MT Elk Opener

Troutslayer2

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May 28, 2010
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755
Wow yesterday was a long one. We left at 3:30AM for a brutal uphill climb. We had scouted some elk a few weeks ago and we have had success here before and we were really liking our prospects. It was cold, and raining, lightning was flashing in the distance which is really strange for how cold it is. We arrived at our spot that affords both the potential to shoot an elk and some great views of distant open hillsides- and it was early, and we were soaking wet and the temperature was dropping hard. It got light and we didn't see anything for a while. At around 10AM my buddy said he heard a cow behind us, which would put it on the downslope of the ridge we were sitting close to the top of. Since I was freezing I thought it was a good idea to climb up there and look over the other side. I just took my rifle and took about 30 steps up from our perch when my view changed and I saw 3 elk right where we expect them to be but in a pocket that is just out of view from where we were sitting. I hit the dirt and started trying to get ready, I could only see that one was a cow and could not identify the other two. The hill was so steep that I had on leg of my bipod all the way out and the other all the way in and I could still not get my gun level. Ranged them- 464 YDS. I crammed the short leg of my bipod into the dirt far enough to get level, but I couldn't get behind my gun very well. I dialed up the March. By this time I had realized that there were 2 good bulls with that cow but I had to wait for them to clear some vegetation that was on a ridge between them and I. I took my binoculars off in an attempt to get behind my weapon but I still couldn't shoulder it proper. When he cleared the tree and was standing broadside I let one fly for a perfect high shoulder shot. He didn't move an inch other than the 100 or so yards he tumbled because the terrain is so steep.

It took us a while just to get over to him and from there we really had our work cut out for us. We got three quarters off but in trying to get the fourth we had to roll him and he rolled a lot farther than we would have liked. So we climbed down and got the fourth. Then it happened again as we were trying to get at the back-straps and other meat. Just getting all the meat up to the ridge was quite an ordeal and it had started snowing really hard, like 2" fell while we were cleaning and getting ready for transport. We finally got him to the ridge and decided it was best to get him off the mountain but not all the way to the truck. We took the hinds and as much personal stuff as we could carry. Then we went back for the rest of the meat, the head, and all of the rest of our gear which was a lot because we had planned to spike out so we had tents, sleeping bags, food all that stuff.


My best bull, and a very good one for this area. Doing it the hard way on public land.
A6D2CAD7-C031-443E-BC7E-54B5E6B108DC.jpeg


Getting it all in one place in deteriorating conditions.
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The 168 Grain 7MM ABLR launched from my 280AI at 2900FPS, 464 YDS, 62.5% weight retention.
EC6525AE-BAF1-42DF-896D-6A407649E5D5.jpeg
 

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Wow yesterday was a long one. We left at 3:30AM for a brutal uphill climb. We had scouted some elk a few weeks ago and we have had success here before and we were really liking our prospects. It was cold, and raining, lightning was flashing in the distance which is really strange for how cold it is. We arrived at our spot that affords both the potential to shoot an elk and some great views of distant open hillsides- and it was early, and we were soaking wet and the temperature was dropping hard. It got light and we didn't see anything for a while. At around 10AM my buddy said he heard a cow behind us, which would put it on the downslope of the ridge we were sitting close to the top of. Since I was freezing I thought it was a good idea to climb up there and look over the other side. I just took my rifle and took about 30 steps up from our perch when my view changed and I saw 3 elk right where we expect them to be but in a pocket that is just out of view from where we were sitting. I hit the dirt and started trying to get ready, I could only see that one was a cow and could not identify the other two. The hill was so steep that I had on leg of my bipod all the way out and the other all the way in and I could still not get my gun level. Ranged them- 464 YDS. I crammed the short leg of my bipod into the dirt far enough to get level, but I couldn't get behind my gun very well. I dialed up the March. By this time I had realized that there were 2 good bulls with that cow but I had to wait for them to clear some vegetation that was on a ridge between them and I. I took my binoculars off in an attempt to get behind my weapon but I still couldn't shoulder it proper. When he cleared the tree and was standing broadside I let one fly for a perfect high shoulder shot. He didn't move an inch other than the 100 or so yards he tumbled because the terrain is so steep.

It took us a while just to get over to him and from there we really had our work cut out for us. We got three quarters off but in trying to get the fourth we had to roll him and he rolled a lot farther than we would have liked. So we climbed down and got the fourth. Then it happened again as we were trying to get at the back-straps and other meat. Just getting all the meat up to the ridge was quite an ordeal and it had started snowing really hard, like 2" fell while we were cleaning and getting ready for transport. We finally got him to the ridge and decided it was best to get him off the mountain but not all the way to the truck. We took the hinds and as much personal stuff as we could carry. Then we went back for the rest of the meat, the head, and all of the rest of our gear which was a lot because we had planned to spike out so we had tents, sleeping bags, food all that stuff.


My best bull, and a very good one for this area. Doing it the hard way on public land.
View attachment 155228

Getting it all in one place in deteriorating conditions.
View attachment 155226



The 168 Grain 7MM ABLR launched from my 280AI at 2900FPS, 464 YDS, 62.5% weight retention.
View attachment 155227
That was some tough hunting!! Congratulations!
 
Wow!!! Congrats all around. Beautiful bull, and good job getting it out. The weather was flat nashty yesterday. 5am was calm with barely a snowflake fluttering around, 5:30am, snowing sideways, and by noon there was 6-7" of snow on the ground. Very crazy opening day. Very happy for you.
 
Thanks for sharing and congratulations!
I have the same clambering and was staring at my box of ABLR in 168 gr. Wondering how it would perform, yours looked like it handled it very well. What did you load this up with?
RL26 but I have a 22" barrel that I was trying to squeeze velocity out of. I will say that they weren't that easy to get to shoot, until I consulted the internet and realized people were jumping the quite a ways- as soon as I did that groups shrank big time.
 
RL26 but I have a 22" barrel that I was trying to squeeze velocity out of. I will say that they weren't that easy to get to shoot, until I consulted the internet and realized people were jumping the quite a ways- as soon as I did that groups shrank big time.
Was your chamber throated .100 or so deeper?
 
Wow!!! Congrats all around. Beautiful bull, and good job getting it out. The weather was flat nashty yesterday. 5am was calm with barely a snowflake fluttering around, 5:30am, snowing sideways, and by noon there was 6-7" of snow on the ground. Very crazy opening day. Very happy for you.
Crazy weather for sure. I never would have had an opportunity just 45 minutes later when the visibility dropped to ~100 yds.
 
Sweet bull Trout.....i like those kind of antlers...aged to perfection....

Would like some info on you RL26 loads for your 280ai....as I been running 4831sc at 2630fps....with a 22" noodle barrel....and 168lrab
I definitely want to switch over to RL26......eek a little more velocity...
and you oal......pm plz

Again...perfect bull...
 
Sweet bull Trout.....i like those kind of antlers...aged to perfection....

Would like some info on you RL26 loads for your 280ai....as I been running 4831sc at 2630fps....with a 22" noodle barrel....and 168lrab
I definitely want to switch over to RL26......eek a little more velocity...
and you oal......pm plz

Again...perfect bull...
I'm running 60.6 grains and seating .075 off the lands. This is safe in my rifle but on the spicy side. MV 2905. Groups just over .5. I think the hardest part for you will be finding the RL26.
 
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