Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

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Exophysical
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Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Exophysical » Fri Oct 11, 2019 4:59 am

This is the somewhat wordy tale of a canoe hunt I just returned from. For a few years now I've considered the elk hunt we did back in 2015 one of my greatest trophy's, even though it was my partner that pulled the trigger.I think I finally surpassed that victory however with a truly epic hunt. This hunt was significant in that it is the 10th canoe hunt I've done, and quite possibly the last one that I will do for moose as early season tags are getting much harder to draw. It was also significant in that the hunt was done solo, and just the all around epic-ness of the whole hunt. So if you've got a few minuets, pour yourself a coffee and enjoy the read, if not just enjoy the pictures.....

ImageDSCF1223 by https://www.flickr.com/photos/153108294@N08/, on Flickr

First off, a huge thanks to a fellow outdoorsman and all around stand up guy, and great hunter by the sounds of it. He drove me to the put in point, and kept my vehicle at his house for the duration of the trip. We met for the first time over breakfast on the morning of the hunt, drove to the put in, and then I gave him my truck LOL.


ImagePA200256 by Cal bablitz, on Flickr

I spotted a few cow moose as I paddled down the river, each time I pulled over onto the opposite bank, glassed the area carefully and did some calling. I never did manage to put antlers on a moose that day however. Despite some strong upriver winds and my relatively late start I paddled about 30km that day and made camp late in the day.

ImagePA190254 by Cal bablitz, on Flickr

The next couple of days I stayed along the banks, I was seeing quite a few cow moose near the river, and saw a couple bulls higher up the valley. I figured if I kept calling it was only a matter of time until I got a bull to come out on the bank, where dealing with it by myself would be relatively easy. A couple days into the hunt however, two jet boats full of "keepers of the land" made camp upriver of me. These guys were buzzing past about 4-6 times a day, I saw them go by with two cow elk and what looked like a cow moose, at that point I didn't really want to call any moose closer to the river, so I started hunting higher.

ImagePA200255 by Cal bablitz, on Flickr

The next day it got bitter cold, my Life Straw bottle became more or less useless, there was a lot of driving snow, and up and down the valley you could hear the crash of trees getting blown over. The wind made calling useless, and longer shots impossible. However it did give me enough noise coverage to still hunt some timber, even with the dry crunchy leaves. I found some fresh moose tracks in the dead leaves, headed down a well worn game trail that I could move along quietly and decided that I may as well follow them. Without snow there was no way to tell the sex of the animal, but I figured it was about as good of a chance as any. I slowly followed those tracks for about 4-5 hours and eventually bumped into the cow that had made them at less than 20 yards. Not a bull, but I was pretty proud of myself for pulling that off on bare, crunchy ground.

ImagePA230257 by Cal bablitz, on Flickr

Shortly after tracking the cow I saw a herd of elk further up the far side of the valley, and decided to go after them the next day. I hiked a couple kilometers back to camp and the paddled the canoe a couple km upstream so I could use it to get into position the next morning. The next day was much like the previous, high winds and lots of snow. I hiked upriver to the canoe, crossed the river, then hiked another 3 km further upriver (and down wind) before climbing way up the valley. I hunted half the day up there and didn't see any elk.

About noon I looked across the valley and saw a moose, way up on the other side. It was hard to tell through the snow, but eventually I was able positively confirm that it was a bull. He was slowly descending off of a bench in a more or less south bound direction. My first feeling was that of disappointment, but the more I thought about it the more I became convinced that I just might be able to intercept him if I really got a move on. The moose was over a kilometer away, not accounting for the elevation, and heading upriver, and my canoe was about a kilometer and a half downriver... I decided that I didn't have anything better to do that attempt a more or less impossible stalk.

I barrelled down the side of the valley to the river bank, hoofed it back to my canoe down the rough bank, and then paddled the canoe back up the river as fast as I could. I landed about where I had seen the bull, I ditched my pack and then marched up the riverbank another half kilometer to get downwind of the bull... assuming he was still headed in that direction. The bush was impossibly thick and noisy so I had to move very slowly and only using game trails. I was trying to cut back to the wall of the valley where I figured the bull would be, but the game trails were not taking me there very directly. All of the sudden I smelled him, he was close! I hunkered down and did a few calls... nothing. After about 15 minuets I convinced myself that I must be smelling a wallow, and moved forward cautiously. About 10 yards further... BOOM!... a huge commotion right near the wall of the valley. It was too thick to see anything so I ran up a knoll, hoping to see over the undergrowth. The bull was charging straight up the wall, back up onto the bench he had come off of, right at the top he stopped broadside. I couldn't tell you the yardage, but it felt too far for me to freehand. He just stood there while I blundered around trying to brace my rifle on a tree, however the moment I found a rest he turned, giving me no ethical shot, and slowly disappeared over the edge. At that point I really should have given up, but I decided that I was going up after him, did you know a moose can pretty much run up a vertical wall? By the time I was nearly to the top, I was only still climbing because I was too scared to try to come back down. On top of the bench it was crazy thick, forget trying to move quietly, I was doing pretty good just to move at all. I did bump a moose near the top but never did see it, and finally decided that maybe I'd just have to give up on that bull.

