Category Archives: Good Stories

Good stories about horses, dogs, and horse packing trips.

Finally getting around to finishing the story of my 2019 moose hunt

I guess an apology is meaningless here, so I won’t bother. It’s been more than 3 years since my 2019 moose hunt trip to Alaska with Derek Habel and I’m just now getting around to finishing the story. This is my sixth post about it, I believe.

So, when I left off, I had just gone off with a saddle horse and four pack horses to return to the trailhead, 19.97 miles by our gps, to pick up about 440 lbs of horse feed to bring back to our camp. I documented that whole experience in a previous post (somehow I got things a little out of order as I was documenting the trip), so I won’t go back over that trail here. Suffice to say that it was a tough ride, particularly coming back in with four pack horses, fully loaded, alone, in grizzly country. However, having said that, a hot shower and a warm, comfortable bed at the trailer made it the trip almost worth the trouble!

We’ll pick things back up as I was arriving back at camp, Tuesday evening, after a very long and hard day on the trail. I arrived around 7pm and Derek had gotten back into camp just a little before I got there. He had a roaring fire going. We both pitched in to unload and care for the horses, and it wasn’t long before dinner was ready. It felt very good to sit and warm myself by the fire. My feet were soaked and cold from the river crossings coming in and I was utterly exhausted. If you haven’t read it, go back and read post #4, which I linked above, about my trip to bring feed for the horses back in. On the trip back in to the camp, I had three wrecks with my pack string, two of which were pretty serious. I was lucky that neither I nor any of the horses was seriously injured. It’s really too bad that I had nobody to get video footage of that ride. It was a tough one.

Not dead, just resting.

On Wednesday morning, that would be September 18, 2019, Derek and I packed up two saddle horses and all four pack horses and headed back into the back country. We traversed the low bogs, crossed Iverson canyon, made our way up Anaconda Creek, over to Cottonwood Creek, and finally down into Carden Creek, where we found a cozy little spot for a camp. All told, we were about 12 miles from our base camp. It was some pretty tough riding, but as we had come that way the previous week, we had idea of the easiest routes to take and kept the horses out of most of the toughest bogs and thickets.

The following day, we saddled Moose and Finn and headed out to hunt. We found a nice knoll above Carden Creek, from which to scope the area, but saw nothing we could hunt. We spotted a couple bull moose down farther in the valley, but they were too far off and moving too fast for us to make a try at them. They probably had been spooked by hunters brought in by the local outfitter.

On our way back toward camp, Derek spotted a cow moose and calf on the hillside opposite the one we were on, across Carden Creek. We stopped and watched for a few minutes, before we saw a second cow and decided that there was probably a bull somewhere nearby. After about a half hour or so of scoping the hillside, we finally saw him. He was a legal sized bull, but not a trophy.

I need to interject something here, just for background information. A couple of Derek’s friends, resident hunters of Alaska, had flown in and met us at our base camp the previous week and we hauled them up into the foothills east of camp to get them started on a Dall sheep hunt. As they were Alaska residents, they were hopeful that they might also get a chance at a Grizzly bear after their sheep hunt. Derek only hunts for trophy moose, so there was no guarantee that he would take one, but I, on the other hand, had no such aspirations. Derek’s friend purchased a bull moose tag for me in hopes that I might score a bull and create a “gut-pile” to attract a Grizzly to the area.  With that in mind, Derek set me up to take the bull we were looking at from that hillside on Carden Creek.

The bull was laying near the base of a tree, which is why it took us awhile to see him, facing north and broadside to us. After using Derek’s range finder, we determined that the range was 440 yards. I carried our bear protection rifle – a .457 Marlin lever action, so Derek gave me his custom 300 Ultra Mag with an excellent range-finding scope. He coached me through the use of the scope to get the proper rise and I got myself into a comfortable seated position.  I held a long breath, slowly exhaled, and squeezed her off. I saw the bull toss his head and thought I had hit him, but he didn’t do anything else, so I took a second shot, which I was pretty sure hit the mark. He then stood up. I took a third shot, which I thought scored as well, but he then slowly turned away from us and started to slip behind some brush. I took a fourth shot, which I was pretty sure missed completely. He slipped behind the brush and out of our sight. I was pretty sure my second shot was a solid hit, so I mounted up on Moose and started to find my way down the mountainside, across Carden Creek, and up the opposite mountainside. Derek remained at the site from which I shot, to spot for me and make sure I found the moose.

It took me close to half an hour to reach the bull, but I found him not 20 feet from where I first saw him laying near the base of the tree. He was dead as a hammer. As it turned out, my first shot hit him in one of his antlers. After he stood up, my next two shots were both in the neck and were both kill shots. As I had thought, the fourth shot missed completely.

Derek and I got to work cutting up the moose. We quartered him and pulled the backstraps and left the meat laying on some moss to cool, while we went back to our satellite camp and returned with our pack horses. By the time we got the meat and antlers packed on the horses and made our way back to camp, we were a couple of tired puppies.

The sky was lowering that night, so we prepared our camp for rain. It came in the early hours of the morning, which made getting up and getting packed up for our move back to base camp a cold, wet, chore, but we were on the trail by about 7:30am.The trip back to base camp was a rough one. Neither Derek nor I had slept well and we were exhausted. Our horse feed had run out the day before (what we brought out with us from base camp) so the horses were hungry and irritable, as well. Missy had a sore back, so she was problematic for us and she kept getting us all tangled up in the pack string. She became such a problem to us and all the horses that we considered more than once just shooting her and having it done with! However, our better selves prevailed and eventually we got things sorted out to minimize our horse problems and made our way back toward base camp….in the rain.

We were supposed to be meeting Dave and Zack, our intrepid Dall sheep hunters, somewhere along the path back, but we had no communication from them and gave up trying to contact them by satellite and cell phone (it was amazing that we had cellular coverage in some areas). When we arrived back at base camp that afternoon, it was like coming home…almost.

My horse, Apollo, as I mentioned in previous posts, had developed a limp on his front right foot on the trip in from the trailhead. I had him shod by a farrier I had not used before a couple days before we left Spanish Fork and I think the farrier quicked him. Apollo lost the shoe on that hoof before we had been out three days, but I was lucky enough to have been able to find the shoe and retrieve it. I re-set the shoe and hoped that would relieve the pain in his hoof. I also gave him some rest the first week, but as time went on we had to have him. During our three-day hunting expedition to the Carden Creek area, Apollo again lost that same shoe. I didn’t bring our farrier kit with us, so he had to go barefoot on that hoof. He was fine in the tundra, but while crossing the rocky creek beds, he was very sore. I took it as easy on him as I could. He was game and kept on working. Once we got back to base camp I again re-set that shoe.

During the whole trip, I had to re-set seven horse shoes. I went through all the spares we brought and finally ended up having to make a rear shoe out of a used front shoe to get us out on the last day. It held, though. We haven’t used that farrier since.

All the horses, at this stage of the hunt, were showing wear. Apollo and Missy were dropping weight quickly and were looking pretty thin. The rest of the horses had rub sores in one place or another from the pack saddles. I was double-padding Missy, to ease her sore back. Having said that, all-in-all, we and the horses were in pretty good shape for the work we were doing.  We had plenty of feed for the horses at base camp, so they were well fed when we were there. The dogs, Ruger and Lucky, were ok, although Lucky was still suffering badly from the porcupine quills in his mouth (I talked about that encounter in a previous post). We continued to pull one or two now and again, whenever we saw the opportunity, but Lucky was not wanting anything to do with us by that time.

The following day, Saturday,  September 21, Derek and I saddled up and packed up the horses and headed back out toward Carden Creek and farther south. We blazed a trail through the tundra and thickets, cutting out a bunch of scrub trees and clearing a trail for ourselves, made our way past Cottonwood Creek and made our way over to our previous satellite camp. We set up camp for the night there and rested that evening.

On Sunday, we headed over the hills south of Carden Creek, up on to a rise, then down into a valley. As we continued southward, we sighted a decent bull on a hillside a half-mile or so away. We headed that direction. When we got close enough, Derek started a stalk, while I took the horses around to an area where I thought we could approach without being seen. While I was bushwhacking, Derek was able to stalk to within about 200 yards and scored a very nice bull with a one-shot kill.

As I made my way toward Derek’s kill, the remaining moose, several cows and another nice bull, passed right by me and the horses. In trying to find a way to reach Derek’s bull, I ended up in a gully about 100 yards or so below where I needed to be. I could see no easy way to get there, so I pointed Ginger up an extremely steep, brush covered, hillside, making our way in short switch-backs, up the side hill. Finn, on the other hand, wouldn’t follow us. I ended up dismounting and just letting Ginger head on up the hill on her own (Derek was waiting at the top of the ascent), while I went back for Finn. I finally succeeded in coaxing Finn up the hill, now that Ginger was at the top, and we both reached the top of the hill out of breath, but in good shape.

We again quartered the bull and caped this one (it was a very nice 64″ bull), but having no pack horses, we laid out the quarters and backstraps on the moss to cool, and headed back to camp. We picked up the other horses at our satellite camp and continued on toward base camp. We had made contact with Dave and Zack and had made arrangements to pick them up in Anaconda Gulch around 2pm, but we didn’t reach them until about 6-7pm. It was long after dark after a very long day when we reached base camp that night.

Dave and Zack had spent 12 days in the high peaks hunting Dall sheep. They had scored a nice buck with full curls, but had no further luck. They had eventually run out of food and had been living on fresh mutton without salt for a couple days! They were happy to see us.

We had a fun evening that night, exchanging hunt stories with Dave and Zack. We stayed up past 2am, before running out of steam and heading for bed.

On Monday morning, two planes came in and landed in the river bed, not far from our base camp, to pick up Dave and Zack. Derek and I again packed up the horses and headed back over to our Carden Creek camp. We had previously cleared a lot of the trail, which made the going easier, but by the time we arrived at camp that evening, we were bushed. We had a quick meal and went to bed.

The next day we packed up early and, with all the horses in tow, headed over the hills to retrieve Derek’s bull. We had it loaded and underway by around noon. We arrived back at our base camp in the early evening, before dark, after having made 23 miles on the day.

The following morning we arose early. I went right to work replacing a hind shoe on Apollo, which he had lost the day before. I was out of shoes and almost out of nails, having replaced six other shoes during the trip. I took the front shoe Apollo had lost days before and used a rock as an anvil and another rock as a hammer, and was able to rough it into shape as a rear shoe. I tacked it on and while it was ugly, it held and he made it out with all four shoes in place.

We then packed up the camp, loaded up Derek’s bull, and headed back toward our trailhead and the trailer in Beaver Creek, Yukon Territory, Canada. We left my moose quarters and backstraps hanging on our meat pole. The trip out was sort of a blur. We were exhausted from our exertions of the past couple of weeks, as were the horses, but they and we knew we were headed back toward the trailer and the end of the trail. The horses moved out without any urging from us.

