Showing posts with label Elk Hunting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elk Hunting. Show all posts

14 July

I know where you are!

 - by Jim Taylor

The coolest  piece of technology I've incorporated into my hunts has been the Garmin Rino gps/radio.

Rino by Garmin
I was introduced to the benefits of this "gotta-have" tool  about five years ago as I sat on a lonely Idaho ridge top in the dark.  Four of us were bowhunting elk and I was odd man out with only a 1/2 watt radio(Walmart $19.95 I think) and my handheld gps that I was so proud of.  Right at dusk the adrenalin packed voice of hunting partner Ryan Springer broke  radio silence that he had just arrowed a monster bull at like 12 yards.  Springer, Shoemaker, and Frasca had Garmin Rinos....I had my 1/2 watt Wal-Mart special.  I could hear them, but I  could not reply as  my ½ watt radio was too wimpy to broadcast any distance in the thick Idaho timber.  So, there I sat listening to the back and forth chatter of my excited friends as everyone but me worked their way to Springer's downed trophy elk using their Rino gps/radios.  While they did the congratulatory high five’s, handshakes, and posed for trophy pictures  I sat there alone on a stump as dark fell over that Idaho ridge.  Guess what I asked Santa for that Christmas?

Since then, the Rino  has added so much pleasure to my hunts.  I won't  leave home without it.  These powerful little 5w radios  have built in gps's that let you broadcast your position as well as see the gps location  of your hunting buddies on a topo map displayed on the Rino's screen. 

Mike Frasca navigates with his Rino gps/radio 
They have proven indispensable on our elk hunting trips out West each year.  It used to be that when a bowhunter bagged an elk he might have to walk out of a canyon 2 or 3 miles to the nearest trail to rendezvous with his fellow hunters who then had be "guided" back into the canyon to the downed animal. This meant a waste of precious meat packing time when the September temperatures in Colorado are often in the 80's during the day.  With the Garmin Rino radio/gps, when one of our members downs an animal we can immediately see his position and we can all navigate separately and independently from every direction to converge at the downed elk.

Ryan Springer's 2006 Idaho Elk
Aside from the usual benefits of radio communication and gps usage the Garmin Rino allows you to:

1. Get Help: If you fall and break your leg,  your buddies can locate you. Even if you are unconscious your buddys can "ping" your position to locate you. With the rugged terrain of Western Colorado that's not a bad thing to have.

2. On public land like we hunt it is very useful to know exactly where your hunting partners are so that you are not stumbling on top of each other unnecessarily or hunting the same draw. You can actually set your radio to alert you if you come within a certain distance of a hunting partner.

3. You can transmit hunting hot spots, dangerous cliffs, or locations of last blood while tracking to your fellow bowhunters.

At our stage of life, hunting its not so much about the killing as it is about sharing the hunting adventure and friendship and camaraderie built around high mountain campfires. The Rino gps/radio has enhanced our hunting experience by letting everyone in our hunting party share in the exhilaration and excitement at the very moment a  buddy unleashes an arrow at the big one.    It just doesn't get any better than that dude.

Lets go hunting!

20 January

New Bowhunter Oriented Online Community Launched

Check out our new Online Community specifically for bowhunters to share photos and videos online.  It's called Bowhunter Chronicles. I'ts a cool, fun and easy to use site.  With Bowhunter Chronicles you don't have to wade through all the teenie bopper stuff on the other social networks.  This one is strictly bowhunting and archery!  Check it out at www.bowpros.net

jim taylor

18 September

Colorado Hail

Colorado Bowhunt September 18 -26, 2009                             Story by Jim Taylor

The cold front brought the storm in fast and unloaded what seemed like gale force winds against the walls of my 3 room tent. Using my flashlight, I peered out from the warmth of my sleeping bag to watch the rapid flutter of the thin fabric tent walls. The tent was struggling to protect me and my gear from the cold rain and gust of the night time storm. It was as if I had gotten zipped up into some wacky carnival thrill ride where I could only guess what was about to be revealed as the storm crawled over us. I sent a text message to my wife Teresa that we were in a storm at 10:22pm.

This was the first night of my highly anticipated annual bowhunting reunion with elk hunting partners Mike, Wade and Tim.

The temperature was falling and forecast to drop below 20 degrees by morning. We all knew the weather in Colorado was unpredictable but none of us were prepared for these temperatures in September. The rain had now given way to a torrid of marble sized hail that was now pounding the roof and walls of my tent. The darkness was constantly interrupted by  flashes of light followed by near instant cracks of ear piercing thunder. As I thought about the consequences of our camp location(on the peak of a ridge top), I got a vision of the comical Wile E. Coyote, blackened to a crisp, white eyes blinking in a dazed stupor, while holding the skeletal remnants of a charred, still smoking umbrella.

