Author Topic: Stoke the Fire!  (Read 9213 times)

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Offline Little John

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Re: Stoke the Fire!
« Reply #30 on: November 30, 2010, 10:54:15 am »
Thanks for the pics Pat, both of those horses have gone to new homes, but we still have a couple for packing. I never got even near Salt Creek this whole season, too buzy making a living but plan to have a delux camp set up for the 2011 season. Can't wait for summer.      Kenneth
May all of your moments afield with bow in hand please and satisfy you.            G. Fred Asbell

Offline Wolf Watcher

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Re: Stoke the Fire!
« Reply #31 on: November 30, 2010, 02:54:46 pm »
Pat:  That picture looks like a horse mounted prospector!!  LJ:  Diamonds are a packer's best friend and I like seeing them on a pack!  Its good to know that there are some welders on the PA site.  Where abouts are you doing the camps and elk hunting? A/Ho Pokie
Get Close---Shoot Straight

Offline Pat B

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Re: Stoke the Fire!
« Reply #32 on: November 30, 2010, 03:23:30 pm »
Joe, we were along the Salt Creek drainage in the San Juan Mts in S.W. Colorado, above Durango.
  I might look like I know what I'm doing but all I was actually doing was holding on to the horn for dear life while the horse brought me out. That was the first time in almost 50 years for me on horseback but my riding style hasn't changed much!  ;D
Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes!    Pat Brennan  Brevard, NC

Offline Little John

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Re: Stoke the Fire!
« Reply #33 on: November 30, 2010, 08:39:54 pm »
Joe, I don't know if it really is a diamond or just an improvised squaw hitch but it works for me. The area is a large roadless  non motor vehicle  area that is only lightly hunted which suits me very well. At first I thought you were talking about Pat being a diamond. Diamond in the rough maybe.      Kenneth
May all of your moments afield with bow in hand please and satisfy you.            G. Fred Asbell

Offline Wolf Watcher

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Re: Stoke the Fire!
« Reply #34 on: November 30, 2010, 09:03:56 pm »
I'm old so I have a lot of elk stories.  When I lived in Reedsport, Or. there was a good sized elk herd that wintered in the hills and pastures along the Umpqua River on private land.  Oregon had a late season Feb. hunt to help with private farm crop damage.  I had permission to bow hunt there and one of the fellows that helped coach my wrestling team had a shad boat and dingy moored in the mouth of Dick creek.  The hills next to the big pasture were very steep and covered with heavy brush.  There had been a logging operation there years before and there was a logging road cut into the hill side that wound its way to the top and was narrow with a good sized cut bank on the up hill side and heavy brush on the down side.  You have to remember that I was raised in Cody, Wyoming so hunting the coast was new to me.  I took the dingy and poled my way up Deans Creek until I found a place to tie up the boat.  Pulled it as far as I could out of the water and tied it to a tree.  The plan was to hike up the logging road and wait until the elk fed out and move back into the hills for the day.  Well, there wasn't enough time to reach the top before the elk started up country and it amazed me at how fast and easily they caught up to me.  There was no chance in seeing them, but I could hear them below me.  I hunkered down and nocked an arrow thinking if one came out on the road I would maybe have a shot.  There was noise right across the road from me about 12 feet and a cow stuck her head out.  The hill was so steep that her head was about level with the road.  She was looking right at me and I was frozen with out a clue as what to do.  Head shots are a no no and trying to draw would cause her to fall off the mountain.  It seemed like an eternity that she stared at me, but when she retreated the whole hill side erupted and there were elk in the road above and below me and all sprinting to get out of there.  When I finally got over the rush of excitement I spent several hours following them thru the brush.  The plants there do not all loose their leaves in the winter so you can be right in the herd and never see them.  When I made it back to the boat it was getting dark and the tide had gone out ant the boat was a good 20 feet out of the water!  Did I say it had poured all day and I was soaked!  The locals never let me forget about being in tide country.  That area has since been made a refuge and you can see the herd from the highway.  A/Ho  Pokie
Get Close---Shoot Straight