Coming out after a successful hunt

We had gone just a couple of miles, when we came upon a young bull and a cow crossing the river. The cow was very concerned about us and stood her ground, watching the dogs and us. She showed some aggressiveness, so we kept our distance. An angry cow moose is nothing to mess with. The bull, on the other hand, not quite legal size for hunting yet, was entirely focused on the cow. I’m not even sure he noticed us at all. The cow must have  been in season, because he was completely focused on her. We waited several minutes, got a little video footage, then they moved off across the river and into the woods.

We made it to the trailer in very good time, arriving in the late afternoon around 4pm. We clocked 19.97 miles in 5 hours 27 minutes, fully loaded.

It was very nice to be back at the trailer that night. Derek’s living-quarters trailer is almost like a hotel room and a hot shower was excellent!

But, the trip was not over for me. I still had to go back for my moose!

The next morning, Derek arose at 6am and packed up Ginger and Shadow for me and saddled Moose with my gear. He let me sleep in until 7, waking me up for breakfast. I was in the saddle and headed back to the base camp by 7:37am.

The morning was wet and it was snowing lightly, and it was cold and breezy.  I had dressed for it, though, so I was comfortably warm, at least until water from the river crossings started getting through to my feet.  Still, I had long since gotten over the “heeby-geebies” of being alone with horses in Grizzly country, so I enjoyed the ride in. The river was higher than the previous year and many of the short-cuts and byways I had come to know from my previous trips in and out had changed, but I was getting to know the way fairly well by this time. There was little guesswork this trip and I was able to avoid the worst of the traps and log jams I encountered on the previous ride in. The horses moved along well and gave me no trouble, the weather cleared by mid-morning, and I enjoyed watching the mountains change as I drew nearer to them.

I arrived at base camp, now empty but for my moose and a few odds and ends of gear, just before 1pm. We made the 20 miles in 4 hours and 13 minutes. Happily, I found the meat on the meat pole had not been disturbed. I took about an hour to rest, eat lunch, and let the horses get what little grass was left in the area.

Then came the hard part. A quarter of moose can weigh upwards of 200 pounds, and I had the task of loading two pack horses with 4 quarters and some other large packs of meat, and some remaining camp gear, by myself. It helped that the horses were compliant and stood in place while I struggled to get each pannier up and hooked over the pack saddle trees. By the time I had both pack horses loaded, I was in a full sweat and exhausted!

Derek had given me his satellite phone for the trip, so I took a minute to call and let him know I had made it in safely and was heading back out. It was 2:02pm when I climbed back in the saddle and headed out. The trip out went smoothly. No problems from the horses.  I was mounted on Ginger and she led the way at a wonderful pace. If there was five feet of level ground in front of her she stepped up into a foxtrot! Anything else was at a fast walk. As the miles flew past, I began to run out of energy. I mean, this was a tough day on a 61 year old saddle bum! By the time we rolled into camp I was just about at the end of my rope.

We arrived at 5:55pm, making my trip out, fully loaded, 3 hours and 53 minutes. Overall, we traveled 40 miles (39.94 to be exact), took an hour’s break in the middle, in 8 hours and 20 minutes…or thereabouts.

We arrived in the evening at 5:55pm, just before dark. Derek was there to welcome us in and simply waved me to the trailer while he unpacked, cared for, and fed the horses. I later calculated my travel time: Trip in – 4:13, trip out – 3:53, lunch break and packing – 1:12, total trip 9 hours 18 minutes for 40 miles.

That evening, Derek treated me to a nice meal at Buckshot Betty’s restaurant. They have hot showers and changing rooms in the back as well, so we took advantage of that too.

The next morning we were met by a Yukon Territory Conservation Officer, who nicely informed us they were waiting for us to show up at the Canadian Border Patrol Station to obtain proper permits to transport our moose meat through Canada. We stopped first at Buckshot Betty’s for a nice breakfast, then headed over. We were in full compliance with all regulations and all went well. Then we drove the 18 miles to the US Border Patrol Station to declare out kills and get the proper inspections to depart the US and enter Canada with the meat. We then stopped again at the Canadian authorities’ office, where they were already expecting us and moved us through quickly and with no trouble. We were on the road headed home by just after noon.

It was a long, but relaxed 4-day drive home. Both Derek and me, as well as our six horses, were due for a nice long rest.

I’m pretty proud of what those horses and I did on that last ride. We made a 40-mile ride through the Yukon Territory back country, without a trail, following a river with dozens of crossings, with a pack string loaded with meat and gear, with an hour break in the middle, in nine hours and 18 minutes!

That’s what a string of Missouri Fox Trotters can do for you!  Not too shabby for an old man either!

TH

 

 

 

Spring Riding

This spring has been a strange one for me. Early this year, a friend and I sat down and planned out a number of major ride plans and several lesser ones as well. We scheduled things out on the calendar, so we could designate specific days for these rides and block them out, so that nothing else would inadvertently get scheduled over them, as has so often happened in the past. We scheduled a three-day trip to the Moab, Utah area, one to the Grand Canyon, one to the Wind Rivers, one to Yellowstone, and monthly day rides for our local Back Country Horsemen chapter. We were pretty excited.

Then real-life happened. Our very first trip, to the San Rafael Swell area, was downgraded from an overnighter to a day trip. We left early one morning with another rider, all loaded into my truck/trailer rig. We hadn’t even gotten out of Spanish Fork, before my truck suddenly overheated!  We limped it back into town and ended up transferring our horses and tack over to our buddy’s truck/trailer and headed out…later than we had hoped.

We had a nice day ride in Buckhorn Wash, but we didn’t get as far up the canyon as we had hoped. Still, a nice trip.

Turns out my truck’s thermostat was stuck. A $15 part that took all of 5 minutes to replace.

Then our Moab trip was cancelled, due to weather concerns and other things that got in the way. However, I was able to occupy my time helping a friend purchase and tune-up a couple  Missouri Fox Trotters he bought for his family. He, being a first-time horse owner, asked for my advice in helping him select the “right” horses for his family. He had found a pair in the local classified ads that he thought might be likely prospects, so I went with him to take a look.

After giving them a good “once-over”, I saddled each one and took a couple turns around the pasture. Since neither horse was registered, I had two purposes in mind: First, to make sure they would actually gait, and secondly, to see what their temperament was like and what level of training they might have. Both geldings gaited very well, showing a nice Fox Trot as well as a nice canter. Both, however, needed some mileage put on them, as neither had been handled at all for more than a year, before they would be ready for my friend and his kids. Both horses had very gentle and friendly temperaments, though, and the price was good, so I recommended he have both horses checked by a veterinarian and, barring any issues from the vet, buy both horses (they were siblings and had been pretty much raised together).

It seems I only got a photo of the older gelding, but they look pretty similar.

Based on my recommendation, Dave bought the horses and hired me to put some mileage and trail training on the youngest gelding, who was about 6 years old and still showed some “green” tendencies. During his training, I also spent time working with my friend and his sons, teaching them a little about horsemanship and working with good horses, so as to ensure both the riders and horses would enjoy each other and neither would develop any serious bad habits. After putting about 50 miles on the younger horse, I put another 50 on the older gelding, who was about 13 years old and a little steadier in his mentality, but a bit skittish from lack of handling over a long period of time. Due to spring weather along the Wasatch Front, it took me over three months to complete the training. I look forward to riding with Dave and his sons later on this summer.

During that same time frame, I helped another friend get his three wonderful mares bred to a couple Rocky Mountain stallions located north of Salt Lake City. I’m still working on that project. Two of the three mares didn’t settle from the first breeding, so we tried again and are waiting for pregnancy confirmations.

Due to all the above, my horses didn’t get all the attention I had hoped to give them, in preparation for my fifth or sixth attempt to cross the Grand Canyon. My followers will recall that last fall I was actually on the road, headed to the Grand Canyon to make my crossing, when my truck’s engine failed, thus ending my trip just as it was getting underway. So, after so many failed attempts to make this trip happen, I wasn’t too surprised when I had to cancel it again. Sadly, my partner, who was to shuttle my truck and trailer around the Grand Canyon as I rode through it, had a death in the family this past week. That sort of brings things back into focus and reminds me how much more important are our family relationships than horse trips.

I have begun to think that maybe the Good Lord just doesn’t think crossing the Grand Canyon is a good idea for me. Still, I got a very good reminder this past week, that He is mindful of me and watching out for my welfare.

Last Tuesday, I hauled the two geldings I had been training up to Heber City, Utah, and delivered them to my friend’s place. The trip includes 22 miles up and back through Provo Canyon, a winding route with a maximum speed limit of 55 miles per hour. Upon my return I was a bit rushed and hurried down the canyon to meet my daughter, who needed help moving from Provo, Utah to Morgan, Utah. I picked up my 18′ contractor’s trailer and loaded it up with all her and her husband’s belongings, and headed northward. The drive was about an hour and a half up I-15, US-89, and US-84, to Morgan, where we unloaded and I headed home in the fading light.

I had just gotten back onto US-84, headed back toward Ogden, when I noticed something bouncing down the highway alongside my truck. I couldn’t tell what it was, but I figured I must have run over a rock or something and sent it bouncing down the road. I gave it no further thought.

The following day was rainy, so I spent the day working on my computers at home. Thursday, however, showed some sunshine, so I grabbed my son-in-law and picked up a load of 8,000 pounds of hay. We hauled it to my hay storage barn and unloaded about half of it, before I had to call it quits for the day. I’m just not the man I used to be.

On Friday morning, I hitched up my 4-horse gooseneck trailer and loaded up my three horses for a trip to the vet for Coggins tests and spring shots. I hadn’t gone a mile before my truck again overheated!

The veterinarian’s office wasn’t far, so I limped it in to Benjamin, Utah to make my appointment. I was able to limp back to my pasture afterward without doing any damage to the truck’s new engine (remember the engine failure last fall? I spent $18,000 on a new engine). I got the horses unloaded and trailer unhitched and limped carefully home, where I could further diagnose the problem.

Once home, it looked like it might rain again, so I limped on over to my hay storage barn, where about fifty 80lb bales were waiting for me to finish unloading and stacking them. I got that done and went back to trying to figure out why my truck was overheating.

Now, I have been my own mechanic for more than 50 years and in all that time I have had only one thermostat failure…and that was just last month on my truck! So, having just recently replaced my thermostat, I started looking at the temperature sending unit as a possible target for replacement. So, I drove my truck back to Spanish Fork to the local NAPA auto parts store. After some conversation with the store manager, he came out with me to take a look and see if we could determine whether the new thermostat had failed or if it might be a problem with the sending unit. As he walked past the front of my truck, he pointed at my front left wheel and said, “I think I would be more concerned about that than a thermostat!”

I walked forward to see what he was talking about and saw this:

 

Five of the eight lug studs had broken off! My life sort of “passed before my eyes” and I suddenly remembered that “rock” that was bouncing down the road beside my truck on Tuesday evening near Morgan, Utah! Well, I very thankfully bought a new thermostat, as well as 8 new lug studs and 5 new lug nuts and again limped my way very carefully back home!

I was able to replace all the wheel studs without trouble and was back on the road this week. I replaced the thermostat, as well, have have had no further trouble with overheating.

My takeway from this incident is simply this: I think the Good Lord is not done with me yet; He has a few more things He wants to do with me before He takes me home.

