Tag Archive for: spot and stalk

mountain mule deer, mtn bucks, montana wild, buck hunting, two muley bucks, mule deer, jared miller, zack boughton

Montana backcountry: ✅
Rifle season: ✅
2 deer tags in our pocket: ✅
2 mature mule deer bucks: ✅

If you could guarantee a checklist like this every year, there’s not a western hunter in the country that wouldn’t plan their year around it.

Unfortunately, opportunities like these are few in one’s life. It’s not that we planned better, worked harder or got luckier than others. Sometimes everything just aligns and you’re blessed with an epic adventure. It’s these experiences that I crave. Those that once experienced, you get to relive and share the story of for the rest of your life.

Zack and I have made a bit of a tradition the past few years chasing mule deer during Montana’s rifle season. Usually in November. Often including big storms, cold temps and long miles. The one variable not always featured are mature bucks that we’d like to punch our tags on. It’s not that we don’t find deer, it’s just that mule deer are our favorite species to chase and it takes a special critter or circumstance for us to end our season early.

Speaking for myself here, I try to fill the freezer early each hunting season with an antelope and an elk with my bow. Once the stress of supplying meat for the family is gone, I can be free to chase mule deer throughout the season, more often than not, riding out the year without filling my tag. In fact years often go by without an opportunity on an animal I’d been willing to end my deer season early on.

This hunt was one of those special occasions that did just that, not once, but twice.

Zack and I had put dates on the calendar for the middle of November months in advance. As happens in life, a last minute engagement required a shift in our plans by a few days. As it turned out this would be a blessing as it meant we’d be hunting the back of a big storm that laid a solid white blanket of snow over Montana.

If you’ve hunted deer in standing dead timber, you know how difficult they are to spot. However, with a solid white backdrop, their gray-brown bodies offer a stark contrast to the white snow and are much easier to pickout. Combine this with some solid rut activity and the usual higher movement of critters following a big storm and we were set up to capitalize on perfect timing that came about simply by chance.

By this point in the season, Zack had 2 elk in the freezer and I had an antelope and an elk in mine. We had 9 days set aside and with full freezers, we intended on using all of them to cover lots of miles and look over as many deer as we could find.

We are certainly blessed for opportunity in Montana with some 30 million acres of public land which sometimes makes the decision of where to hunt a difficult one. From national forest, blm, state ground and wilderness, the options sometimes seem endless. In 2023 we did a big mountain mule deer hunt right through the middle of the biggest (and coldest) storm of the season. After enduring a thorough beating in the mountains, we decided to change things up and head out on the prairie where Zack arrowed a nice mule deer buck during the late rifle season bow in hand, blaze orange and all.

This year (2024) we were jonesing for another mountain mule deer rip. A spot Zack had scouted in years past kept coming back as our first choice. In fact Zack had spent a quick 2 days there the year before and had turned up an interesting young buck that was very distinct. Lots of mass, kickers off both sides and a dropper off his right side.

The decision was made. We’d head back to that spot in hopes of turning up what we referred to as the “Sticker Buck”.

On our drive to the trailhead we were beaming with excitement. I had talked Zack into sleeping in and getting a mellow start to the trip as opposed to driving/hiking through the night to be set up for the morning’s glass at sunrise. Yes we gave up a prime glassing opportunity but knowing the amount of physical effort we were about to expend, the idea of good coffee from home on the drive and a mellowish midday hike to be set up for the evening glass was too appealing.

It was a bluebird day. White snow blanketed everything we could see including the high country several miles away where we were headed. Absolutely optimal glassing conditions. A day after the storm, if you couldn’t glass a deer directly, any tracks you could see were likely so fresh that they’d lead you straight to a deer. We even crossed paths with a very fresh grizzly track halfway in.

