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Main Boards => PowWow => Topic started by: jhg on January 22, 2022, 03:04:42 PM

Title: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 22, 2022, 03:04:42 PM
I was only half an elk hunter (if I can say that), until the archery season I experienced the elk opera. Anyone who hunts elk archery has heard about it. Buglefest, buglemania, elk madness, elk-insanity. Whatever its called every archery elk hunter should be gifted the experience first hand at least once in their lives. It is not overstating it to say not experiencing an elk opera is to miss out on one of the worlds greatest dramas.

Half an elk hunter?

The four days of non-stop theater I witnessed exhausted me mentally. It also galvanized what I knew about elk, erasing the doubts that were always shadowing my mind undermining my confidence that my decisions in regards to hunting them were sound. All these went away after experiencing the elk opera. Four solid days of constant bugles to the point you actually were wishing they would shut the hell up.

This story that follows is true, believe it or not. And arrows were flung.

[attachment=1,msg2989115]
Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: jhg on January 22, 2022, 04:02:38 PM
There are a few different ways to go after elk. There is the major trailhead technique practiced by almost every elk hunter on earth, (or so it seems), the "way-backcountry" wilderness epic bivy hunt, the "horses horses horses horse packing" wall tent extravaganza, the "get in a truck and drive" to a new spot two or three times a day (ugh) and then there is the "where the hunters are not" model.
This last one that is my style and I practice it religiously.
I read somewhere that an elk hunters odds of success went up if they returned to hunt the same unit every year. Do that 6 years in a row and you built up some serious credit! Right?

Right. Definitely right.

Knowing where you hunt is not so much about where the animals might be but about where they never are. Figure that out and you start seeing elk. I found an access point that was old twitch trails (logging) feeding into some regenerating timber, feed zones and bedding areas. Best of all there was a major hell hole of thick down fall, wets and otherwise dastardly thick old growth that elk love to use if pressured. No one is going to better an elk in that snarl. Trust me, I know. 
The question then became, would there be other hunters?
This wallow is in a meadow that borders where I experienced the elk opera. This is where hunters go and the elk know that. It is classic elk mating terrain and I have noticed that they avoid these areas more and more as hunters seek them out on g-earth and hit them hard in archery season. They become night haunts at best and old reminders of past, abandoned usage at worst.

[attachment=1]

Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: kennym on January 22, 2022, 05:25:07 PM
I'm all in!  :thumbsup:
Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: 4dogs on January 22, 2022, 05:51:15 PM
 :coffee:
Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: Over&Under on January 23, 2022, 04:10:09 PM
" It is not overstating it to say not experiencing an elk opera is to miss out on one of the worlds greatest dramas."

As true a statement as I've ever heard

I'm following this one 👍🏽
Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: jhg on January 23, 2022, 04:39:11 PM
I chose a small hard to see pull out that was one of the landings when the logging was being done. Overgrown now, it was just enough to get a pickup into and once there hidden from the road. Best of all, stepping out of the camper put you right onto the access trail/road into the area I wanted to hunt. I had hunted this place before and the elk sign was generally excellent once in a mile.

[attachment=1,msg2989254]

The first two days were typical elking- get up early, walk down the access trail, sit the transition zone awhile, explore for fresh sign and otherwise do what archers do when not seeing animals yet. I am not a bugle your head off to locate a bull elk at first light kind of hunter. It is a great way to hunt if you don't mind driving around a lot in a truck hoping to find that responsive bull. But, mostly, it alerts the elk a hunter is in the woods. I have experienced hunters coming into a drainage, bugling without learning the tone of the area and blowing the elk out. There are a lot of impatient elk hunters out there and they all seem to bugle a lot.

One morning as I stepped around a deadfall across the trail I surprised a bear. He had his head down but he saw/heard me instantly. He was gone in less than a second and there was no time to nock an arrow, no time to even consider it.

Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: jhg on January 23, 2022, 05:38:09 PM
On the way in the trail looked down onto this. Fourth morning came the first bugling out of here.

[attachment=1]
Title: Re: An elk opera. The Magic Flute
Post by: jhg on January 23, 2022, 05:45:51 PM
The elk liked to feed on the tender forbes and grasses along seeps. This seep was near the bottom of the drainage and fed a small creek.

[attachment=2,msg2989264]


I would wait for them as they came up into their bedding area from the bottom. I don't know why other hunters were not doing the same. But they all gravitated to the big meadows and majestic scenic spots they had been told to hunt.

