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hunter4life

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Everything posted by hunter4life

  1. hunter4life

    Million dollar whitetail

    I wonder if SCI didn't accept animals taken on "estate hunts" into the record book, if this would cut down on the numbers of hunts that are conducted this way. I think that it might, but there are always going to be people who only care about the size of the antlers or horns and not about the hunt. Personally I like the free-range exotics that are here in NM. The oryx, ibex, and aoudad are awesome animals that I am glad we can hunt so close to home. What I also find interesting is how some people really hate the aforementioned exotics, but they aren't about to say anything negative against pheasant or merriam's turkeys which have been introduced to a lot of places where they were not historically found and could thus be considered exotics in those locations.
  2. hunter4life

    Our Director gets busted

    Here is the law on posting private property straight out of the hunting proclamation page 15. "Notice of no consent to enter shall be deemed sufficient notice to the public and evidence to the courts, by the posting of the fenced property at all vehicular access entries."
  3. hunter4life

    Our Director gets busted

    His excuse about the GPS coordinate being wrong is pretty lame. He should also be carrying a good topo map with the private land marked on it, and should have known something wasn't right with his GPS coordinate. He was hunting the checkerboard land (mixed public &private) and being the Director of G&F he should have been darn careful to stay on public land.
  4. hunter4life

    How hard do you shed hunt?

    I don't get out to shed hunt much for coues because it is a long drive to get into coues country. When I do, I cover a lot of miles and generally find sheds about 50% of the days I look. My best day for coues sheds is 4, and best two day period is 7.
  5. hunter4life

    My '07 New Mexico Coues

    Congratulations on a nice NM buck!! I like the shape of that bucks rack. Cool pic of the coati as well.
  6. hunter4life

    MONSTER WIVES!!!