On the hike in I made a mistake on my food choice. I’m a pretty big ramen guy and pack two a day no matter the season. I like the variety packs of the cheap Maruchan brand that you see everywhere. My mistake came when I chose a chili flavored pack just before the trail got steep and we had to start putting some elevation under us. Let’s just say I struggled to keep my stomach contents where they belong that afternoon.


Nevertheless we reached camp 1 with plenty of time to set our tents and were ready to glass till dark that evening. Halfway between what I’d describe as those front country and backcountry zones, we didn’t pick up many deer that evening but there was a feeling that the following morning would be prime.

The air was still that night which is a rare occasion in the mountains. I don’t recall a cloud in the sky which also meant cold temps. I relish these opportunities to actually use the gear we obsess about all year round. Zack and I were both using Durston X-Mid Pro 1’s on this hunt, which are incredible Dyneema trekking pole tents. The usable living space to weight ratio is unmatched in my mind. Combine that with a Thermarest X-Therm sleeping pad and 0* Stone Glacier Chilkoot sleeping bag and I was as comfortable as can be. Well, minus the slow leak I’ve had in my sleeping pad going on 3 years now. I’ve tried patching it but for some reason it doesn’t bother me to wake up every 3-4 hours and blow it back up when I get cold once my body gets too close to the snow underneath me.

The following morning was everything we’d hoped. We weren’t quite into the good mule deer habitat where we were headed but we didn’t want to bypass the in-between country in case it was holding deer. Zack and I each moved around the glassing knob we were camped on picking apart the country. It wasn’t long before Zack glassed up a clearly mature buck bedded above a cliff band nearly 2 miles away.

Several other deer were spotted that morning but after the prime glassing time had passed we knew we had to get a closer look at the buck in the distance. We packed camp and headed deeper into the basin.

Every bit of elevation gained or twist and turn in the trail offered a new spectacular view. Now’s a good time to mention that I had recently picked up a camera and dove head first into the photography world. I purchased a Sony A6700 with a couple Sigma lenses and had committed to actually carrying and using it, this being only the 2nd hunt since purchasing the camera. I don’t know that I have ever hunted with Zack when he didn’t have his camera. So with 2 cameras in hand we decided (almost randomly on the drive to the trailhead) to document this hunt both with photos and video in the hopes of making it a Montana Wild film.

As we neared the head of the basin, the buck we had come to get a closer look at had moved from his bed above the cliff band. We dropped a bit of elevation to set up on a glassing knob that gave us views of as much country as possible. Before long, Zack had glassed up the buck we were looking for (a common theme of the hunt) bedded in the timber with a handful of does. It was around this time that Zack had a feeling this may be the “sticker buck” we had come to find.

From 1200 yards away, we must have watched him for a couple hours. Due to the nature of the terrain, it would have taken us no more than 20 minutes to put ourselves inside of 400 yards without him knowing. During that time we each tried to talk each other into shooting the buck. He was clearly a beautiful, mature mule deer buck living in amazing country but for some reason we each passed. I can’t speak for Zack but for me it almost felt too easy, like we hadn’t yet earned such a specimen of a deer. We had plans of heading over the ridge to explore the next basin and I think I felt there were more dues to be paid before having a chance at such a special mountain buck.

We packed up our glassing setup and headed into the next basin.

We’d found more deer that evening but nothing that got our hearts racing like the “sticker buck” we left in the basin behind us. At some point during the evening after setting up camp 2 and building a fire to eat dinner beside, Zack had got some cell service and sent Phone Skope footage to his fiance Samantha. I believe her response was along the lines of, “and why didn’t you guys shoot that deer?” That’s when it hit me. We may have blown an opportunity on a truly exceptional Montana mountain mule deer. However…this feeling didn’t stop us from pressing forward with our plan of further exploring the next basin.

We woke up early the next morning to climb a peak that would give us a vantage point over another part of the next basin we hadn’t looked over yet. It felt like we were being punished for our boneheaded decision making as we trudged along towards the top. We’re no strangers to breaking trail in deep snow but this was that particularly unbearable snow condition that would almost hold your weight and just before you trusted your next step, it would break through somewhere between 12-18” making each step feel like two.