With my 50 some years of mechanical experience, I have now had only two thermostat failures. The second may have saved my life, as my next trip was about 75 miles to Ogden, Utah to help a friend, which would have taken place early Saturday morning. Had that thermostat not failed, I would never have seen those broken wheel studs. I cannot explain how that wheel did not come off, as I was traveling home from Morgan at speeds in excess of 80 mph at times, pulling a trailer.

Last Friday, I drove back up to Heber City to finish up helping my friend get settled with his new horses. On the way back down Provo Canyon, I saw one of my lost lug nuts (they are extra large and not hard to see) in the median about half way down the canyon. Yesterday (Saturday), I drove up to Orem, Utah to take my grandson to his baseball game. I saw another of my lug nuts in the median on I-15 on the way (a car had run over it and it was bouncing down the highway, just like the one I saw near Morgan). It is pretty evident to me that I started losing them in Provo Canyon and lost the other 4 en route to and from Morgan. I must have driven more than 150 miles with my wheel about to fall off!

I have no explanation for how the lug nuts became loosened nor how that wheel stayed on once the studs began to break.

Like I said, I guess the Lord is not done with me yet.

 

 

Some Horse Stories from my Dad

Not too long ago, I spent some time with my parents at their home in Arizona. While I was there, Dad and I had a chance to sit and reminisce about some of our rides, pack trips, and other experiences together. I got him talking about his boyhood in southern Utah and he told me about his first three horses. As soon as I got back to my room that night, I spent a few minutes writing down in my journal what he told me. I thought it might be enjoyable reading for my followers.

Dad was born and raised in Panguitch, Utah, which is the setting for the stories I am about to relate. This is taken directly from my journal entry for December 2, 2021:

This evening Dad and I sat up late talking about family history and some of his youth experiences. He told me about three horses he had as a young boy: Nick, Brownie, and Flicka. Dad has always loved horses. So have I.

When Dad was about 6 years old, or thereabouts, he and his buddy, Doug Davis, were playing in the hay loft of his Aunt Pearl’s barn (Panguitch, UT, circa 1940). They noticed an old gray horse had walked into the yard and was snatching hay from the cracks between the siding boards of the barn.  He and Doug decided to catch the horse, so they went down to give it a try, thinking the horse would run away. The old horse just wanted to be fed, so they fed it. Eventually, Dad got a rope around the horse’s neck and tied it to a post. He ran across the road, to his grandpa’s house (Norm Sargent), where Dad and his family were living at the time. He told Gramp he had caught a horse and asked if he could keep it.

Gramp said, “Well, let’s go see it,” so the two of them returned to the barn yard where the horse was tied. Gramp took a long look at the horse, checking its teeth, hooves, and walking all around it. Then he told Dad, “Yes, you can keep him. I used to own this horse and he’s come home.  His name is Nick.”

Dad kept Nick at Gramp and Granny’s place. He has an old photo somewhere (I’ve asked him to try to find it) of him and five other kids sitting on Nick’s back. Dad and his friends often took turns riding Nick around their block. Once, Dad and a friend were riding Nick down Main Street in Panguitch, when  an older boy, who was always somewhat of a bully, stepped out of his doorway and shot a rifle at them. At the time, Dad thought it was a B-B gun, but in retrospect, he now believes it was a .22 rifle, probably loaded with .22 short ammunition, which was commonly used for killing rats. Nick jumped and tried to run away with them, but Dad was able to get him back under control and got home safely. Dad doesn’t remember seeing a wound on the horse, but he walked with a limp on a hind leg ever after.

After that incident, with Nick going lame, Gramp told Dad he had better just let the horse go and return to whoever owned it. So, that’s what they did. Years later, Dad remembers, he saw old Nick working on a local farm, pulling logs and brush for a man. He was still limping on that hind leg.

Dad’s second horse was Brownie.

One day Gramp was in another town working, when a rancher drove his cattle into town to market. He was riding a mare with a colt. He didn’t want to keep the colt, so he asked Gramp if he wanted it. Gramp, thinking about Dad, accepted the colt. He loaded it into the back seat of his 1937 Dodge and drove home to Panguitch.  When he arrived, Gramp pulled Dad aside and told him, “Come see what I have for you!”

Dad raised Brownie by himself, with a little help from Gramps. He eventually broke her to ride – again, by himself at about seven or eight years of age. Being a mustang, Brownie was always ornery and hard to handle (of course, that’s from the perspective of a seven or eight year old boy), but Dad loved her.

One winter (winters in Panguitch are long and cold) his dad (my grandfather, Torild Henrie), approached Dad and explained that they just couldn’t afford to feed Brownie through the winter. She was sold to a local rancher.

During June the following year, his dad was killed in a construction accident. Dad had just turned 9 years old at the time.

Not too long after, the rancher to whom Brownie had been sold, approached Gramps and said, “Remember that mare you sold me? Well, she had a foal.”  He offered the foal to Gramp, which he accepted on Dad’s behalf.

Dad went out to the fellow’s ranch, on foot I suppose, where he easily caught Brownie, who knew Dad well. He mounted Brownie and rode her back to Gramp and Granny’s place, with the young foal following. When he got there, he rode into the barn, then locked the foal inside.  He then returned Brownie to her owner.

The foal was around six months old, so easily weaned.  Dad said he had a tough time getting her to become friendly with him, but eventually succeeded. The 1943 movie “My Friend Flicka” had recently been released, so that is where this little filly got her name.

Dad, now at about nine or ten years old, broke and trained Flicka himself. Not knowing any better, however, he started her very young, riding her probably by the time she was a yearling. Dad believes that his riding her so early, even though he was such a small boy, may have stunted her growth a little. He remembers that she was a small horse and that her front legs seemed a bit short proportionate to her hind legs. He remembers that while she was a good horse, she was never particularly athletic.

Eventually, Flicka was sold to a local rancher, who used her to help him make the rounds on his irrigation ditches.

Dad said he had horses all through his youth and even dated on horses during his high school years.  Nick, Brownie, and Flicka were his first three and they kindled in him a life-long love for horses, which I am pleased to report he passed on to me in full force.

Thanks, Dad.

For Dan and Jackie

TH

Finally! I’m going to cross the Grand Canyon!

Today, I feel very blessed and grateful.
A couple weeks ago I realized I was again going to have to postpone the next leg of my Mexico-to-Canada horse pack trip, which was planned for this month (May 2021).  As it turned out, two issues arose:  First, my recon of the area revealed that the drought had pretty much dried up the water sources along the route between the North Rim and the UT/AZ border, which is the driest part of the Arizona Trail even in the best years. Secondly, my riding partners for the trip had some major events occur in their lives that made it pretty much impossible for them to make the trip. Without the logistical support their involvement brought, I couldn’t see any way to continue.  So it seemed my Mexico-to Canada horse pack trip would remain stuck at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon for at least several more months. That got me a bit down in the mouth.
 
As I considered whether I might be able to at least cross the Grand Canyon by myself, I began to realize that my hopes of eventually continuing my horse pack trip all the way to the Canadian Border are pretty much gone. I thought that if I could at least get across the Grand Canyon, I would have fulfilled one of my last remaining lifetime “bucket list” dreams and, though things looked bleak, if I were to be able to continue the big pack trip, my logistical issues for the future would be greatly simplified.
 
My goal now is to make it from the US/Mexico Border to Panguitch, Utah, which is the destination I originally dreamed of in my youth. That’s the trip Dad and I used to talk about when I was in high school – Tucson, AZ to Panguitch, UT. My dad was born and raised in Panguitch; that’s where my pioneer forefathers settled and my greatest desire for the trip was to re-connect, so to speak, with them, so Panguitch was our original destination. So that’s what I have dreamed about for most of my life – a horse pack trip from Tucson to Panguitch with my dad.
 