    Wow, another excellent buck!! Tell your wife congratulations!
  7. I recently got back from a trip to Alask from Oct 11-20. My wife and I spent 4 days hunting and fishing with my parents and then my wife and I stayed for a few extra days visiting some of her relatives outside of Anchorage. We hunted with Larsen Bay Lodge (http://larsenbaylodge.com/) doing an unguided hunt where they would drop us off in the mornings and then pick us back up in the evening. The lodge was very nice and the food was excellent. The weather was not bad in that we did not get rained on until the day we left, however it was fairly windy for most of our stay. Day 1: Got up early from the hotel in Kodiak and flew into Larsen Bay via Island Air. We got settled in our cabins and then checked to make sure the guns had not been bumped off zero. Both my 7mm mag and my dad's 7mm WSM were right where they should be. We had a great lunch at the lodge and then got loaded in one of the boats to hunt a place that was closer to the lodge since we did not have a full day. Working our way through the thick forest we kicked up 2 does, which we could only see at the apex of their bounds through the 5 foot tall dead, brown colored ferns. We worked our way up to the base of a mountain into more open country where we could glass. There was a good amount of deer sign, but we didn't see any more deer. We did glass up a huge bear at the top of the mountain. We made it back to the beach and got picked up. The lodge. Day 2: We had about a 25 minute run in one of the boats to reach an island. It took 2 hours of hiking to get through the forest, and climb to the spine of the mountains at about 1300-1500 ft in elevation. The hiking is very tough going due to the dead ferns, devils club, willows, tall grass and alders. The bear/deer trails help, but many times we just had to muscle through the brush. This is no place for a nice wooden stocked gun. Once on top of the main ridge the going is easier with more open grassy hillsides interspersed with brush. The grass is about 5 feet tall in many places and deer trails can be seen snaking through it. We work our way along the ridge with frequent stops to glass. In the afternoon I finally spot the first deer of the day from about 400 yards. We sneak in to 180 and see that it is a small buck, but from here there is no place to sit for a shot and the wind is really blowing. I sneak in closer and get on a little rise at about 120 yards where I can lay and shoot over my pack. The buck turns broadside and BOOM, drops like a rock. We get the buck skinned, quartered and pack him out to the beach just in time to meet the boat and be picked up. Day 3: We take a short run in the boat and get dropped off at the mouth of a river in a new area. From an opening in the forest I glass on the mountainside and see a deer out in the open. We work our way up the mountain and once we can see better we have glassed up 5 deer spread across the face of the mountain and have seen 5 does up close in the forest. We sneak in on the closest deer on the hillside and get some pictures at about 60 yards. It is a little forkhorn. We keep working up to the ridgetop at about 1500 ft. and glass up numerous deer throughout the morning. We have seen two bucks better than mine, but they were just forkies with eyeguards and we passed them up. We also glass up a very dark, almost black brown bear way below us near a lake. After lunch we finally see a promising buck and plan a stalk that will put us about 50 yards away when we finally can see him again. When we are about 50 yards from where we will be able to see the buck again, I look on the opposite hillside and see a nice buck along with a smaller one. My dad sits down, I call out the range (230yards) and BOOM, the buck drops straight down. I thought this was the one we were stalking, but then the original buck comes out 120 yards away. I take a few pictures because while he is nicer than my buck he is a big fork plus eyeguards and I am looking for something bigger. We are also several miles from the ocean at this point and have a long pack ahead of us with dad's buck. On the way out with packs loaded with meat, we pop through a saddle and are greeted with this bear about 300 yards away in the bottom of the canyon. We give him a very wide berth and luckily the wind is in our favor. We have to really hustle and get back to the beach right as the last light is fading. Day 4: We get dropped off in a new area as the wind is wrong for landing the boat where we hunted yesterday. Same story of fighting through thick brush to get to the ridgetop. It is quite windy and cold. While hiking, I spot a fox up the ridge from us on a knob. A look in the binos shows it to be black and silver and I immediately lie down to get set for a shot. My dad ranges it at 289 and the first shot is a miss. A quick second shot results in the fox acting hit, but disappearing downhill into long grass. We sneak over and looking down into the long grass I spot the fox and finish him off. I had not accounted enough for the wind and my second shot had hit the fox too far back. I skin out the fox and we stop for lunch. That afternoon we spot another forkhorn with eyeguards, but we pass on this buck as well. Day 5: We are scheduled to leave in the afternoon, but the weather is starting to look bad so we get out on the earlier mail flight. Once in Kodiak it starts to rain and then snow. We make it back to Anchorage and my parents head back home, while my wife and I spend a few days with some of her relatives. Overall we had a great trip, but it was tough to find good bucks. We could have each shot our limit of 3 deer, but after getting one for meat we were looking for good bucks. From what I was able to gather talking to the guides the hunting is fairly tough in early October and one really has to work to get a good buck. In November the rut is going and it would probably be the best time to hunt bucks where you still have to get up in the hills and get after them. In December it sounded more like a deer shoot when the snows have pushed the deer down low and they can be found out foraging on the beaches when the tide is out. The late hunts on the beach don't sound like they would be my preference, because I prefer to get out, hike, and work hard when I am hunting.
  8. hunter4life

    Kodiak Island Sitka Blacktail Hunt (long story and pics)

    Thanks for all the nice comments. It was definitely an awesome trip and I just wish we had spent more time so I could have tried the fishing and duck hunting. We cooked up some of the deer a few nights ago and it was excellent. I haven't tried the fish yet, but my parents have and they said it was the bast halibut they have ever tasted.
  9. hunter4life

    Pics of my wife's deer

    Congratulations on a fine muley!! It is nice to see all the women out hunting and tagging bucks this year. What makes you think he looks "couesy", as it looks 100% muley to me.
  10. hunter4life

    Monster MOMS!!!!

    Wow, that is an awesome buck!! A big congratulations to your mom, and those who scouted out this buck.
  11. hunter4life

    Late bloomers.....