That there is pretty much the most epic day I've ever put in. I think if I had had a partner on this hunt, no matter who it was, they would have talked me out of even attempting it. I cant even decide if nearly pulling the whole thing off makes it more crazy, or less crazy, but it was indeed crazy.

ImageDSCF1216 by Cal bablitz, on Flickr


So the next day I decided to move further away from those jet boaters, I packed up in the dark and launched my canoe at the crack of legal shooting light. About 200 yards down river, just standing there on a gravel bar, was a bull moose... so I shot him.

ImageDSCF1221 by Cal bablitz, on Flickr

I only had to pack him about 100 yards to get him in the canoe, but still, dressing a moose, and packing it 100 yards over your shoulder is pretty hard work for one guy. I was back in the canoe by noon, doing my best to keep it headed downriver. As usual my arms and stomach were cramping up like crazy, I literally could not even sit still without some muscle or other twitching and cramping. My entire right arm was hard as a rock, but if I tried to rub it my left hand would involuntarily curl itself into a pretzel like shape, and I would have to use my other hand to straighten it out. So mostly I just drifted and drank lots of water for a couple hours, eventually I recovered to where I could carefully do some paddling... despite my slow progress I managed to cover the 40km or so of river to the takeout before nightfall.

If anyone managed to read this far, I thank you, and hope that it has been somewhat entertaining, and I will end with the same line as I did on that 2015 hunt, because it so nicely sums up everything that made this hunt great... More than the game we pursue, regardless of the outcome, its the hunt itself that is the real trophy. Good luck everyone.


They say millwrights can fix anything except a broken heart, but I've even got a tool that can do that!
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Motivated » Fri Oct 11, 2019 5:20 am

:clap: :clap: :clap: :clap: Excellent job and great story too!
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby backstraps » Fri Oct 11, 2019 5:26 am

WOW!!! What an exciting hunt (ADVENTURE) and to do it SOLO!! My hat is off to you Exo!! :clap: :clap: :clap:
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby NYBackcountry » Fri Oct 11, 2019 5:29 am

Great read, I laughed out loud at the last two paragraphs. Between the pretzel hand and the casual "so I shot him", I just about spit my coffee out.

Congrats on a heck of an accomplishment, a solo moose hunt is no joke. 8-) 8-)
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Jackson Marsh » Fri Oct 11, 2019 7:19 am

EPIC hunt!! :clap: :clap:

I always look forward to your posts, beautiful rough country you hunt. I can't imagine the amount of work it takes to butcher and pack a moose by yourself. Hats of to you, well done. Thanks for sharing the pics and story. Do you freeze all that meat? Can it?
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Exophysical » Fri Oct 11, 2019 7:48 am

We freeze it and eat most of it fresh, whatever is left next fall gets turned into jerky. With a moose I usually do a quarter every day, sometimes two but I always try to only do one hind quarter a day. A whole moose, from quarters to freezer is almost 12 hours of steady work for two guys, I can tell you that by the end of that nobody is doing their best work.

Jackson Marsh wrote:EPIC hunt!! :clap: :clap:

I always look forward to your posts, beautiful rough country you hunt. I can't imagine the amount of work it takes to butcher and pack a moose by yourself. Hats of to you, well done. Thanks for sharing the pics and story. Do you freeze all that meat? Can it?
They say millwrights can fix anything except a broken heart, but I've even got a tool that can do that!
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Kokes » Fri Oct 11, 2019 7:56 am

Incredible..congrats..what province did you get that moose in?
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Exophysical » Fri Oct 11, 2019 8:23 am

He's an Alberta bull. I'll not put a tape to this one, because I just hate to boil down a great hunt into a cold hard number indicative of my measure of success... but he's somewhere around 40" or so, a 3-4 year old. Perfect for the table IMO, lots of meat but not too tough.

Kokes wrote:Incredible..congrats..what province did you get that moose in?
They say millwrights can fix anything except a broken heart, but I've even got a tool that can do that!
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Edcyclopedia » Fri Oct 11, 2019 8:43 am

Spectacular! :clap:
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby milkweed-militia » Fri Oct 11, 2019 8:58 am

Awesome hunt and story. :clap:
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby matt1336 » Fri Oct 11, 2019 9:08 am

What a great adventure! Congratulations
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby Net Guy » Fri Oct 11, 2019 9:22 am

What an awesome hunt! Congratulations! I'm jealous. :clap:
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby JAB » Fri Oct 11, 2019 9:55 am

That's about as good as it gets right there! Congratulations on a huge adventure and moose!!
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby stash59 » Fri Oct 11, 2019 10:18 am

Super cool!!!!! :clap: :clap: :clap: :dance: :dance: :dance:
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Re: Canoe moose hunt, 2019.

Unread postby headgear » Fri Oct 11, 2019 10:54 am

Love your stories Exo, always a good read!


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