During about 2010, a conversation with an old friend, Dale Maples, got me started considering a cross-country trip starting at the US/Mexico Border and ending at the US/Canada Border. Neither of us had any idea what that entailed and we figured we could make it in a couple months. After starting my research, I realized this would be much more of a major undertaking than either of us had imagined.  Eventually, Dale decided he could not make the trip and my dad and I began to make plans.  Very early, we realized we just would not have the financial or logistical support we would need to make the trip in one shot (besides the fact that I was in my mid-50s and Dad in his 80s), so I started planning to divide the mileage into a number of legs, ranging from about 200 to 1,000 miles each. 
The first leg of the trip would be a “shakeout” leg, in which we would get a better idea of the mileage-per-day we could plan on, how our horses and gear would fare, and gain useful experience to help us plan for the rest of the trip. This leg would be from the US/Mexico Border, about 19 miles east of Douglas, Arizona, to Eagar, Arizona.  At Eagar, which is where my parents live, we would evaluate ourselves, our horses, and gear, and decide whether we could continue on and make the second leg of the trip at that time, which would end at Panguitch, Utah around late-July.
We completed the first leg in April 2015, making 355 miles from the US/Mexico border – actually tied up to the border fence – to Eagar, which is where my folks live. This leg took Dad and me 28 days on the trail. It was a wonderful father-and-son experience (you can read my blog posts about it on this site) and an exceptional learning experience.
Our original plan was to make it to Eagar, and if all was well, to continue on to Panguitch, all in one trip. The plan was to arrive in Panguitch, Utah about July 22, just in time to take our place in the Garfield County Pioneer Day Parade on July 24. However, we were not many days on the trail when we realized that making the entire trip, over 900 miles, in one shot was not going to be possible for us. We decided to stop for the year at Eagar and continue on the second leg the following year, planning for much shorter legs in the future.
We continued the trip in 2016, making our way from Eagar, AZ, joining the Arizona Trail above Payson, AZ, and following it to Flagstaff. Again, our plan was to make it to Panguitch this time, but after reaching Flagstaff, we found it impossible to continue. The drought in 2016 was so severe in northern Arizona that wildfires were raging all through the region and we had already found ourselves threatened at one point and diverted by firefighters in another place. Additionally, consultation with the local US Forest Service made it clear that finding water for ourselves and our horses would be a critical issue. We wisely decided to stop there at Flagstaff for the year.  In the end, we made 200 miles in two weeks.
The following year, my father, in his 83rd year, got bucked off his usually trustworthy gelding while out on a ride and got pretty beat up. It took him quite a while to recover from a lacerated spleen and other less severe injuries. That year my mare was pregnant, as well, so we delayed the next leg for another year. It was during that layover that Dad finally decided it was time to hang up his spurs. So, with a heavy heart I began to plan for the rest of the adventure without my best riding partner.
During 2018, a good friend, Jeff Palmer, mentioned he would like to make some of the horse pack trip with me. During the spring of 2019, he and I made our way from Flagstaff, AZ to the South Rim of the Grand Canyon. We made a total of 92 miles in 5 days, ending a couple miles east of Tusayan, Arizona, which is only about 7 miles from the south gate of Grand Canyon National Park.
And there I have been stuck since that time.
Making it across “The Big Ditch” has been a major logistical problem. The Arizona Trail crosses the Grand Canyon via the South Kaibab Trail from the South Rim, continuing from the bottom to the North Rim via the North Kaibab Trail, a total of 22 miles.  The drive for the truck/trailers from the South Rim around to the North Rim, however, is nearly 6 hours, making it necessary to stage vehicles at both the North and South Rims, have places to keep horses with water and feed at both ends, and camp permits for at least three days within the park boundaries. Due to necessary coordination with the mule train outfitters operating on those two trails, crossing from the south to the north presents difficult schedule issues that make it nearly impossible to cross the canyon in one day, not to mention the fact that the park extends another 30 miles or so beyond the trailhead at the North Rim.  Therefore spending a night in the canyon was in the plan, along with another night in the park at the North Rim, before heading out to continue to the UT/AZ border.
However,  securing a Back Country Camp Permit for two nights in the Grand Canyon National Park is a difficult thing.  Applications for these, to have any chance at all at getting one, must be submitted four months before the desired date. Recently the GCNP started allowing submissions 10 days in advance of that 120-day span, but does not actually process them until the opening day of the application time-frame. Of course, I struck out and was unable to secure a permit. The park rangers, however, were very helpful and encouraging. They give some priority to travelers going through the canyon over those just making out-and-back trips, in an effort to assist those making cross-country trips on the Arizona Trail.  I fit into that category and they assured me that if I could come to the park and wait a few days, they would be able to secure a camp permit for me and get me and my horse through and on my way.
Then came the news that my riding companions were not going to be able to make the trip.  So, as mentioned above.  It looked like I was going to have to wait again.  I began to have doubts about the whole trip, as age is starting to catch up with me and I have been feeling the miles lately.  I began to think I might have to just call everything off and just be happy with what I have accomplished so far…which is nothing to sneeze at! I mean who gets to make a horse pack trip of 555 miles with their dad? Still I felt a sense of loss at the thought of giving up on yet another lifetime dream.  At my age, you begin to realize that most of those dreams just aren’t going to happen and I don’t have too many of them left.
Then, last week, someone made a comment on a post on my Western Trail Rider facebook page, to the effect that she and her husband were traveling around southern Utah with their mules, riding at various sites. She mentioned that her husband has always wanted to ride through the Grand Canyon and wondered if it might be possible for him to tag along with us as we crossed. I told her sadly that it looked like my trip was going to be cancelled after all.
Then, a few nights ago, I found I could not sleep for thinking about having to cancel my crossing of the Grand Canyon and the prospect that my opportunities for doing so were quickly waning.  I began to wonder whether my new friends, Ron and Janet Erickson, and I might be able to work out something together. The long and short is that after a few communications back and forth, we have struck a plan!  I decided that the direction in which I crossed the Grand Canyon was less important than the fact that I did, in fact, cross that marvelous natural wonder on my own horses! Besides, riding from north to south makes coordinating with the outfitters easier.  So, if all works according to plan, Ron and I will be dropped off by Janet, with our equines (Ron rides a mule) on Thursday morning at the North Kaibab Trailhead at the North Rim. While Ron and I make our adventure real, she will drive a rig around to the South Rim, where she will pick us up when we emerge from the canyon in the afternoon at the South Kaibab Trailhead.  Looks like this is finally going to happen!
So, I will be heading south on Tuesday to meet Ron and Janet, who are currently staying  at Paria River Ranch, to complete our plans and maybe take a ride with them on Wednesday. Ron and I will cross the Grand Canyon, me with Chief and Missy, him with his mule, from north to south, on Thursday, May 20, 2021.
Yes, today I feel very blessed and grateful. Thanks to the generosity and willingness of the Ericksons and Ron’s dream, like my own, to cross the Grand Canyon on our own worthy steeds.
How great is that?!

I have a new boy in the herd!

Finally!

My mare, Calypso, a Rocky Mountain Gaited Horse, was a week overdue from the latest possible date I calculated. The best I can calculate, she held the foal for 353 days! Normal gestation is 330-345 days. I was getting pretty concerned! My new boy was born early Saturday morning, April 4, 2020.

I had been going out and checking on her every few hours, because I wanted to be there for the birth. I wanted to be able to do some imprinting training with the foal during that critical two hours right after birth. On Friday night I was exhausted and slept like a rock.

I got a call about 7:30 Saturday morning from the landowner from whom I rent pasture, letting me know I had a new foal. Dangit! I missed it! I arrived about 8am. We think the foal was probably born a little before daybreak. He was already standing when I got there. The three geldings with her in the pasture where curious and wanting to get to know the new arrival, which was causing Calypso to get agitated and protective, so I pulled her out of the pasture and carried the foal to her.

Well, I missed that critical imprinting period, but I was able to spend a lot if time in close contact with him. I spent most of the day caressing, holding, and touching him all over.  Now, two days later, he’s a little wary of people and he prefers his mother, which is the way it should be, but he’s friendly and unafraid of people.

When Chief was born I had the help of a couple other people, who handled him before I was able to get there a couple hours later. The imprinting done with him has made a marked difference in the way he relates to people and to me in particular. I wanted that for this new boy as well, but missed the opportunity.  Still, I think the time I was able to spend with him has had some effect. He will not leave his mother to come to me, the way Chief would do, but he is not afraid.

Last month, my mother told me she had a name for my foal if it turned out to be a colt. She suggested “Trooper” and I liked it. So, the new boy’s name is Trooper. He is half Missouri Fox Trotter (Chief is his sire) and half Rocky Mountain Gaited Horse, so he should be a well-gaited horse.

The pregnancy was accidental, as she was placed in the same corral as Chief and several other horses when Chief was just getting old enough not to be “shooting blanks” at 18 months.  When I realized she was coming into season, I immediately separated them, but when I went out to feed the following morning, Chief had completely destroyed the gate between their corrals and they were standing together in her corral looking very satisfied and content.  Chief is now a gelding.  I look forward to watching Trooper grow and I’m hoping he’ll get to 15 hands. We’ll see.

I had thought Calypso had had foals before, but it didn’t take long to recognize that she was having a hard time figuring out what to do. It is apparent to me now that she was a maiden mare, and at age 15, many of her maternal instincts were vague to her. Initially, she would not allow Trooper to nurse, wanting to keep him directly in front of her. When Trooper would move back to try to nurse, she would move her hindquarters away from him to keep him right in front of her. It took some work to get her to stand still and allow him to nurse. I used treats as a training aid, giving her a treat as soon as the foal began trying to latch onto a teat. That worked well and within a few hours she was standing to let him nurse as long as I was holding her head, but she would not stand still for very long and would start to fidget and lift her leg to get Trooper off the teat. It was obvious Trooper wasn’t getting enough milk, although he was able to get the full load of that all-important colostrum.

Trooper was beginning to weaken and was having a hard time standing by the time we were finally able to get Calypso to stand long enough for him to nurse well. By late afternoon, however, she was beginning to relax. By Saturday evening she was allowing Trooper to nurse without me holding her and his strength and appetite had improved. He began nursing every 15-20 minutes.

Once I saw that Trooper was gaining strength and his appetite was strong, I felt comfortable reintroducing Calypso to the other horses. I pulled the dominant gelding out and put her and Trooper in with Chief and Chocolate. They were curious, but respected Calypso’s defensive posture and they caused no problem. I then brought Bandit back into the pasture. Chocolate immediately took up a protective stallion-like posture between Calypso and Bandit, like he was protecting Calypso and Trooper from an invading Stallion. However, they all returned to normal without any fighting or problems. I was confident that everything would be fine by the time I left them that evening.

When I checked on him early Sunday morning, Trooper was feeling good and starting to test out his long legs. I shot this short video of him:

Sunday afternoon I got a call from the landowner, telling me that somehow Trooper had gotten through the three-rail fence and couldn’t get back into the pasture and Calypso was going crazy! I got there in short order and carried Trooper back around and put him back in the pasture and all was well. I doubt Calypso will let him get near the fence line again!

So, I have a new boy in my herd. He’s almost an exact copy of his mother, all black with a white star on his forehead. He is showing some silver highlights in his coat, but I think that’s just his new foal fur and that once he sheds it off he’ll be black. I hope I’m wrong and he keeps that silver-black smoke-like color. We’ll see.

Every foal is a new adventure. I’m looking forward to this one.

TH

 

Time (well past, actually) For Another Alaska Moose Hunt Post

It’s been awhile since my last post about my 2019 Alaska moose hunt. Time to sit down and get another one done.

As it turns out, in reviewing my journal entries of the hunt, I discovered that my memory was a bit rusty when I made the last post. I completely passed right over nearly a whole week! So, this post will cover that missed time and get the chronology straightened out.

So, when we left off, Derek and I had arrived at camp, got ourselves and horses squared away, our other hunting buddies had flown in and we had hauled them up into the foothills to start their Dall sheep hunt. That’s where I got things mixed up. That was Wednesday, September 11, 2019.

You will recall that Apollo had a bruised hoof and was pretty sore, so I let him rest a few days.

On Thursday, Derek and I took a very long and tough ride across the foothills and valley to the west of camp, looking for new routes to take us to farther ranges and hunting areas. The area Derek has hunted for several years didn’t show any promise for decent moose bulls last year (2018), due to the presence of a pack of more than 24 timber wolves.

I saddled up Moose for this ride. She is a Missouri Fox Trotter mare, about 15-2 hands tall, with a strong build. She is about 9 years old. Moose plows through the tundra like a bulldozer. She can carry a 300 pound pack all day and drag the other pack horses along behind. If she has one shortcoming at all, it is that as a pack horse she doesn’t like to track behind the lead horse.

She has had her heels clipped a time or two by the horse behind, which is quite painful, so she likes to walk to the side of the string and ends up trying to get alongside of the lead saddle horse.  She sometimes gets on the wrong side of trees and causes problems. On our trip in to the hunt camp, Moose was the cause of our most serious wreck, because she doesn’t like to stay in line. Still, as a saddle horse on any kind of trail, she is hard to beat, utterly fearless and strong. This was her third trip to Alaska and she knew the drill.

Derek was riding Finn again, his tall, lanky, strong, Tennessee Walker. This was his second trip to Alaska and he was a different horse this time. Last year Finn didn’t have the strength necessary to carry Derek through the Alaskan terrain. He tired quickly, stumbled a lot and didn’t hold his weight well. This year it was a different story. Finn was up to the task and proved himself a very good horse for this difficult job. He was amazing.

We decided to find a reliable way to cross a large valley to the west of our hunt camp, that would give us a faster route to Cottonwood Creek and beyond. The way across the flat in the bottom was tough on the horses. The stunted Alberta pines grow so close together in places a horse can barely fit between them, much less a horse with a pack. Then there are the marshes and tundra that the horses had to struggle through. In the long run, we were able to find and mark a pretty good route. We will still need to clear paths through a couple Alder thickets in the future, but it’s a much quicker travel route and easier on the horses than making our way across the foothills.