Here is the creek and my spot was above a well used crossing that I am still blown away did not have a tree stand on it.

[attachment=1,msg2989264]
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Bvas on January 23, 2022, 07:39:18 PM
Keep it coming!!!
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 23, 2022, 09:06:53 PM
The bugles began on the opposite side of the drainage. Then, while I was still walking in to my sit spot, the whole valley opened up with bulls bugling everywhere. It was unlike anything I had ever experienced.

Bulls bugled, others answered. Above my sit spot there was a herd bull, fighting to keep control of what was his. I could tell it was the apex and the center of the drama. His bugles where altogether different. Raging, guttural and defiant. He was under attack, sort of, as the satellite onslaught was aimed not at him, but at his cows coming into estrus. He chose to defend. His genetics and his nature demanded it. Not all bulls have the mentality to be herd king. Its is not always size, or antlers or age. It is attitude. Some animals cannot be second and he was one of those that could not relent or back down.

He chose to fight.

[attachment=1,msg2989297]
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: elkken on January 23, 2022, 10:32:09 PM
 :jumper: :jumper: :coffee:

I no longer hunt elk seriously but I venture into elk country every fall to hear the elk opera .... it keeps me alive :archer2:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Killdeer on January 24, 2022, 06:49:31 PM
This is some seriously good storytelling! Love your pictures, love your prose.

Killdeer
(I'll be back!)
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 24, 2022, 07:32:06 PM
When did I become a bowhunter? Or should I say a traditional archer?  In my father's hunt closet were shotguns and rifles and fly rods and boots and one very old, well used wicker creel. If I held it close to my nose I could smell the trout. The oils of fish after fish after fish had over time wicked into the wicker around the woven square hole that allowed the fisherman (or woman) to basket them without lifting the lid.
But in the way back of the closet, in the dark corner that was blocked by jackets wool and canvas, the rod cases, the hats hanging on hooks several deep and every other clothing piece an outdoorsman acquires through living a woods life, was a longbow. Did it begin there, my bowhunting?
I don't know. Maybe it was always inside me  and needed no prompt. When I began hunting whitetails it was with a rifle. Yet I removed the scope and went with aperture sights. I aleady wanted to get closer. Then it wasn't enough to hunt the back forty. I had to paddle a canoe across a lake, hike some miles and hunt out of a lean-to for a week. All I needed was a bow hunting mentor to make the change from rifle, but there was none.
Anyway, it doesn't matter. I am an archer now, chasing elk.

[attachment=1,msg2989387]
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 24, 2022, 08:40:06 PM
This photo is of the game trail that led up from the creek to the bedding area. Although I took this picture another year when we got some weather, you get the idea. It is a great spot to wait and I would get there early before the elk moved upslope. I would sit back off the trail and just above it, maybe 15 yards. I did that for two reasons: 1) to keep my scent stream out of the trail corridor and 2) any elk 15 yards off the trail on either side would be in my kill zone. Animals do not generally use trails like we do, welded to the track. The game trail represents a corridor, the animals may walk it but just as likely they will be either side of it, feeding along.

[attachment=1,msg2989402]


The bugles continued and I spent some time chasing them locating satellite bulls. Early on I got within death range of two young 4x's. They must have been long time buddies, same age and size. This may have been their first real mating season, when the chemical cues in their bodies left them no choice but to participate.
The two stood on the tip edge of a finger ridge and were looking down into the timber that blocked our view of a big park beyond it.  I think they were not quite sure what to do. Down there were bigger, more experienced bulls very willing and able to kick teen elk butt. So they held themselves a little away.
Intent as these two were, listening to the drama below- bugles from every direction, loud bugles and far away location calls, nearby screams and course challenges, they never saw or heard me approach them.
The nearest youngster was perfectly broadside at 20 yards. I nocked an arrow, came to anchor and released. The arrow fluttered meagerly across the distance and stuck into the ground under the nearest bull. He jumped a little but they both continued to stand there. I had time to make another shot, but realized my heart wasn't really into it. I was after bigger bulls. I had made that decision a long time ago to go big or go home and it showed with the anemic half baked shot.

[attachment=2,msg2989402]

Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 26, 2022, 01:11:34 PM
Finally the two youngsters bolted off and hearing more bugles I headed down to the creek crossing. On the other side was a long 3/4 mile slope steadily rising until it made some small benches. Beyond those it was a black timber drop off- no feed, no bedding, only the perfect fuse for any elk pushed so far as to need it for escape. The elk were bedding on this slope about 2/3rds high every late morning.
On the S side of the slope was the hell-hole.  This next photo was taken inside and you can see how dense it becomes.