    It must be something funny about this year in particular. My brother just got done today guiding a hunt in Southeastern NM and he saw 10 different muleys still in full velvet. Some of these were pretty good sized bucks. We almost never see bucks this late in the year still in velvet. Very strange. I would like to see what some of the biologists on the site think of these observations.
  12. hunter4life

    Lion in a canyon

    I don't think a lion spooks the deer out of a canyon for long. On my hunt this year there was a fresh set of lion tracks over our tracks from two days before and I shot my buck out of the same canyon the next day.
  13. hunter4life

    First Coues

    Awesome buck, congratulations to your brother!!
  14. hunter4life

    Whitetail rifle for my wife

    My wife is also small and is what I would describe as recoil sensitive. I had an old .243 that I shot when I was a kid that had the stock cut down which was a good size for her. I added a good after market recoil pad and with that addition she can shoot hot handloads or Hornady light magnum 100gr. ammunition without any problems. I would recommend anything from the .308 Win based cartridges as someone else also mentioned. I would also recommend staying away from a muzzle brake as well. They are just too loud and are not needed, especially on any gun shooting the above mentioned cartridges. The noise is not so bad with earplugs on and when you are directly behind the shooter, but in a hunting situation without earplugs and where you may be sitting beside the shooter that muzzle brake will definitely cause pain and leave you with ringing in your ears for quite some time. My advice for the top 2 choices would be .243 or 7mm-08.
  15. hunter4life

    Kodiak Island Sitka Blacktail Hunt (long story and pics)

    On the 3 full days that we were hunting, my wife and mom went fishing. Some of the days they were accompanied by the wife of one of the other hunters in camp as well. They caught mainly halibut and some types of cod. At this time of year the really big halibut are in deeper water, so they were catching smaller ones that are supposed to be better eating anyways. They had a great time and fished for parts of the day and then went around sightseeing. They saw whales (minke and fin), porpoises, seals, otters, eagles, foxes, deer, and a bear all from the boat. Day number one. Day number two. They also checked the crab pots and found them loaded with king crabs. The bad part is that the law reads that you have to be an Alaskan resident to take king crabs and even then one is only allowed three crabs per household per year. They were trying to get tanner and dungeness crabs, which they could have kept. Day number three.
  16. hunter4life

    alaska trip

    I just got back about 2 weeks ago from a Sitka hunt on Kodiak. The hunt was based out of a lodge and they would take you in a small boat from there to drop you off at various locations to hunt and then pick you up in the evening. The outfit is called Larsen Bay Lodge and they have combined deer hunting, fishing, and duck hunting trips. I will try and get a post together today to show the results of our trip. I have been pretty busy since getting back and just haven't had time to get a good post together.
  17. hunter4life

    Finally got him!

    Congrats on a great buck!! Your friend also got a very nice one as well. I love the mass on the buck that you killed. It looks like the bucks had pretty good sized bodies as well. Did you weigh how much meat you ended up with? I also got lucky last week on my NM muzzleloader deer hunt and killed this 87 5/8" buck. The bone in hindquarters, boned out front quarters, and backstraps weighed in at 40 pounds.
  18. hunter4life

    2 Dandy bucks

    Congratulations to you and your dad!! I like the extra stickers on your buck.
  19. hunter4life

    36a Whitetail

    Congratulations!! Gotta love the .243, I have shot a bunch of critters up to the size of a blue wildebeest in Africa with one and it works just fine if you park the bullet in the right spot.
  20. hunter4life

    2007 Coues Buck

    Congratulations on a nice buck and a great hunting season so far!!
  21. hunter4life

    My 2007 Coues Buck

    Congratulations on a great buck!! It looks like the scouting paid off.
  22. hunter4life

    First whitetail

    Congratulations on your first coues!!
  23. hunter4life

    frustration buck

    Even though you didn't get the buck you wanted, the one you got should make for some great table fare.
  24. hunter4life

    Shorty Bags a Buck...

    Congratulations on a very nice buck!! Great pictures as well.
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