After we reached Cottonwood Creek, which is mostly a dry gravel and shale wash, we headed south toward the area we wanted to take a look at. About a mile down the wash, we came upon the camp of the local outfitter. They use the wash as a runway to fly their hunters in by bush plane. We happened upon one of their guides and a pilot there. They were none too happy with us and leveled some veiled threats at us for invading their hunt area. We ignored those and just went about our business. It was sufficient for Derek that they knew we could reach their camp with little effort, should anything untoward happen at our camp.

By the time we started back toward home camp, it was getting on toward evening. We returned by way of the foothills, which we both knew very well.  Moose and Finn knew they were heading back toward camp, so they put it into high gear and we made our way over the hills at a pretty quick clip in the gait these horses are known for.  We found ourselves busting down the tundra covered hills as fast as 10 miles per hour!

We arrived back at camp just after full dark. We were lucky the horses knew the way, because we couldn’t see our hands in front of our faces! We logged 19 miles that day. By the time we arrived back at camp,   both our horses and ourselves were absolutely tuckered-out.

Made for a sound night’s sleep.

The only game we saw through all our travels that day were several Dall sheep way up in the peaks and a lone boar Black bear. That was quite disappointing, even though we didn’t consider it a hunting day.  I commented in my journal that the way the Dall sheep can hang on sheer cliff faces amazes me. That is really something to see. I wished our two buddies hunting them lots of luck!

The next two days were rainy, so we stayed in camp and lazed around and relaxed. It was a good rest period for the horses as well. We had  brought some good old Louis L’Amour western novels and we went through a couple each. Late in the day on Saturday we heard wolves howling on both sides of camp, but some distance away. We never saw any, though.

The weather was still fairly warm, so the bugs were horrible. The horses, despite our keeping fly wipe and spray on them, were covered with welts from gnat and mosquito bites. We hoped and prayed for frost to kill off the insects. That came only a few days later, to the great relief of all. Meanwhile, we kept a smoking fire going, which helped greatly.

After our experience a few days earlier, in which four of our horses headed back toward the trailhead on their own, we kept a sharp eye on the horses as we allowed them to graze. We found it was pretty safe to allow two at a time out of the corral. We rotated them every several hours, so that all 6 had at least two hours of grazing time. We also supplemented their grazing with alfalfa pellets we hauled in with us, but, being restricted by the weight we could haul in on the horses, we realized the bagged feed wasn’t going to last long. The plan was for me head out with three pack horses and bring several hundred pounds of feed back in from the trailer. That took place a few days later and is documented in the previous post.

On Sunday, we took another ride over west, through the valley and the flats again. We decided to make this a hunt day as well as an exploration day, so we took two pack horses along, with gear to sustain us in case we got a moose and had to make camp for the night.  This time we crossed through the flats in the valley and made a loop over to Anaconda Creek, named for its winding path, then farther west to Cottonwood Creek, then on over another ridge to Carden Creek. The travel was tough, but the horses handled it in stride.

On this day I rode Ginger, a Missouri Fox Trotter mare about 15.2 hands, almost a duplicate of Moose. She had made this same hunt trip at least four times before. She is an amazing horse, one I would trust with my life under any circumstances. Ginger has a Fox Trot that is amazing. She plows through anything without hesitation, never stumbles, and hops up into her fox trot at every possible place in the trail...if there is a trail at all! She really doesn’t need one.

After crossing Anaconda Creek and climbing to the crest of a ridge between Anaconda and Cottonwood Creek, we stopped for lunch and spent some time scoping the valley below. We spotted two bull moose that were legal size (50 inch spread minimum or four tines on one brow), but they were too far away and moving too fast to even consider trying for them.

We made our way farther west, crossing Cottonwood to Carden Creek, which was the farthest west Derek had been on his previous hunts. We saw no further moose the rest of the day.

By the time we turned back toward camp, once again taking the high route through the foothills because we were familiar with the route, the daylight was fading. While the evening sunshine on the mountain peaks was beautiful, we didn’t take much time to look. We were pushing hard to make it back to camp. We were concerned about finding the trail in the dark.

We were still about three-and-a-half miles from camp when we heard a dog yelp. We looked around and couldn’t find Lucky and Ruger anywhere! We stopped and called, searching in the fading light, but couldn’t find them. Then, a few minutes later, both dogs slowly made their way up to the horses.  What we saw was one of the worst sights I have ever seen on any of my pack trips or hunts.

The dogs had apparently come upon a porcupine and had torn into it. Ruger, the pup, was the luckier of the two. He had a dozen or so quills stuck in the side of his face. Lucky, on the other hand (despite his name) had literally hundreds of quills in his face, inside his mouth, and even on his sides.  There were quills sticking through his ears and through his tongue! He had so many stuck inside his mouth that he could not close it! My heart sank.

Derek and I parked the horses, tied them to a couple stunted pines, and went to work on the dogs with our multi-tools. I went to Ruger first, while Derek started on Lucky. Ruger sat there submissively, while I plucked the few quills out of the side of his face. He winced a bit and gave a muffled cry a time or two, but within a couple minutes I had removed all the quills I could find and he was feeling much better.

Then I turned to help Derek with poor Lucky. He was in such pain that it was difficult to hold him down. We turned him on his back and one of us would sit on him and hold his face still while the other pulled quills. At first Lucky was tough and just whimpered a little, but after the first fifty or so quills were pulled, he started snapping at us and yelping out loud. It must have been terrible for him, yet he never bit down on us, despite getting our hands in his mouth several times.

While all this was going on, Derek and I kept in the back of our minds the thought that we were out in the middle of nowhere, in Grizzly bear country, with wolves all around, in the dark, with a yelping dog! Luckily, we were not disturbed!

Eventually Lucky just couldn’t take any more, so we let him alone. At least he could close his mouth now. We got back in the saddle and made the last few miles to camp with two wounded dogs and tired horses, through bear and wolf country, in the dark. The horses, always reliable, knew the way and took us home at a good Fox Trot. I will always have a soft spot in my heart for Ginger, for bringing us safely to camp that night, hours after dark. She comes into play again, pulling my weight through a tough day later in the trip as well.

We made 23 very tough miles that day. We were pretty happy to find our camp undisturbed, with the other horses calling to us and ready for some feed.

Another good night’s sleep.

The next day I left with three pack horses to make the 20 miles back to the trailhead to bring horse feed back to camp.

P.S.

Just so nobody worries too much, both Ruger and Lucky survived the trip. Lucky’s face swelled and we were pulling quills out of him for days. After we arrived back home at Spanish Fork, Utah, Derek took him in to see the vet, who sedated Lucky and pulled another 20 or so quills out of his mouth and face. He is fully recovered now, a much wiser pup than before.

TH

 

 

 

Post #4 Alaska Moose Hunt

Well, it’s time for another chapter of my Alaska moose hunt.

As we left it last week, Derek and I had finally made it into our hunt camp and were getting settled-in. Our hunting buddies had arrived and I was getting ready to head back to the trailhead to bring in horse feed.  That’s where we’ll start for this post.

I’ll apologize right now for the dropoff in our photography. This was a tough hunt trip and Derek and I had our hands full most of the time. Photography was not foremost in our minds unless we came across something particularly spectacular. I’ll try to do better in the future.

Our father-and-son pair of hunters, who were flown in, were there to hunt dall sheep, moose, and if they were lucky enough, grizzly bear. In our hunt area (Wrangell-St. Elias National Park) only Alaska residents can hunt the mighty grizzly. The son of the pair covers that requirement, which allows the father to enjoy the same benefits.

The day after they arrived, Tuesday I believe, Derek and I mounted them up on horses, loaded a pack horse with their backpacks and gear, and led them up into the foothills of the mountain range to our east. It was a tough haul, with a couple river crossings where the water came to near our knees, and steep mountainsides where the scrub oak and brush grew thick. We were lucky enough to come across a fairly well-traveled game trail for the last bit of our climb. We let our friends off after a climb of around 1,000 feet, just before the brush gave way to clear rocky mountainscapes.

Dall sheep about 1,000 feet above us on the hillside

Derek and I bid them farewell and headed back to the hunt camp.  Later that day and the following morning, Derek and I were able to find our friends high up on the mountainside, stalking a herd of dall sheep, through Derek’s spotting scope from the hunt camp.

On Wednesday morning, I saddled up Apollo for my saddle horse and rigged up Ginger, Moose, Shadow, and Missy with pack saddles. You will recall that on the trip in, Apollo came up lame. He pulled the shoe on that sore front right in the river, but I recovered the shoe and re-set it. He seemed to be doing better, so I decided to ride him on this trip back out to the trailhead to get horse feed.

Derek has a very nice aluminum camp kitchen, designed in the form of two pack panniers, that has lots of storage and a built-in cook stove. It is a very nice convenience on a hunt trip like this…when it works. Apparently the regulator went bad on us and we could not get the stove to light. So, we decided I would haul it back to the trailhead, freeing up a pack horse to haul meat at the end of our hunt.

Our camp kitchen

We loaded up the camp kitchen with things we decided we wouldn’t need for the rest of the hunt, so we could maximize our capacity for the final haul out at the end of our stay. Moose was elected to carry the camp kitchen. Not a heavy load at any rate, but she is a strong, hearty mare and would stand carrying a load 40 miles in two days; we knew the loads coming back in would be heavy. The rest of the pack horses were hauling empty soft panniers.

The trip out to the trailhead was one of the toughest rides I’ve ever done. I fought with the horses the entire trip. The problem was that I had Moose first in line, so I could manage her. She is the one that doesn’t like to stay in line and occasionally gets her head on the wrong side of a tree, which is a major cause of pack string wrecks. I figured that if I put her first in line, I could keep that from happening.

The problem with having gaited horses in a pack string, is that gaited horses tend to reach forward with their front feet as they gait along. When you get a horse that holds too close to the horse in front of it, its front hooves will occasionally clip the heels of the horse in front, which is very painful for the horse that gets clipped. This has caused Moose to develop the habit of walking to the side of the pack string to protect her heels.

Moose also likes to try to move up alongside the lead horse to try to get farther ahead of the horse following her, which was frustrating to me, since we were passing through so much brush and areas treed with close-growing saplings, where the paths were quite narrow.  Moose pulling and causing disruptions in the string caused the pack saddles on the other horses to slide back on them. She would pull forward, causing the horse behind her to get dragged by his lead rope, which was tied to Moose’s pack saddle. That would pull her pack saddle back until her breast strap was stretched tight. The same thing would happen to the rest of the pack horses, except for the last in line, which was Missy.

I had initially allowed Missy to roam free, thinking she would stay with the pack string and that leaving her free would keep her from pulling Shadow’s pack saddle back on his loins. Missy, however, not wanting to be left behind, would not stay at the back of the pack string and kept getting tangled in lead ropes and trying to pass between the pack horses. I finally tied her behind Shadow.

Somewhere along about mile four or five, I noticed that the camp kitchen was making a lot of noise. I stopped to take a look and found that the side panel on one of the camp kitchen  panniers had not been properly fastened in place and the pannier had opened and was hanging in place. I had no way of knowing whether anything important had been lost, but I wasn’t going back to look, since I didn’t know for sure how long it had been open. I secured the panel and started on again, figuring that I would just keep an eye out for anything that had fallen out on the way back to camp the following day. As it turned out, on the trip back in I found a bag of Cinnamon Gummy Bears and a can opener that had fallen out on the trail. I am pretty sure that was all that was lost from the open panel.