[attachment=1,msg2989661]

Some time had been used up chasing bugles, shooting at young bulls and missing. So wasting no more time I hiked upslope and found a nice tree to lean my back against. There was a great field of view into some open timber that was part of the corridor the elk were using. I no sooner opened a sandwich when a bugle ripped the woods just 75 yards below me. I got to a kneeling stance and faced the music. Another bugle hit me but closer. He was coming my way. Soon enough I could see the white tines of his antlers, then his body in flashes as he wove through the timber. He walked right out into the open timber in a beeline that would take him just under me at 20 yards. He was still 60 yards away and I nocked an arrow. My palms were wet. I tried hard to get a grip on my breathing and heart rate. A nice bull this and I already wanted him badly. On he came. My palms seemed to have been dipped in water. I wiped them again on my wool pants and cussed the material almost wishing for cotton. Another 20 yards he came. He bugled again 40 yards away, facing me but not seeing, I motionless, ready.

[attachment=2,msg2989661]


Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: ron w on January 26, 2022, 04:35:22 PM
Only hunted elk one time, this is like being there!!! Cool stuff :thumbsup:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Wudstix on January 26, 2022, 06:00:20 PM
Bring it!!!
:campfire: :coffee: :archer2:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 26, 2022, 07:39:10 PM
Between me and the bull was the tree I had chosen to lean against. Maybe 14 inches diameter it gave me just enough cover to not be left out in the open. The bull I could see by leaning one way or another allowing my vision to clear the tree trunk. He was right there, just forty yards and slightly below. It was a shot I could make if things were perfect. Perfect position (bull broadside), perfect stance (standing), perfect shooting lane (no lean out). But the bull, who had now stopped, was frontal. I was on my knees, a shot not yet mastered. And I needed to lean my body out to clear the tree. I just couldn't risk it. My own self-respect wouldn't allow it.

The bull bugled again, this time quietly. "C'mon!" My mind screamed it. "Walk on!! Walk on!!!" It was definitely not good for me he was where he was.
He turned his body slightly, sniffed the duff covering the ground and laid down.

Not good. Not good. He was facing me head on in his day bed. It was definitely not good for me.

I was trapped. Seconds. Minutes. Quarter hour. My knees started first, letting me know this would become unsustainable. I was aware that under the leaves it was wet. Moisture wicked into the wool of my pants. It was cold.
The bull, he was head up. Without any sign of recognition or alarm he was looking through me. As long as I remained rigid and motionless, I was part of the landscape. Move a muscle and I was toast. The bull started to relax. He even seemed ready to sleep but bugles everywhere kept him responding time to time. The back of my knees started next, the pressure of my crouch putting compression weight on the soft tissue there. Nothing tells you your age like a knee crouch.
Then it was my lower back, the job it had asking it to remain still and supportive new and unusual. A back is at its best as a flexing, modulating unit that is part of a larger modulating machine. A back was never meant to be motionless for long. Incredibly strong in motion, it was never meant to be a motionless beam.

I think it was my mind that gave out first though.

As soon as I allowed the thought I could move, just a little, to present itself into my consciousness, the rest of me fell like dominoes. I leaned out. I moved a leg, just a little. If I could get so the tree was not a factor maybe I could make a shot when he stood. The plan, such as it was ill-considered and impatient, was I would let him see me move when I was ready, then draw as he stood up, sending an arrow into his broadside as he turned and ran.
So far so good. I moved my other leg, bringing my body a little out from the tree. The bull saw the change, but could not define it. He now was not looking through me. He was looking at me. I froze. Time again became the enemy. My knee pain again eroding my resolve.
The bull turned his head. I moved a bit more, almost ready to stand. But I misjudged an undulates amazing peripheral vision. The bull was locked on now, alarmed,  up and gone in the time it takes to read this sentence.

