was in northern Colorado when three fronts converged together and stalled over that area for nearly nine days. It went from warm and dry to seven foot snow drifts. We had to abandon our camp at 10,500 feet and luckily we had horses that transported us out of harms way. Well, that same storm was responsible for wiping out nearly 90 % of the mule deer in that area because they got caught in the high basins and couldn’t get out to their winter range. Luckily for us we found a guy who was just as crazy as we were and he had a D8 Caterpillar who we hired to plow a twelve mile road to retrive our gear ( trucks, tents, trailers etc.) I’m sure the Routt National Forest had some new unautorized roads in the spring.
After a very successful antelope (3 for three) and pheasant hunt in South Dakota my hunting partner, Bill Keenan and I traveled to Western Wyoming right after the same front that dropped 2 ½ inches of rain on SD. We both had three antelope tags there and the conditions could not have been better. We arrived at our cabin to 16 – 18 inches of fresh snow and temperatures in the teens. The antelope were coming out of the hills like fleas. And, as I said earlier they were heading right to their winter grounds where they knew they would have groceries or at least be able to get to them through the crusty snow. The next three days were about as much fun as you could have hunting.

John with a Trio of Speed Goats
Unlike most other wild game animals you don’t have to get up at an ungodly predawn hour to persue antelope as they are pretty much out all day or at least visible. So getting up and having coffee and a hot breakfast was a very good change from the normal hunting experience. We literally saw over 1000 antelope. It was so much fun shopping for “the buck”. The doe tags we had were filled and we had a rule that they had to be singles (no does with fawns) and they had to be with fifty yards of where we could get the truck…..hey antelope hunting affords you those priviledges.

Sunset with a 15 1/2 inch Wyoming Buck
Our journey home had us hauling back 9 antelopes and a handfull of wild North Dakota Pheasants, in addition to a few tender cottontails. The freezers are full at my house! Stay tuned for a bunch of new antelope recipes in the weeks to come.

Bill Keenan, John and a full meat pole in Wyoming
Four days after my return from South Dakota and Wyoming I headed to northern California for our annual deer hunt during the late season. Last year was going to be impossible to match. Although the weather started to cooperate in early Septmeber it never materialized. When we arrived at our camp the temperature was in the mid-ninties! Not your ideal deer hunting weather and considering a week prior I was in the teens it was a bit disappointing. The openner came and each and every day a deer was taken and it seemed like our unit was the only one even seeing deer. Through focused hunting and not getting down because of the weather Tony Naples from Danville, CA was able to score on a monster 27 1/2 inch wide, heavy antlered three x three buy. To say he was happy would be an understatement. I don’t think he slept for the next two days. He had the right, what a great California Buck!

Tony’s great blacktail buck
We managed to go 9 out of 14 on deer. I took a nice big bodied 4×4, with eye guards …..at 11.35 am, when it was 85° F ….go figure?

John’s big body blacktail
It was quite an adventure and in thinking back on these three trips it was probably the most field cleaning I have ever done. In South Dakota we were six hunters and had taken 18 antelope. I probably cleaned, gutted and skinned at least 10 of those. In Wyoming I had my hand in all six and in northern California I cleaned at last 3-4 deer.
I would like to acknowledge a product that I had with me on all these trips. It was my Outdoor Edge Kodi- Pak. It performed flawlessly and with the help of a steel it kept its edge through all of those cleaning sessions. Over the years I’ve collected a lot of knives and have put them all to work. This line of cutlery from Outdoor Edge performed as good as any I’ve ever used including some that were more than twice the price. They’re durable, hold an edge, lightweight and come in a very sturdy leather sheath. I can say without reservation that this product is the real deal!
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Kodi-Pak from Outdor Edge Cutley