Just before we reached about half-way, I looked back and found that Missy had pulled Shadow’s pack saddle back and it had slipped to the side. He had empty soft panniers on his pack and one pannier was missing. I had been so busy fighting with Moose, that I hadn’t noticed that Shadow was having trouble. I stopped and got Shadow’s pack saddle resettled on his back and left all the horses tied to trees, while I rode Apollo back to find the missing pannier. Luckily I found it about a half-mile back. It had a broken strap buckle and could not be properly hung on the pack saddle, so I stuffed his panniers in Ginger’s empty panniers and left his pack saddle empty. We started on again.

Not too much farther along, Apollo began limping again, and we were moving along at a slow walk. I finally stopped and switched my riding saddle to Shadow and moved his empty pack saddle to Apollo. Shadow has a much stouter build than Apollo and it was impossible to adjust the pack saddle to fit Apollo properly, but without a load I figured it would be alright for the remainder of the day.

Things went a little better from there, as Shadow held a little faster pace and that tended to keep the rest of the horses in line a little better. I still had to keep fighting Moose, to keep her in line, though, and Apollo’s ill-fitting empty pack saddle slid all the way back onto his loins and the cinch was way back under his belly, but it stayed on. By the time we reached the trailhead, I was beat.

I must confess here that my normally clean and proper vocabulary suffered greatly during this ride back to the trailhead. Regrettably, a number of expressive nouns and adjectives were reintroduced into my library of words that I haven’t used in many years. At the time, my normal vocabulary just seemed inadequate and some words reserved for “special” occasions were necessary.

After such a difficult trip, I was glad to see the trailer. Derek’s trailer includes a very plush living quarters, complete with pressurized hot water. After taking care of the horses and giving them a good bait of alfalfa cubes for dinner, I took a nice, hot shower. I was too tired to head into town, so I found something to eat for dinner there in the trailer. After catching up my journal I hit the hay.

I was awakened about 6:30am the following morning by a knock at the door! sliding open the bunk window, I found myself talking to a couple of Canadian Customs Officers. They informed me that I had illegally entered Canadian territory and that I could be fined $1,000 for not reporting at the border! I explained that I had gotten in late the day before, after a grueling 20-mile horse pack trip and that I would be heading back to the hunt camp that day. That didn’t satisfy them, so I said I would report at their office later that morning…after I got out of bed. They reiterated their stern warnings and left.

After feeding the horses, I drove Derek’s truck to the Canadian border station at the other end of Beaver Creek, arriving at 8:00am. I presented all our paperwork, my passport, hunting documentation, etc. They reviewed it for several minutes and contacted the US Border Patrol station about 19 miles away about my “illegal” entry back and forth into the US and Canada. The US Border Patrol informed them that they were aware of us and that we had done everything properly and they were not concerned. That seemed to take the fire out of the Canadians and it ended up being a pleasant encounter. By the time I left the station we were on good terms and they were wishing us luck in our hunt.

The encounter with the Canadian authorities put me behind schedule. I finally got all the horses packed up and on the trail about 2:00pm, knowing I would be lucky to make it back to camp before sunset. Three of the pack horses carried four bags of alfalfa cubes each, bringing the total to 480 pounds of feed. knowing the pack panniers would get soaked on the trail, I put the feed bags inside heavy-duty garbage sacks to keep it dry. That was then dropped inside the soft panniers. Apollo, being slightly lame, was loaded with food and several other items for camp. His pack was slightly lighter than those of the horses with the feed.

On the trip back out to camp I decided I would ride Moose, thus relieving myself of the single biggest problem I had on the trip back to the trailhead the day before. That worked out much better and things went pretty well for the first several miles.

At one point, as we passed through a narrow spot through a logjam, the third horse in line, Shadow, brushed a heavy branch, which then fell across the path of Apollo, who was fourth. He couldn’t get over the branch, so he stopped and pulled back. This upset Missy, who was last in line, so she pulled back as well. Ginger and Shadow were pulling forward, so Apollo ended up being stretched between three horses pulling in opposite directions. As Apollo struggled, he got himself over the heavy branch, but a small log moved, inserting itself through Apollo’s butt strap rigging. He was really in a mess, stretched over one log with another stuck in his rigging. To his credit, he just laid down and stopped struggling.

This all happened very quickly and I had little time to react to do anything to help the situation. I dismounted and tied Moose to a nearby tree and went back to see what I could do. I was able to get all the lead ropes free and separate the horses, which I then tied to trees. After some work, I was able to remove Apollo’s packs and get the log out of his rigging. With a little encouragement I got Apollo back on his feet. I resettled his pack saddle and repacked him and we got back underway. No serious harm done.

A little farther along,  just over half-way to camp, came the second wreck. As we crossed the river at one of our normal crossings, I found the riverbed had changed a bit, due to the recent rains in the area. We hit a deep spot just before reaching the opposite shore. The water came up near my knees, fully wetting my boots again. As the horses struggled through the hole, Apollo tripped and went down. Luckily the momentum of the pack string dragged him through the deep spot, but, struggle as he might he could not get his feet back under him. Again, he just gave up and lay there, with his head just out of the water and his body still in the river. Missy, with a heavy pack, had enough lead rope to make it to shore, but was unable to go farther, as she was tied to Apollo’s pack saddle. Again, I made a quick dismount and tied Moose to a tree limb. I also tied Ginger and Shadow. I had to cut Apollo’s lead rope off Shadow’s pack saddle, because the wet knot had pulled so tight it was hard as rock.  Missy waited patiently, while I did the same to free her from Apollo’s pack saddle. Then I went to work unpacking Apollo and dragging the water-logged panniers ashore.

By this time, Apollo was pretty tired and discouraged. He didn’t want to get up. I let him lay and rest a few minutes, while I removed his pack saddle.  Then, with a little encouragement, he stood up. Again, no injuries, just tired from struggling. I tied him to a tree and started working on getting him repacked.

While I was working on Apollo, Moose freed herself from the branch she was tied to and began heading on down the trail toward camp. There was nothing I could do but watch her go. I let loose a few of those special words at her, which I reserve for just such occasions,  as I watched her round a bend and go out of sight. I was envisioning myself trying to cross the river numerous times on foot, cold and wet and spending a night on the trail without provisions, as I walked the last seven or eight miles back to camp.  I finally got Apollo re-packed and I headed out after Moose.

Most of you know that I am a religious man. During my pack trips I have learned that God, our Father in Heaven, is very much aware of and involved in our lives. He loves and watches over each of us very closely. I have had numerous experiences in which He has answered my earnest prayers, helping me when I was in need during my pack trips. This was one of those experiences. As I watched Moose head on down the trail, knowing I could do nothing about it as I worked to get Apollo re-packed, I said a quick prayer asking the Lord to stop Moose for me, so that I might not have to spend the night out on the trail without provisions, wet and cold.

I left the other horses tied and headed on down the trail on foot, following Moose’s tracks, hoping I could walk her down and that she would let me catch her when I found her.  I was very surprised and grateful to find her just around the bend in the trail, about fifty yards from the rest of the horses, where she was calmly nibbling on the sparse grass just off the trail. She had stepped through her reins, which had become caught in some undergrowth. It was another humbling experience and a further testimony to me of our Father’s great mercy and love for his children.

A few minutes later, we were back underway and moving down the trail.

We had one more incident before we reached the camp. Just over a mile from camp, while ascending a short bank, Missy, last in line, went down. Somehow, her front legs had become tangled in her lead rope and she went down. She struggled and her pack slipped to the side. Luckily, no other horses were involved. Again, I had to cut Missy’s lead rope loose from Apollo’s pack saddle, as the knot had pulled rock-hard. I got her packs off (she was loaded with 160 pounds of feed) and got her up. She had a pretty good cut on her shin, just above the ankle on her front right leg. It didn’t look to serious, but it bled well. I put some pressure on it for a minute and got most of the bleeding stopped. Then I got her pack saddle re-settled and got her panniers back on the saddle. By this time I was beat! I mean I was really tired. I got back in the saddle and on we went.

We dragged into camp just after sundown at about 7:00pm, after a little over five hours on the trail. Derek had arrived back in camp about a half-hour before, having been out hunting all day, and had a nice fire going and supper warming. He helped take care of the horses and we got them put away. I was very happy to get a hot meal ( BBQ ribs, I believe) and sleep in a warm sleeping bag that night.

I very well might have spent the night on the trail, wet and cold, without a sleeping bag!

That was a very tough forty miles in two days.

TH

 

Alaska Moose Hunt, Chapter 3…

This is my third post about my 2019 Alaska Moose Hunt.

So, at the end of the last post, Derek and I had made the horse pack trip in to our hunt camp. I said in my last post that we made it to camp during early afternoon on the second day, but as I was reviewing my journal for this post, I saw that we actually arrived at camp about 4:00pm the second afternoon. It was a tough 20 miles, involving deep river crossings, overloaded horses, pack problems, a lame horse, and quicksand, and a night’s camp on the trail. I wrote in my journal that the trip in was “an ordeal.”

Also, I neglected to mention a wreck we had on the way in that could have been a lot worse than it ended up being.  It was significant enough that I thought I’d talk about it in this post.

It was the second day and we were still making progress toward our hunt camp. We had run up against a logjam and were trying to make our way through a thicket to clear the jam. We found a way out to a clear area on the shore of the river, but it entailed crossing several downed logs and a large berm of sand that had washed up against them, creating a steep bank. Derek made it through on Finn, so I came behind him on Apollo, leading the four pack horses. Apollo and the first pack horse, Ginger, carefully walked through the jam, crossing the logs and descending the bank without trouble. The second pack horse, Moose, however, decided to jump across the logjam, rather than walking through it. When she jumped, she pulled Shadow into the logjam without giving him a chance to see where he was going, so he fell across the logs and went down. The trailer, Missy, who was just making the turn toward the logjam, saw the wreck and immediately pulled back and started fighting her lead rope.

We ended up with two pack horses, Ginger and Moose, pulling against Shadow’s lead, with Shadow down on the ground on his side with his head downhill, stretched out, and Missy pulling against him backward. Missy had fought until she was in a sitting position with her pack saddle completely off her rump and on the ground, with cinches and rigging still hooked up and tight around her hips.  After a few intense seconds, the horses stopped fighting and just held their positions with all the lead ropes taught and hard.

Derek and I immediately dismounted and tied our horses and started working on freeing the horses. The wet lead ropes had tightened until the knots were impossible to untie. We ended up having to cut some of the pigtails to free the lead ropes. Once the horses were free, we tied Ginger and Moose to brush and went back to work on Shadow and Missy. We were relieved to see that Shadow was uninjured, despite his precarious situation. We were able to unload him, remove his pack, and get him back on his feet without too much trouble.

Missy was another problem. The way she was sitting, it was a simple matter to get her packs off, since they were already sitting on the ground, but getting the pack saddle off of her was another matter. After several minutes of work, I was able to access the cinch rings and loosen the latigoes, allowing the pack saddle to fall away. I was then able to untangle the mass of rigging from around her legs and clear it all away. Luckily, she, too, was uninjured.