[attachment=1,msg2989724]
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 28, 2022, 11:59:05 AM
But I had grown up hunting whitetails in the thick woods of Maine and I had a trick left and throwing on my pack while same time trying to get the kinks out of my legs I re-booted my arrow into the quiver. The bull had bolted downhill straight away but out of sight almost immediately. So I really had no idea where he had gone.
Upslope there was plenty of action, bugles and screams. An elk cacophony. The regularity of the bugles and the intensity had been increasing all during my little stare down with the lay-down-bull.
I headed upslope at the best I could do for a run at 9800' above sea level. I pushed hard. The window of time available I figured was two minutes max and probably less. My lungs burned even though three times a week I played competitive ice hockey a very fitness demanding sport. At this elevation however, the slope and the distance brought the pain.
I wanted to stop and rest. My mind told me it was ok to stop. I didn't have to push so hard whats a little slowing down going to hurt?
Finally, after climbing maybe 100 yards something had to give and it was my legs and lungs. The muscles in my legs had exhausted their aerobic capacity. My lungs sounded like a bellows as they worked to get the carbon dioxide out of the circulatory system.
  I looked around and there he was already, the bull. He was watching me heave my chest in huge gulps of air.  Just as I knew he would he had circled above me to get my wind and see what I was. I was just a little too slow, a little too low.
The bull turned away and started walking uphill. I fell right in behind him as soon as I could undetected, being careful to stay close enough and centered on his back so his amazing peripheral vision was unable to alert him I was there.
It is amazing how much ground an elk can cover at a walk, uphill, at elevation. It was all I could do to keep up and eventually we were into the middle of the elk opera. Somewhere along the way the bull I was dogging became other satellite bulls and I was now stalking each one I encountered in turn and as wind and cover permitted.

[attachment=1]
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: SlowBowKing on January 29, 2022, 10:53:20 PM
 :campfire:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Over&Under on January 29, 2022, 10:56:25 PM
 :campfire: :archer:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Killdeer on January 30, 2022, 04:43:22 PM
Writing of this quality takes time. I am grateful to be able to read it. Thank you!

Killdeer
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: cacciatore on January 31, 2022, 04:40:54 AM
These kind of threads are what makes this site great. Thanks for sharing,makes me dream my next high country hunt.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: UncasUK on January 31, 2022, 12:27:24 PM
jhg Who made that interesting bow you have there.
And what model?
Thank you.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 31, 2022, 01:00:29 PM
It is a wonderful thing, the hunting life. It can surprise you with sunrise, stand the hair on your neck the walk-out darkness, bring out your tears from joy or from regret or from sorrow. Sometimes, somehow, you are by chance or by design involved in something real, something basic that is the vital connection bolting your ancient primordial self to the never ending drama of existence. Because we sit in cars and speak on phones, flick switches and lock doors does not somehow mean six million years of history welded into our DNA is negated. We are a part of the physical world as much as we are part of anything.

[attachment=1,msg2990305]


Around me the bugles were never ending bombast that at some point became nerve wracking. I was forced to climb a finger ridge that stood just above the only undulation on the long slope the bull elk and I had just climbed. My scent stream was upslope and parallel to the elk group below me. A herd bull who I only glimpsed now and then was literally fighting off a number of other bulls, herding cows to keep them from being stolen or drifting off and being run ragged.
His was a losing hand.
I watched as a cow ran by chased by a lesser bull. Other cows, unable to relax, jittered and jumped here and there as if repeatedly shocked by an unseen force. The herd bulls bugles were not bugles at all but roars, screams and monstrous shrieks.
Along the edge of my perch on the finger ridge my scent stream cut a razor sharp declination between undetection and discovery. There were at least 20 elk below me, cows, bulls ,the herd bull, yearlings and juveniles. Some elk climbed the opposite side of the little gulley and it was only a matter of time before some of them would climb my side too and walk right into my man stink drifting up the mountain like a serpent. The herd bull, unable to stand his ground, pushed his remaining cows over the edge of the fuse and dropped out of my life.

[attachment=2,msg2990305]

Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 31, 2022, 01:06:29 PM
The bow is "Elkmaster".

Made for me by Dan Toelke. Its a super static 64" recurve. 54# at 31.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: UncasUK on January 31, 2022, 06:23:12 PM
Great bow sir,

Most impressed by your Elkmaster
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: glass76 on January 31, 2022, 06:42:31 PM
Now this is how you tell a elk hunting story! Great read so far, hoping for more!
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on January 31, 2022, 10:53:27 PM
BTW, I just found a really embarrassing typo, and corrected it.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Killdeer on February 01, 2022, 04:51:55 AM
I saw that. :biglaugh:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on February 01, 2022, 10:04:25 AM
Note to self- never proof when tired or distracted.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Sam McMichael on February 01, 2022, 10:25:14 AM
I will never hunt elk, but I have heard the song. On a visit to Yellowstone a really beautiful bull looked me straight in the eye from about 30 yards and screamed out a challenging threat that was both fearsome and beautiful. You guys that live amongst elk or get a chance to hunt them sure are lucky.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Killdeer on February 01, 2022, 05:43:24 PM
My sruff is edited over and over...see?
:banghead: :goldtooth:

Killdeer
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Wudstix on February 02, 2022, 09:25:44 AM
My fingers need to go back to Skool.  More elk story please.
:campfire: :coffee: :archer2:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Killdeer on February 08, 2022, 09:02:54 PM
TTT
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on February 09, 2022, 11:21:22 AM
The herd bull was gone. But around me the bugles continued. Cow elk had been stolen and were either being blocked by satellites from following the herd bull or had just given up and accepted their new suitor(s).