The wind was getting increasingly more powerful as I watched my thin walled shelter yield more and more to the breath of the storm., yet after each violent gust the fiberglass tent poles would promptly return to the tent to its upright position.

The almost horizontal driving rain was now intent on finding its way into my tent via the screened windows and rain fly cover. Splatters of water were now finding my face, pillow and bedding. A wet sleeping bag was going to make for a long miserable night in the approaching cold. To avoid the spray I moved my air mattress to the center of the tent. This helped but I was still being constantly misted through the screen. Luckily I had purchased an inexpensive Wal-Mart brand camo rain poncho for the trip. As I unpacked it in the frigid night air the otherwise pliable poncho was now a noisy sheet of stiff plastic that struggled to lay flat over my camp bed. In-spite of the creases and pockets of the stiff poncho collecting pools of rainwater, it did manage to keep me and my bedding fairly dry during the storm.

As the winds continued their powerful but sporadic bursts I rolled over and attempted to get some sleep. I am feeling confident, cozy and warm with my weather proofing efforts. I am exhausted and personally for me the roar of the winds and the drone of the constant rain/hail mix actually make for good sleeping. Natures white noise. As I am drifting off to sleep I am startled by a loud SNAP! at the opposite corner of the tent. The wind gusts have finally exceeded the limits of my fiberglass tent poles! The loose tent walls were now flapping even louder in the fierce winds. I feared the large 10X20 tent was about to be torn loose from the tent stakes and drag me and my and gear across the open meadow and through jagged oak brush like a paratrooper being dragged by his open parachute. Minutes later I realized that the tent stakes and remaining poles are holding firm against the wind. Now clothed and with flashlight in hand I exited the tent to a bombardment of stinging hail on my neck and hands to analyze the situation. Using a couple of Carbon Express Arrows, and Gorilla duct tape I attempted a McGyver style fix using arrow shafts for a splint on the broken tent pole. I quickly found out the wind gust were much too powerful for even the three Carbon Express arrow shafts I had taped across the fractured tent pole.

Standing in the elements, all I could do is watch by the glow of my flash light as the hail and water accumulated on the now deflated wall. Water was pouring onto  my tent floor though the now horizontal screen window as it lay flat. I reentered my tent. Two of the three rooms were still standing tall. I quickly consolidated my belongings to the two remaining rooms and simply zipped up the door to the collapsed and now sinking room. The result was not unlike a submarine captain who would strategically shut selected doors to a torpedo damaged section of his submarine to keep it from sinking. Luckily in my case there were no poor sailors to be entombed.

I cranked up my Lil Buddy propane heater to the high setting and dried myself off along with pillows cases and pillows over the flame. Once dried I crawled back into my warm, comfortable and somewhat dry bed. The fierce storm has just about passed. My last text to my somewhat concerned wife Teresa indicating all was well was at 11:22pm.

16 September

2009 Equipment Preparations



by Jim Taylor

My broadhead target is little more ragged and the bulk of my gear is packed as I move into the final day of preparation for my 2009 Colorado Elk bowhunt.

Here in Fort Smith we have been deluged with constant rain over the last week. It has hampered my shooting practice as well as  my scheduled  2.7 mile runs around Shadow lake in my futile preparation for the peaks and canyons of Colorado.

After packing my truck tonight I will depart Fort Smith at 5 am tomorrow morning for the 19 hour trip to the Uncompahgre National Forest.    Ohio bowhunting partners Mike, Tim and  Wade are going to rendezvous with me around noon on Friday. Intentions are to set up camp Friday afternoon and hit the canyons with bow in hand at day break Saturday.

11 October

Three Year Elk Odessy






Finally... After three trips in as many years out west, two to Idaho and one to Colorado the ol Arkansas Bowhunter managed to find the alignment of the stars in perfect order while on the side of a dark canyon September 26, 2008 at 2:57pm. After six days of trekking up and down Colorado canyons and with the wear on my feet becoming more noticeable as the week progressed I finally found myself within 30 yards of a trophy class bull.

10 October

2008 Elk Bowhunt

The Colorado 2008 Posse



Our decision to not hunt Idaho for Elk this year was spurred by a friend of a friend who had reported a great number of Elk sighting in the area the year before.. Pete Sisson more on Pete later.

09 October

PETES PRIZE

by Jim Taylor

The Colorado gang with Petes Elk. Pete brought down the first elk of the week with this nice bull on Wednesday morning. He was pumped, excited and proud of his first bull elk! Read his story by clicking here: Pete is a dedicated and serious bowhunter who is fun to be with and knows how to enjoy himself while working as hard as any hunter as I have ever met. Petes success is no accident, he spends the months leading up to the hunt preparing himself physically for the extreme challenges of the Colorado mountains and devours the latest elk hunting techniques and diligently applies them. (Left to Right: Jim, Tim, Wade, Mike and Pete)


Pete Elk