After getting Missy through the logjam and down onto the shore of the river, we were able to get all the horses repacked and back underway.  As we were both quite busy and the adrenaline was high, sadly, neither of us thought to get photos of this wreck.

After another couple of hours with no further serious wrecks, we made it to our hunt camp.

Our hunt camp was in about the same condition in which we left it when we departed last year.  The meat pole, unused last year, was still standing. Much of our scaffolding for the tarp roof was still there, but we had to cut a couple new poles. Our makeshift corral was still standing, so we let the horses into it, fed them, and went to work on the camp.  Our first task, after unloading and caring for the horses, was to set up the camp kitchen and the tent. By that time, it was getting dark and we were tired. After a good dinner around a campfire, we hit the sacks for a good night’s sleep.

The weather for the trip in was quite pleasant, clear and probably in the mid sixties. The problem with the pleasant weather, however, was the bugs!  The “noseeums” and mosquitoes were so thick that one breath with the mouth open would get you half-a-dozen bugs for dinner! The flies nearly drove the horses nuts! We had plenty of fly spray concentrate, but it seemed to have little effect. A couple of the horses reacted to the fly bites and had welts all over them. The best deterrent to the flies and mosquitoes seemed to be the smoke from our fire. By about the end of the first week we had a couple nights of low temperatures, which greatly reduced the bug problem. Later on we had a couple of hard freezes, after which the flies and mosquitoes were almost non-existent and both we and the horses were much happier.

The day after we arrived at camp, we went to work improving our camp. We had packed in some landscaping spikes, which we used to nail up the rails to our makeshift corral, making it much more secure. We gathered driftwood for the campfire and got things situated in camp.

I took the opportunity to take a look at Apollo’s front right hoof, to see why he was lame. I picked up my hoof pick and started toward Apollo. He decided he didn’t want to be caught, after the previous day’s hard ride, so he started walking away from me. Derek brought two dogs with us, one of which likes to nip the horses’ heels when they are causing problems. That one was following close behind me as I walked toward Apollo. As I caught up with Apollo, and was near his rump, he moved his rump toward me. I reached out my left hand to push his rump away . He apparently felt that hoof pick and thought the dog had nipped him. Apollo immediately kicked out with both hind legs, catching me just above the knees on both legs! I hit the ground like a sack of potatoes, moaning and groaning.

Once I was sure nothing was broken, I looked around at Apollo. He had walked off a step or two and was looking at me with this contrite and apologetic expression on his face (yes, horses have expressions) that said, “Sorry boss, I thought you were the dog.”

Derek was on the satellite phone with his wife during all this. He looked around and saw me on the ground groaning and figured that since I was groaning, I was still alive and would survive, so he just continued the conversation with his wife and didn’t even come check on me. Some friend!

That night both Derek and I slept so well that neither of us wished to get out of bed in the morning. We finally got ourselves up around 10am. We had a couple more hunting buddies that were to join us in camp. They were to be dropped off by bush plane, so we spent a couple hours preparing a landing strip near our camp. While doing so, we had let several of the horses out to graze on our little island. About the time our friends were to arrive, I went to saddle up a couple horses to bring them to camp. That’s when we noticed our horses weren’t with us anymore, so I saddled up Ginger and went looking for them.

Sure enough, Moose, Shadow, Apollo, and Finn, had all decided to head back to the trail head, 20 miles away. I caught up with them about a mile and a half from camp, headed north at a pretty good clip. They didn’t run from me when I approached on Ginger, so I caught up Moose and turned back for camp, thinking the rest would follow us, but they didn’t. So, I tied Moose and went after them again and caught Finn. Shadow and Apollo just kept on going. I stopped and tied Moose and Finn to some deadfalls and went after the other two. I finally caught up with Shadow and caught his lead rope, but it was a chase. Leading Shadow, now, Apollo decided to follow. I went back to where I had tied Moose and Finn and tied each lead rope to another’s halter, and in that way was able to lead them all back to camp. In all, that was a 3.7 mile jaunt for me. After that, we made sure never to allow more than two horses free to graze at a time. The rest remained safely secured in the corral.

By the time I got back to camp, our buddies had arrived. These are two friends, father and son (the son is an Alaska resident), who came to hunt Dall sheep and grizzly bear, as well as moose. Derek and I were to support them with the horses, hauling them up to the foot of the mountains and packing their kills back to camp. After arriving back at camp, I saddled Apollo to help them get their packs from their drop site to camp. En route, Apollo lost his front right shoe in the river. Luckily, we saw it and were able to recover the shoe.

Back at camp, and everybody settled in, I took a look at Apollo’s hoof and discovered the reason for his lameness. I could see that the farrier had trimmed him too closely and that one of the nails had caused bruising on the outer side of the sole from being placed too far into the white line. I reset the shoe, hoping it would help, but the damage was done. Apollo remained sore on that hoof for about the next 10 days. Eventually he lost that shoe again I replaced it with a new shoe. After that he walked without a limp and was useful again as a saddle horse.

The following day Derek and I put the extra saddles on two of the pack horses, and hauled our buddies up into the foothills east of our camp and dropped them off. We did some bushwhacking to get them to where they could start their hunt. It was pretty tough going with no trail, other than a couple game trails. Derek and I made our way back to camp and again spent a relaxing evening around the campfire.

The following day, Derek and I made a 19-mile tour around the area he has hunted for the past six years. Derek rode Finn and I rode Moose. We passed through some beautiful and difficult terrain, but the horses performed well. We came across the hunt camp where a local outfitter drops his clients. They land their planes on a makeshift landing strip in the riverbed of Cottonwood Creek. The pilot and one of the guides was there when we passed. They came out to talk with us. They were none too happy that we were hunting in “their” area and they were somewhat rude to us, bordering on threatening. Derek and I weren’t much intimidated, though, and we ended up letting them know we were there to stay, that we could easily reach their camp with our horses, and that they could not prevent us from hunting anywhere we wanted to hunt within the limits of our legal hunt area.

We continued on and made our way around our loop, having traversed some areas where we had previously not ventured to take the horses. On the return trip, we traveled through areas Moose was familiar with, so she set a blistering pace, occasionally hitting around 10 miles per hour in her awesome fox trot through tundra sometimes knee deep! We arrived back at camp after dark. Both we and the horses were tuckered out. It was quite a day.

Last year we were unable to pack in sufficient feed for the horses for the time we planned to stay on the hunt, so, the plan this year was for me to take the entire pack string and head back to the trailhead, where we had our feed stacked in the back of the pickup. I would pack up about 700 pounds of feed (alfalfa cubes) and bring it back. I took off early the next day to do just that. My next post will document that 40-mile trip and a few more days of our hunt.

So stay tuned!

To Alaska and Back, Part 3

I am about to head for Alaska again next week. Decided I had better finish my posts about the last trip – it’s been almost a year! So here’s part three from last year’s Alaska Moose Hunt Trip. The other two posts can be found here and here.

As we left the last episode, Part Two, Derek Habel and I were in camp on Beaver Creek in southeastern Alaska.

The hunt camp on Beaver Creek, southeastern Alaska.

We had been in camp about a week, when one evening, two of the horses decided they had had enough of the Alaskan adventure, and they headed back down the trail to the trailer…18.7 miles by my GPS. That was on Sunday, September 23, 2018.

Our first hint that the two horses were gone, was that my gelding, J Golden, had been grazing with them, but returned to camp alone that evening. We had heard him calling a couple of times in the distance, which must have been when they crossed the river and headed out. J just let the other horses go and turned around and came back to camp. I tracked him back and found the place on the other side of our island where  the two horses had crossed the river and headed north on Beaver Creek.

One of the horses, a mare named Ginger, had been on four previous hunts to that same camp, so she knew the route back to the trailhead very well. The other horse, Shadow, was on his first trip, but he willingly followed Ginger on her way. Why J Golden, who was also on his first trip to Alaska, turned around, left the other two, and returned to camp, I cannot guess, but I’m sure glad he did. In fact, he saved us two more times that way, when other horses ventured off the island to find other pastures.  A priceless trait for a backcountry trail horse!

The following morning it was decided that I would take J and head out after the two missing horses, while Derek continued his hunt; the moose rut had started and our hunting days were numbered before we had to head home. If he were successful, we would need those two horses to pack out the meat and rack. After a good breakfast, I saddled J Golden and said so-long to Derek. He kept Lucky, the trusty bear dog, with him, since he would be going through the thick forests, while I would have to depend on my horse’s senses and a .457 Marlin Lever-action saddle gun for my own protection. I have to admit I was a bit anxious, having spent very little time in grizzly country in my life.  So, trusting to J’s senses and divine protection, I headed out.

I hadn’t gone very far, when I began to see bear tracks superimposed on the tracks of the two horses in the sand along the river shores. It seemed that I found those tracks at nearly every crossing for nearly eight miles. I’m pretty sure most of the tracks were those of a large black bear, although there might have been tracks of a grizzly among them as well, as we saw some grizzly bear tracks near the trailhead as we departed the week before. I tried to speed up my chase, although cautiously, hoping to come upon the horses before they became bear food. I have to admit that I wondered about my decision-making processes, as I hurried to catch up with horses that were being followed by a bear!

I pushed J along pretty quickly, averaging about 5 mph or better, crossing the river upwards of 30 times. I found myself enjoying the ride and becoming less and less concerned about bears and more and more enthralled in the wilderness and beauty around me. I enjoyed the feeling of a good horse under me and his strength and effort in making his way through difficult water crossings, over and around log jams and blow-downs, and picking his way through rocky terrain and thickets. J gave me all he had. I was very pleased with my gelding and pleased with my surroundings. I thoroughly enjoyed that ride, and I think he did as well.

By the time J and I reached the trailhead, it was nearly 2pm, leaving me very little margin for safety in getting back to camp before nightfall. I found the two wayward horses calmly grazing on the sparse grass on the shore of the creek, near the bridge. As evidenced by their tracks, they had been up to the trailer, but finding nothing to eat there, had come back down to Beaver Creek and settled down to wait there. I contemplated staying overnight in the living-quarters trailer (fantasizing about a hot shower), but decided against it, since Derek would need me if he had killed a moose. Both J and I were tired, but I could see no alternative than to return to camp immediately. I moved my saddle and bridle to Ginger, grabbed some soda pop and snacks from the trailer, and headed back up the trail. I also grabbed some dog food for Lucky, as our supply at camp was running low.

Ginger wasn’t very willing to be heading back to the hunt camp at first, but after a few hundred yards on the trail, she settled-in and headed off down the trail at a good clip. I ponied J, and Shadow followed along of his own accord.

Heading back down Beaver Creek to camp

Back along the river we went, backtracking our trail, river crossing after river crossing, mile after mile.  On one river crossing, Ginger stepped into a deep hole and ended up swimming the last few yards to the far shore. I went in up to my hips. My rifle scabbard filled with water and had to be dumped out. I pulled the rifle from the scabbard, emptied the action and magazine and let the water drain out of it as well. Luckily, my saddle bags stayed dry and my pants, which were waterproof, stayed dry as well. My leather boots, however, were soaked and my feet were wet and cold most of the ride. I decided then that I would buy myself a pair of waterproof boots for the next such trip!

