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Mule Deer Hunting in Colorado

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  • Mule Deer Hunting in Colorado

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    <title>Sat Mar 18 2006 06</title></head><body><b>
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    &nbsp;<span id="subject0">Chefs Hobby Mule Deer Hunting Grand Junction, CO</span>
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    <img height="75" alt="" hspace="10" src="http://forums.chef2chef.net/avatars//11169.jpg" width="65" align="left" vspace="10">
    Well since I have fallen behind on my wedding show photos I thought I
    would discuss Chefs' hobbies, I personally aspire to hunt furry
    creatures and pull their hide off to see what their flesh tastes like
    when it meets fire and smoke!<br>
    <br>
    I thought I would take you along for the ride on my Mule Deer Hunt at
    Horse Notch in the Castle Peak Wilderness Area. My brother and I hunted
    this area for a lot of years. We built a corral camp as close to the
    wilderness line as the BLM would let us. When we arrive we usually have
    to fix a few cross rails and set the hay box back up. But having the
    corral camp helped us have a place to come out of the wilderness every
    couple days and rest.<br>
    <br>
    The start of the second season in Colorado is always beautiful so when
    we arrive no snow, no mud, just right. But when your camp is at 9500
    feet above sea level things can change in a hurry.<br>
    <br>
    <img src="http://www.thecowboyandtherose.com/pics1/Hunting/packstring.jpg">
    <br>
    <br>
    So we turn the pack string out into the corral and go about setting the
    base camp up. We are so far back in that no other vehicle ever comes by.
    This is rugged country and not knowing what you are doing will cost you
    dearly. We chain up coming in as the grades are so steep with the horse
    trailers and gear the trucks lose traction without them and can not
    climb the notch.<br>
    <br>
    <img src="http://www.thecowboyandtherose.com/pics1/Hunting/setup.jpg">
    <br>
    <br>
    We pop the tent trailer up, set the grain in the stock trailer and move
    the trucks around to act as wind blocks. The camp is left unlocked in
    the event a lost person comes by, there is food, water, heaters, medical
    kits, everything. The whole thing runs on twelve volt batteries.<br>
    <br>
    It is only a matter of time til the sky starts to tell you that we are
    about to get a visit from mother nature. And when mother nature visits
    the high altitudes of the Rocky Mountains she can be an unruly mistress!<br>
    <br>
    <img src="http://www.thecowboyandtherose.com/pics1/Hunting/sky.jpg"> <br>
    <br>
    We also set up a remote camp site, tents and such packed into the
    wilderness area on the animals and set up. When you see a storm like
    this one building you don't try and cover the 25 miles out to the base
    camp, you head to the wall tent and build a fire, your gonna be here for
    a little while. But it is comfortable in the tents as well. Grain for
    the horses, hay, stock salt, all packed in to the camp for the chance
    you will need it. Coffee and food for people. Wood all stacked and the
    stove ready to go. We have spent three days stuck in the tent 25 miles
    from nowhere. We have also had guests that have found themselves
    unprepared for what was about to happen. You have never observed
    happiness until you greet a 72 year old man that is walking and lost in
    the snow. He stayed two days with us and went back to his camp as the
    storm broke and we left in search of the mule deer.<br>
    <br>
    <img src="http://www.thecowboyandtherose.com/pics1/Hunting/sullyleg.jpg">
    <br>
    <br>
    Things don't always go as planned. As the storm broke we came out just
    in time for another one to roll in on us. Here you see the horses eating
    grain. In deep snow they can not find the grain that gives them the
    energy required to generate heat. So these grain bags fit over their
    ears and allows them to eat and breath while the grain just falls to the
    bottom of the bag for easy retrieval by their tongue. You might notice
    the forward horse has a foreleg bandaged. Sully is a quarter horse and
    both rides and packs. After the storm coming up out of the back country
    as we waded through snow up to the horse shoulders, he picked up an old
    stand of bar wire from decades ago when the range was fenced. He
    lacerated the right shoulder one inch into the muscle. When I tell you
    that you have to be ready I mean it, my brother and I laid the horse
    down with 5 CC of domisodo and locally nerve blocked the shoulder with
    Carbocaine. The poor thing took 36 sutures, but got up after the amateur
    vet work and made a full recovery about four weeks later.<br>
    <br>
    As luck would have it on this trip, it would be me and not my brother
    whom the monster mule deer would show himself to:<br>
    <br>
    <img src="http://www.thecowboyandtherose.com/pics1/Hunting/deer.jpg"> <br>
    <br>
    And so the 8th largest mule deer ever shot in the State of Colorado
    would hang upside down in the camp for another five days as we tried to
    find his twin for my brothers tag. We would just end up with the one
    deer but the memory is a great one and discussed ever year at hunting
    camp.<br>
    <br>
    We ended up stuck an extra three days in the Castle Peak Wilderness Area
    because after the fourth storm the notch would slide and what little
    road existed was now under 6 feet of slide snow. We would haul out two
    animals for other camps without horses, we would haul out one
    Californian hunting in sneakers and stuck on the back side of Castle
    Peak, we would held Howard, a 72 year old man doing what he loved a
    little longer than he should have with a snow storm coming.
    Interestingly two years later I would find Howard's horse with no rider.
    My brother and I started the spiral search outward from the horse, we
    would find Howard one hour later about frozen to death, we packed him,
    at 74, like a dead man over our horse with his in tow by the remaining
    rein that did not break during the tussle, to our base camp, put him in
    dry cartharts, warm him up slowly, we knew the old guy would be alright
    when he suddenly looked up and asked if we should not be giving him
    bourbon to help with the hypothermia. This was our most dramatic event
    ever at hunting camp. At 80 years old I still get a Christmas Card from
    the Grand Junction Veterans Hospital from Howard thanking my brother and
    I for the extra time he got with his grand kids thanks to two people who
    know what they were doing when they came across a riderless horse 20
    miles in at Schelgel Lake below the east side of Castle Peak. At any
    given time there are maybe 12 people in an area of 3700 square acres,
    you had better know what you are doing for your own safety and for the
    safety of others who's path you may cross in the middle of nowhere!!<br>
    <br>
    I love the solitude of hunting, but when you run across others of the
    same mind set it is very nice to share coffee and burn some wood in the
    stove!<br>
    <br>
    Til we talk again,<br>
    Chef Bob Ballantyne<br>
    The Cowboy and The Rose<br>
    &nbsp;</font></p>

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    Tour the New Rig Here!

    Sgt. USMC '79-'85

    S-M inmate number 12

    RIP ronP


  • #2
    looks like a great setup, not to mention a great muley. Thanks for the pics!

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