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Hobbies & Interests
Hunting & Fishing
Elk Hunting... is it worth the coin?
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<blockquote data-quote="Huckelberry75" data-source="post: 1561016" data-attributes="member: 7489"><p>I know it's tough, and I have come home with an elk tag sandwhich from the very mountain in Hoddy's pictures, but that's why they call it hunting and not killing. I also shot my first elk about 300yds from where he took the fourth picture, my second came across that same valley at 368yds, followed by a raven off the gut pile at the same range, and then shot the biggest cow of my life about half way up the mountain in his first picture. She was a chore, for sure, to get out.</p><p></p><p>As said before, we pray for snow. Last time out, I was breaking waist deep snow for my buddy who shot his first cow off my shoulder at 98yds in the timber. The snow drives them down off the mountain tops.</p><p></p><p>Sometimes you just have to "pony up" and do it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Huckelberry75, post: 1561016, member: 7489"] I know it's tough, and I have come home with an elk tag sandwhich from the very mountain in Hoddy's pictures, but that's why they call it hunting and not killing. I also shot my first elk about 300yds from where he took the fourth picture, my second came across that same valley at 368yds, followed by a raven off the gut pile at the same range, and then shot the biggest cow of my life about half way up the mountain in his first picture. She was a chore, for sure, to get out. As said before, we pray for snow. Last time out, I was breaking waist deep snow for my buddy who shot his first cow off my shoulder at 98yds in the timber. The snow drives them down off the mountain tops. Sometimes you just have to "pony up" and do it. [/QUOTE]
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