Well Doug, thanks for the reply. I know I cant see all the terrain around you (as in 360 degrees), but that looks like some impressive stalking in such wide open country. You were obviously aided by all that camoflauge that you are wearing.
To Doug and Forster, I must admit, that is why I am still more of a student than a teacher here. Like most students, I do have my own opinions, but I am here to learn. Besides, despite being the home of the RMEF and B&C club, Missoula isnt the easiest place to find a friendly conversation about hunting. I love my friends around here, good people, but they are not hunters.
I grew up hunting in my teen years and in to my early 20's. I lived in Browns Gulch north of Butte. Great hunting turf, but I was the only hunter in my family and I never had a great deal of learnin'bout hunting as I always hunted alone. Needless to say, I made all the mistakes. Like spending all day trying to catch elk by chasing them. I did have my successes and learned a lot. The most important thing I learned was that I had a lot yet to learn.
I stopped hunting in my early twenties and didnt touch another gun for about 15 years.
Three years ago, I decided to get back into it, but I told myself then that I would do it right this time around. So I talk to anyone who will talk to me about hunting, I read anything I can get my hands on and I spend as much time as I can in the field observing and learning from those critters. I am pretty much obsessed at this point.
Most of my friends that I have hunted with from Butte, are not what I call truly accomplished hunters. They talk about 5, 6, and 7 hundred yard shots as "do-able". I am a good shot and have shot mulies at ranges between 3 to 4 hundred yards (around Melrose, Dillon and Silverstar areas). My longest sucsessful shot to date on an elk is about 300 yards. With that said, I know I have killed animals in my earlier hunting life that I never got to put in the freezer. (shameful!!!) That is one of the major reasons why I got away from hunting. And that is why I told myself that I will be a different kind of hunter this time around.
I guess, what I should learn from all this, as I sit here and reflect upon it, is that shooting long shots is a gamble. And, Like gambling, getting lucky a few times early on can lead to a lifetime of a bad habits and possible regret.
just for the record, I don't gamble with money.