I could see three or four bulls right from my sit spot.

A first year 5x started up the short slope toward me. Oh great, I thought, another frontal. This is a shot I am comfortable taking now, but back then it was definitely not one I would attempt under any circumstance. I had not done my homework.  Where to place the arrow, distance limits or self-confidence.  None of these parts were in place in my hunters mind.
The young bull was prime. His fur flashed sheen, his muscles full and powerful rolled under the skin. As he climbed toward me I already knew I would shoot this bull. He was fit and fat, and had that " something"  an animal must have before I click the internal button saying yes, yes, this is one to be proud of. It has never been the antlers for me. Sure, I always focus on trying for older, larger animals. But my prime directive has always been an animals vigor.

I was on my knees and down in one of those small ground dents just large enough for an archer to hide most of themselves from wary eyes. The bull paused several times on his accent toward me to look back over his shoulder. I used these brief moments to adjust my body set, nock an arrow and try to manage my personal hunt shot nemesis, sweaty palms.
He was maybe 20 yards now and the next time he came forward I thought it would happen but something, his sixth sense, his supernatural smell and hearing or some part of his rustic wariness brought his head up and his eyes locked onto me. I kept mine lowered, seeing him just on the edge of periphery knowing full well the intensity of my gaze, not to mention the blazing force behind it.
He was frozen. I was a rock. We stayed this way for a long time. The wind lay against my right cheek. Somewhere, on the edge of awareness, elk ran by and bulls bugled. A deer mouse rustled under the duff of leaves and needles. Ours was the old formal dance of the hunter and the hunted. Choreographed long ago, our roles had already been determined. The bull elk and I knew our places on the stage of life and of death.

What motivates us to be traditional hunters? What ancient impulse directs us to touch the past and connect to ourselves in a way that is right and honest?
I don't know.
It is enough that it is.

When I step out into daily life, that rushing pace that sometimes is heavy responsibility, I also carry inside myself this other man. He is a free spirit and his heart is woven into the branches, the dirt and the water.

The bull, finally satisfied that maybe his concern was false started forward. He came around a small tree and when his body started to turn I came to anchor his muscles loading into a crouch as he flinched at my movement. It was now or never the bull launching himself forward and away the arrow white fletches proud against the back drop of sky and fur. The bull and the arrow met at 6 yards, the timeless dance completing its cycle. The hunter rejoiced in silent awe, the bull, its spirit alive climbing upward into the air above them.

[attachment=1,msg2991339]
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: rastaman on February 09, 2022, 10:39:37 PM
Just saw this and read it all the way through. What an awesome story teller and writer you are. My adrenaline is flowing!
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: jhg on February 09, 2022, 11:16:19 PM
Thanks everyone for the kind words of encouragement. This one is finished.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: kennym on February 10, 2022, 07:15:25 AM
"The young bull was prime. His fur flashed sheen, his muscles full and powerful rolled under the skin. As he climbed toward me I already knew I would shoot this bull. He was fit and fat, and had that " something" I always want an animal to have for me to click the internal button saying, yes, yes, this one is to be proud of. It has never been the antlers for me. Sure, I always focus on trying for older, larger animals. But my prime directive has always been an animals vigor."

I totally get this, sir!

Great story! :thumbsup:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: ron w on February 10, 2022, 09:39:16 AM
 :clapper: well told :thumbsup:
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Killdeer on February 10, 2022, 06:29:43 PM
Beautifully told. Thank you!

Killdeer
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: knobby on February 11, 2022, 09:31:58 AM
Great story and thanks for sharing it with us.
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: Aaron Proffitt 2 on February 11, 2022, 10:56:34 AM
Excellent story !!
Title: Re: The Elk Opera
Post by: gregg dudley on February 11, 2022, 04:19:08 PM
Nicely told.  Thanks for investing the time.