Update #6: PIC HEAVY; Returners, a Surprise, a New Cam Spot, and More Frustration,
Late last week, I got the card from my buddy who's buddy went out there to the lick site with his dad. He said there were some "small bulls", but nothing really to get excited over. After looking at the card, I'd really hate to see what he calls big and gets excited over! There a couple of returners that I haven't seen in a while, which was nice. A couple of new bulls, some feisty bulls, and a couple of mule deer does hit the lick as well. Where there are does, there will eventually be bucks and our early archery season opens a month from today. To be fair, though, I told my wife that unless she really wanted muley meat in the freezer, it would have to be a buck that makes my heart stop to go after him, what with all of the vet expenses of late and planning for the elk hunt expenses. My buddy also asked for his other extra cam back, so I pulled that one. It was no problem as there were only mediocre bulls, but I know bulls are in that area and my other camera at the stock tank was getting mostly pictures of cattle. In two card pulls of that cam, I had over 1,000 pics of cattle and shadows with only a handful of elk and deer pics. I was looking for an excuse to pull that camera, anyway.
Last Sunday, I went out and pulled my buddy's extra cam and then went to swap cards on my lick camera. There came the frustrtion. The camera only had 37 pics in a few days and had been turned off. Come to find out a local sheep herder had his 100+ sheep in there and decided to turn the camera off (got pics of him). Apparently he did this last year a couple of times to my buddy and hid behind his nasty-vicious herding dogs, cornering my buddy and his wife a couple of times.
I really hate that it comes to this, but my 1911s will now be in my truck for all future trips out there, especially if my kids are with me and his dogs are as aggressive as my buddy says they are. I will also be locking that camera to keep him out of it as well as replenishing the mineral rocks that his stupid sheep obliterated.
We continued on out and scouted another remote area that only has one road in and out. Its definitely got some promise and I'll probably spend some time out there during our 3-week early archery deer season doing some on-the-ground scouting. Stay tuned! I found another canyon/travel corridor that elk should be using (found a trail, so I guess they are) and hiked a little over a quarter-mile down and dropped a mineral rock with some block topper on it. The guys at the archer shop here recommend it as a strong attractant to get a mineral lick going. I guess time will tell and when my son and I go out there this Friday, we'll find out how well it works.
I did say that this was a pic-heavy update, so here you go:
Spot made a return visit and is looking even better:
Fours also came back and is still a top contender to have my tag on his antler!
A new bull showed up and he is also another great contender for my tag. I love the way his sixths sweep back. Sixes:
Another view of Sixes:
And it looks like the tension is starting to build. I love these!
I had to throw this one in for my kids. Every time they see these kinds of pictures, they start screaming "Elk Butt!" and giggling. Of course, I see them and start thinking about an elk hair caddis and how great that fly is!
One of a handfull of muley does:
And I also mentioned a surprise in my title. I heard a rumor about this next pic from my buddy, but I didn't actually see it until I was going through them. I know you all see these every day in Iowa
, but enjoy this anway!
If you look closely, you can see the eye shine of something behind the log. To put it in size perspecitve, that is about 5-6 yards from the camera and that log is just over knee-high on me at the very end where the cat is crouching. I'm guessing its a first-year female. My buddy was a little worried, but I assured him that elk and cougars have co-existed for millennia and there was no way it could take all of the elk in that area between now and Sept 14. For no bigger than she is, she'd be hard pressed to take a mature bull at all. My buddy did go back out there last Friday with another buddy of his who is training a couple of hounds and they tracked it over 4 miles (without finding it) in the direction of the remote area we drove into Sunday.
I've only ever seen 2 confirmed mountain lions in the wild here in Arizona and one unconfirmed (moving too fast), but have come across fresh tracks, fresh scrapes (marking territories), and fresh kills. Its one of those things you just get used to dealing with. Besides, the last fresh scrape I encountered, I decided to have fun with. This tom had been running his territory pretty regularly in a canyon I had been doing wildlife surveys in about 3 years ago and his scrapes were very fresh and very big. It was my last night in that canyon and, by the freshness of his scrapes, I'm figuring he was watching my partner and me pretty closely. To show him that I accepted the fact that he could kill me anytime he wanted to, but I was better at psychological warfare, I peed in one of his biggest scrapes, thereby marking over his territory and claiming it as my own. I figured that would get inside his brain long after I was out of that canyon and show him who was really boss!
All my other biologist friends were laughing their butts off at me (and not just because of the predatorial instincts I just triggered in that tom). Yep, I'm a science geek, too!
Its getting that time of year, where velvet should be coming off the elk, so hopefully there will be some hard horn pics coming soon! More next week after my next card pull! Hope you enjoyed this installment.