We arrived at camp just before darkness settled in. I had been in the saddle nearly 9 hours. I was ready for a hot meal and some rest. I had ridden approximately 38 miles, through some very tough country, crossing the river nearly 60 times. Both myself and the horses were pretty done-in.

I found it interesting that I had seen so many fresh bear tracks along the way throughout the entire day, but didn’t see a single bear.

Derek had only arrived back at camp minutes before I had. We found that a gust of wind had come through and quite thoroughly destroyed our camp. The tarp was blown aside and the framework had been knocked down. Some of our gear and supplies had been blown around the camp. Luckily, I had staked-down our tent when we set it up, so that was still in place.

We set about getting the camp back in order and rebuilding our camp lean-to frame and roof, after which we made ourselves a quick meal and headed for bed, as the wind began to rise. We had no sooner laid ourselves down, when the wind began to howl. Since it was still early evening, we laid in our sleeping bags and watched some video movies Derek had stored on his digital tablet. It was tough to watch the movies and tougher to hear them, with the wind howling like it was. Eventually, we gave up on that and just tried to go to sleep. Sometime around 10pm the wind rose to around 50mph, with gusts passing 70mph, in my estimation, and our tent collapsed. Derek has broad shoulders, so when the tent side collapsed against his shoulders, I was left on the downwind side of the tent with a bit of headroom, quite comfortable. We heard our tarp and the roof frame again collapse and we knew our camp would be in shambles in the morning.

Then, just as quick as it came upon us, the wind was gone. There was one last heavy gust, then all was calm. The storm had lasted about two hours.

We found one of the dome tent arch poles had snapped under the weight of the wind. We were able to do a makeshift repair that night, using a fiberglass rod from Derek’s electric fence parts, that kept the tent upright through the remainder of our stay in camp.

The following morning, we again repaired our camp roof frame, re-stretched the tarp, and reinforced the braces. We also took some time to sink a couple posts to use as tie posts for the horses, which proved extremely useful over the remainder of our stay. Later, we also  built a makeshift corral for the horses, which we will reinforce and improve on our next trip.

The following day, which would be day 13 of our stay in camp, both Derek and I packed up a couple horses, me riding J Golden, and headed back up into the foothills. Derek had seen a couple bull moose the previous day and was excited to find that the moose rut had finally begun.

On that day we did, indeed see a good sized bull moose, but it moved away from us into deep forests, where it would be impossible to hunt. After a long day, we started back toward camp. On the ride back, J got going a little fast down a slope. He stepped into a bit of a hole and came up solidly short on a front leg. I was nearly unseated from the saddle. However, he just kept on going and never missed another stride, as we made our way over the next four or five miles to camp. The next evening, however, I noticed J’s front right knee was swollen like a football. I believe he hyperextended his knee coming down that slope. He was not limping, but his knee was stiff and obviously sore. I gave him the next couple days off to rest and by the time we packed out, the swelling had gone down quite a bit. We packed him light and he made the trip out just fine.

The day after J hurt his knee, which was Thursday, Derek and I headed back up into the foothills, intent on coming out with a bull moose. About five miles from camp we came upon the same bull moose we had seen the previous day, along with a smaller bull and several cows. However, this time Derek decided to keep looking, as this bull was not in the trophy class Derek was hoping for.

On one particular hillside, we parked our horses and Derek headed off around the crest to scope for moose. Shortly thereafter, he came running back, yelling in a whisper voice…I think you can imagine what I’m trying to describe…that there was a pack of wolves on the next hill over! We made a plan to try to take a closer look at them and possibly to get a shot at one, as Derek had a wolf tag as well as a moose tag.

I crossed the crest of the hill and set myself up in a good spot. I attached my iphone 7 to an adapter and fitted it to Derek’s 20-60X spotting scope and began watching the wolves. They were lounging on the adjacent ridge, just relaxing, apparently after a good meal. The range was about 700 yards. I counted 16 wolves on that ridge.

Derek set himself up on the other side of a saddle. He had an electronic coyote call that he hoped would attract the pack to come closer, as wolves and coyotes are mortal enemies and wolves will attack and kill coyotes at every opportunity. I got my iphone camera set up while Derek got himself set up. When he turned on the coyote call, we were treated to one of the most spectacular scenes I have ever witnessed. Below is the video I took, in its entirety, with my iphone 7. If you turn the volume to 100%, you will be treated to a wonderful and eerie chorus of the voices of 16 Alaskan Timber Wolves.

By way of explanation, at about 1:37min, you will also hear the electronic coyote call and will see the wolves respond to it. You will also see that the wolves were quite content to remain on their ridge and just howl warnings at the intruding coyotes. These wolves were fat and happy and not in any mood to be off chasing coyotes.

Derek was unsuccessful in scoring a wolf kill. However, we knew from that moment that our moose hunt was over. About 30 minutes later, we saw eight more wolves come down from the hills above us and join the pack, bringing the total to 24 wolves in that one pack. We realized we would see no trophy bull moose in that area for quite a while.

Wolves, beautiful, but devastating when uncontrolled

When a pack of wolves, especially one of that size, moves into an area, they decimate the wildlife in the area, then move on when there is nothing left to feed on. Even the mighty Grizzly Bear had moved out of the area. We saw one Black bear and cub on a far mountainside during the entire hunt. While some would have one believe that wolves only feed upon weak and injured animals, that is actually far from the truth. There simply aren’t enough weak and injured animals to feed them. The wolves will feed on the bulls and the calves, the largest bulls being the most vulnerable. The wolves will chase them into the dense forest, where the bull is less able to maneuver to defend itself, due to the breadth of its antlers, then the kill comes quickly. While wolves seldom kill bear, they will harass even the Grizzly until they simply leave the area. It was a great disappointment to find this wolf pack in our hunting area, uncontrolled and overpopulated. It will take years for the game to be re-established in this particular region.

We made plans to pack out the following day. We came out without a moose, but I wouldn’t call it an unsuccessful hunt.

Breaking camp didn’t take long. It always takes longer to set up than to take down. We had everything packed and ready to move by about 1pm. We headed back up the trail to Beaver Creek at a very nice pace, even for a Missouri Fox Trotter. Despite not having a designated trail to follow and the 30 or so river crossings on the way out, we made excellent time.

 

The 18.7 miles took us three hours and 40 minutes from the hunt camp to the trailer. That even allowed us time to feed and water the horses and head over to Buckshot Betty’s for a nice, warm, steak dinner.

We slept in the very nice living quarters of Derek’s trailer that night, after taking nice hot showers, and rested very well. Before noon the following day, we were on the road, headed home.

 

We retraced our route heading south, with one alteration. We stopped at the hot springs at Liard River Hot Springs Provincial Park, British Columbia, where we took an hour to soak in the hot springs. That was a stop that was well worth the time. Wish I had gotten some pictures, but we left the phones in the truck.

The trip home was a fast one. While we were on the hunt, a devastating forest fire burned in Utah County, completely surrounding Derek’s ranch in Diamond Fork, east of Spanish Fork, Utah. The fire had taken out most of the vegetation in the hills surrounding his place, but he had lost no buildings, thanks to the efforts of several fire crews.

However, as we headed south from Alaska, a severe storm warning was in effect for Utah County and Derek feared is ranch would suffer more damage from uncontrolled runoff from the storm, including landslides and flooding, that was caused by the fire itself. We spent two nights on the road in Canada, then drove straight through overnight to Idaho Falls, where we made a stop at the home of Derek’s daughter’s family, 22 straight hours. The horses were glad for a rest and some grazing time in a grassy pasture.  After a little breakfast and a short nap, we hit the road again. We arrived at Derek’s place that afternoon, in time for Derek to make some preparations for the storm to protect his home and buildings.

I was glad to be home as well. It was a wonderful adventure, but very tough on both men and horses.  The horses all lost quite a bit of weight on the trip, but all came through healthy and well.  The horses did very well in the trailer both up and back and we had no injuries to horse or man, outside the normal bumps and bruises.

Going into and out of Canada was painless. We had our paperwork in order and nothing to declare other than horses and rifles. Handguns are prohibited in Canada, so we left those at home to begin with.

Derek and I are heading back up to Alaska again next week. Looking forward to it. I will be taking Apollo as my saddle mount, since I sold J last spring.  I’ll try to be more diligent in getting my posts and photos up in a more reasonable timeframe.

It’s just that I have been having so much fun on the horses this year that keeping up my posts sort of fell by the wayside.

Stay tuned for posts about my Flagstaff to the Grand Canyon ride last May and my trip to the Jim Bridger Wilderness last month.

 

 

 

Freedom On the Back of a Horse

This evening I was writing in my journal and put to paper some thoughts about my love of trail riding and working with my horses. Thought I’d share them.

I used to tell myself that when I rode my horses I could think more clearly and that a good ride was what I needed to help me consider and have deep thoughts about any particular trouble or concern that was upon my mind at the time.

I was deceiving myself. It was just another excuse to go for a nice ride.

Riding my horses is my escape. It is freedom. No, it is more than that.

When I ride my horse, all of life’s worries, concerns, trials, and tribulations just seem to fade off into the background.  When I am on the back of my horse, there are no worries. There is no trouble. Things seem to be right in the world.

When I am riding the trails on my horse I am not old; there is no age. There are no struggles. No aches and pains. I have no appointments. I am not late for anything. I have not missed any calls. Nobody needs to get in touch with me. I am not in a hurry for anything. My greatest concern revolves around whether to take the right fork or the left fork of the trail…if in fact the trail should have a fork…not that it matters. There are no decisions to be made that have any greater import than those necessary to continue the ride.

There is only myself and my horse and the relationship between us.

I think that’s what I enjoy the most – the relationship between myself and my horse. I like the partnership between the horse and me that riding requires. I enjoy the challenge, for both my horse and myself, that a particularly difficult section of trail may present and the feeling of having successfully negotiated it. I find myself bragging to others about my horse’s sure feet and solid mind and the trails we have been over.  It gives me a sense of pride, approaching what I feel when my children are successful in their endeavors.

I love the feelings I get when my horses first begin to understand and willingly submit to new training elements I introduce. I even enjoy the occasional disagreements we have about how something should or should not be done.

Although I am not always as patient as I should be, neither are my horses. They forgive me and I them and we continue forward, one hoof in front of the other. One breath at a time. Passing from one scene into another. One valley to the next. Sometimes just to see what’s on the other side of the next hill or around the next bend in the trail.

It has taken me a long time to find the two horses I now have, Lizzy and J Golden. I have never been much of a horse trader, but I have bought and sold a few while looking for a pair with the qualities I have sought.  Highest on my list of qualifications? They must enjoy the trail as much as I. I think Lizzy and J do.

I once read a bumper sticker with the following phrase:

“Not all who wander are lost.”

When I am on a horse, the ride is the destination; where we are headed is irrelevant.

TH