Bow
hunting season has begun. Good luck to all those who are stalking elk, deer or
moose. Take bear spray and a handgun. The first injurious encounter between a
bowhunter and a grizzly occurred Monday up Yale Creek.
* CAMPING * HUNTING * SURVIVAL * EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS * FITNESS * OUTDOOR LIVING * FAMILY * CONSERVATION * WILDLIFE *
Showing posts with label bowhunting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bowhunting. Show all posts
Monday, March 7, 2016
Monday, September 29, 2014
Yellowstone Country Safety * Trail Cam *
A
note to the bow hunters who passed my trail camera up a draw along Stamp
Meadows Road: you pushed a nice group of elk past the camera. They were 20
minutes ahead of you!
Yellowstone Country Safety * Bowhunter Consideration *
If
you see a bow hunter’s rig parked in an area of the forest, find an alternative
spot a few miles away to target practice or bird hunt. Once a shot rings out in
the area, the bow hunt is over for the day and all the preparation is wasted.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Things Are About to Change
The final holiday weekend of the summer has arrived.
Vacations are concluding, kids are going back to school and many are storing
their camping equipment until next year.
The activities of those who live in the mountains are changing
as well. Businesses will begin winding down next week. Summer cabins will be
shuttered for the winter. Residents will prepare for the snow to come; urgently
completing repairs to their cabins that were postponed during the busy summer
season. Firewood will be cut and stored and hunting season will begin this week
with the bow hunt.
It is time to break out the camouflage, check gear and
search for that once-a-year successful encounter with an elk. Anticipating the
hunt with the hopes and dreams of a child’s Christmas, the mind sorts through
the scenarios and reactions that may be experienced in the forest.
The cow calls and bugles are rehearsed. The bow string
is waxed and the arrows are fitted with broadheads. The camo is laundered in
scent-free soap and hung on a line to air dry. The bathroom is stocked with
scent-free shower soap and deodorant.
The day pack is stocked with the essential items that
have not congregated together for the past year. A compass, water bottles, GPS,
knives, rope, bear spray, pistol, ammo, light, matches, Allen wrenches,
Leatherman, folding saw, binoculars and a camera are all packed in anticipation
the adventure to come.
Optimism is high for a successful hunt but fall in
Yellowstone country brings its own anticipation. September is the most
beautiful month in mountain country. The leaves change to their brilliant colors;
the aspen are shrouded in bright yellow and the scrub maple in orange and red.
As the temperature cools, the animals prepare for the coming winter with their
own sense of urgency. The stillness of the forest will be interrupted by the
constant thud of pine cones on the forest floor as the squirrels release them
from pine boughs, soon to be stockpiled.
The bull elk will bugle, their primeval cry for a mate echoing through
the pines.
It is an exciting time to be in the forest as a participant and an observer. Things are about to change.
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