"It is not the critic who counts: not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles or where the doer of deeds could have done better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood, who strives valiantly, who errs and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error or shortcoming, but who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself for a worthy cause; who, at the best, knows, in the end, the triumph of high achievement, and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least he fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who knew neither victory nor defeat." ---Theodore Roosevelt 1910

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Happens Once-in-a-Lifetime

After 25 years of applying and a lifetime of dreaming - I shot a moose with a bow!!!

     In May I received an email that I successfully drew a North Slope Summit permit in the High Uintas. That's when I came up with a wild idea. What if me and my 15 yr. old son could 1-2-3 it, me with my bow and Bron with his rifle. Now that would be gnarly! One might ask if it’s even legally possible. Yes, it is under Utah's Youth Mentor Program. I got Bron signed up to hunt with me at the DWR office.

   Because gasoline was $4.50 a gallon, I decided to limit my preseason scouting saving more resource and vacation time once the month-long season began. Three days before the opener, I set foot on my unit for the first time. My strategy was simple, to try to find a big bull and camp on him until the opener. With the hunt starting Sept.20th, the bulls wouldn't be rutting much yet. So, if I could find a shooter the chances of him being in the same area until I got him killed were high. 

     My very first hour scouting and my very first moose sighting just happened to be a good first day shooter. I called him the Sulphur bull because he was hanging near the Sulfur Campground. He had matching split brows and ten points a side. I wanted this bull bad! I camped on him all day for the next two days. My brother Dusty brought Bron up to camp Friday after school. It was a restless night for all of us. Opening morning couldn't come fast enough.

    With great anticipation we rolled out of our sleeping bags an hour before shooting light on the opener. I was counting my eggs before they’d hatched. This hunt could be over in a couple of hours, I thought. I tried to eat a little breakfast but was too amped up. We got to our lookout and waited for it to get light. As so often happens with my hunting luck, our target bull was nowhere to be found. All the other moose were there, all but him. 

    Bron and I spent the next three days trying to relocate him with zero luck. I called in his whacky looking buddy, the Fire bull, into bow range two different times. We saw other decent bulls in the area too while expanding our search, but we couldn't turn up the Sulphur bull. Unfortunately, it was time to get Bron back to school. The long ride back home was torture knowing we were so close to getting it done and having to put the hunt on pause.

    We decided to hold off a full week before returning and wait for the rut to kick in. The wait while at work was agonizing. October couldn't come fast enough. After school got out on Friday, we were off making the 200-mile trip. We were almost to camp when we had a near death experience at the wheel. I about hit the very bull we would later end up shooting. Luckily for us he stopped in the bar pit, or it would have been a terrible collision. I said to Bron, we need to go back in the morning and find that bull again.

    We found him at first light tending a cow in a picturesque willow and lodge pole pine meadow standing beside a small beaver pond. It was a scene out of a calendar. I raised my bow above my head like a set of antlers and we grunted our way in. It was working. He wasn't about to give up his cow to a skinny challenger and held his ground. I knocked an arrow and we had him perfectly broadside at 27 yards. Do we pass or shoot? It was a tough call. 

    I heard Bron say "Nooo Dad!" under his breathe when I took my arrow off the rest. We backed out. Bron was disappointed, but I felt we could find one bigger before Wednesday when he had to head back to School. Plus, my friends Kade and Mike were showing up that night to join us for a few days. 

    Monday and Tuesday all four of us tried our darndest to turn up a big bruiser. We covered a bunch of country on the side by sides and hiked into several river drainages. We also put the hours behind the glass. We saw a few more new bulls but nothing bigger than the Beaver Pond bull.

    That night back at camp, I was pretty bummed out. I still had several more days I could hunt but my son had only one more morning with me. I was conflicted! While I was watching the flames of the campfire, it hit me. What are you doing Dad! Is it really worth a few more inches of paddle and points to shoot a bull without him? I told the guys before we went to bed Let's go try to find the Beaver Pond bull gain and get an arrow in him.

    A big cow with her calf were on the pond when we got there but no bulls were within sight. It seemed unusual for her to be alone this time of the year. Just as we were about to back out, I caught movement across the river from us. Holy Moose Batman! It was our bull, and he was heading our way! He just stepped out of the pines, as if on cue. I was so thankful to be seeing him again. He had frost on his back, and you could see his breathe. Steam was coming off his feet as he crossed the cold stream. He was on the move, and we need to get off the hill we were on and intercept him.

    Bron chambered a round in his 6.5 Creedmoor as we ducked off the hill. We used the willows and rolling terrain to get ourselves into position for an ambush. We could hear his soft grunts and knew he was close. When he stepped into view, he was well within archery range. He spotted us standing there and stopped. I had an arrow knocked and Bron had his gun shouldered. He was quartering towards us though not a shot I would normally risk taking with my bow, but he was in the open and I knew Bron had four bullets in his gun. 

    As I came to full draw, I was surprised to see all five sight pins covering his chest. They are some big dudes. I put my second pin between his front right shoulder and the base of his neck and told Bron to go ahead and shoot too once I let one fly. I sent an arrow tipped with a 125 grain QAD Exodus broadhead. I buried deep. Just as he wheeled around from my hit, Bron pulled the trigger on his 6.5 Creedmoor folding the bull in his tracks. It was a bang-bang play as they say in baseball.

    Heck yeah! We couldn't have scripted the harvest any better. It’s what Bron and I dreamed of doing together in sharing this once-in-a-lifetime experience. We exchanged high fives hugs. It was an amazing bond between a father and his young son.

    We cautiously walked up alongside the bull not 100% sure he was dead yet, but I knew my arrow had buried deep into his chest and Bron’s shot had knocked him to the ground. He had quit thrashing after a few seconds. As we made it over to him, I made a rookie mistake assuming Bron had cycled in a second round after he shot. It wasn’t comical at the time and could have had a different outcome, but we have a good laugh about it now.

   I had my back turned away from the bull and was starting to talk to my friends who just joined us when the bull got back on his feet. Bron in his panic jammed his gun. Luckily, the bull didn’t turn our direction and was hurt to bad to go very far. I quickly fixed Bron’s jam and handed the gun back to him for one last shot that put the bull down for good.

    They are big, tall, and heavy! However, we couldn't have killed him in a better spot. There was a road only 150 yards away from where he died. Bron wanted to haul out the entire moose all by himself. We had no problem letting him do so. After photos, we got to skinning and quartering him while Bron made six packing trips to the truck with all the meat and head.

    I loved everything about this hunt! It wasn't easy. It wasn't cheap. I put about 1,200 miles on my truck and 700 miles on my side by side. I now love the Uintas and can see why so many other Utahns do too. The vistas were incredible! I love the moose we harvested and how we got it done. He is wide, heavy and by the looks of worn teeth also a very old bull.  

Notes: Where was Brody during this hunt? He was on his mission in Guatemala. / I was shocked to learn Tory Brock's hunter killed the Sulphur bull the following year. He was alive after-all and a giant grossing 174".  
















Sulphur Bull & Fire Bull Scouting Photos

Sulphur Bull 2023 -174" B&C