We topped out and puffied up. As sunrise approached we were greeted with one of the most spectacular sunrises either of us had ever witnessed. To the west, the sky was still a deep purple as the eastern sky lit up in every tropical color you can imagine and the tips of the peaks popped in their alpenglow all around us. We were truly thankful for this gift of a sunrise, especially since we didn’t glass up any deer that morning. A single mountain goat some 10 miles away and what I believe was an ermine or stoat were the only critters we saw that morning.

Our stubbornness defeated, we were ready to head back to relocate the “sticker buck”.

Once down from the peak we quickly packed camp and headed back into the basin the “sticker buck” was living in. We were careful to glass our way back in case he had moved or another deer showed up we might be interested in. We dropped a good amount of elevation to a flat spot on the ridge that offered a great camp spot as well as good glassing and sat about 1000 yards from where we had last seen the buck.

This is where a good lesson was learned. While I have a Swaro STX 95 spotter at home, I had elected to take my Swaro ATC in the interest of saving weight. An excellent piece of glass for its size and weight but simply not up to the task of picking apart deer antlers from long distances. We were backlit which seems ideal but the glare of the day and my small spotter made things difficult. About an hour before sunset, I had glassed up what I thought was just a 4 point buck. Zack was on the opposite side of the ridge glassing the backside when I spotted this deer. When he had made his way back to me, that buck had moved out of sight behind a group of large trees.

Sure enough, that buck came back out about 20 minutes before dark when Zack spotted him again in his Leica 82 Televid. He was instantly able to tell that it was the “sticker buck” all along. With the short amount of daylight left, there was now no time to get in range of him that evening. It wasn’t till laying in my tent that night that I realized my mistake. If I would have identified him as the “sticker buck” when I first spotted him we would have had plenty of time to make a play on him. Lesson learned, carry the bigger glass.

We were confident we’d immediately find him the next morning and it would just come down to where he was located which would decide our approach. Well, that didn’t happen…

The wind had come on strong the night before signalling the approach of another storm. So much so that we each built a snow wall on the windward side of our tents to alleviate some of the spin drift that was whipping under the edges of our shelters. The wind continued into the morning and battered the cliffy face the buck had been living on.

We diligently glassed into the afternoon when we decided we’d do a big move to put ourselves on the face we’d been seeing the “sticker buck” in the hopes that he had moved out of the wind and into the timber below our camp. As we still hunted our way across the face, we actually turned up a couple of does and another small buck but no sign of the “sticker buck.”

With no sign of him, we decided to loop over the top and peak into a micro basin that we hadn’t looked at yet. On the map this drainage didn’t look like much but boy were we surprised when we topped out and got our first look in. Zack immediately spotted a doe and I saw a buck just above her in the timber. I only saw this bucks right antler but almost immediately I knew I’d be proud to shoot this deer.

Looking across the micro basin, there were actually 2 bucks and a handful of doe’s on their feet working through some dense standing dead timber. It was clear that if we were going to have a shot at this buck, it would be a very narrow window both the shooting lane and time to get the shot off. We hustled down the ridge and set up a shooting position across from the group of deer that would give me a shot between 500-550 yards. The buck had bedded but as is common during the mule deer rut, the bucks will not let their doe’s get too far away so we knew it wouldn’t be long till he was back on his feet. Zack got the spotter and Phone Skope ready to roll while I set my rifle up in a prone position.

While the buck was still bedded, I double checked all the parameters on my Kestrel ballistic solver and opened the Range Card and set it to 10 yard increments. Knowing how quick this was likely to happen, I dialed for 550 and memorized the dope down to 500. We had blowing snow and extremely flat light making the deer extremely hard to see through my scope. I didn’t want to take my eye out of the scope so I asked Zack to run the rangefinder for me. Sure enough the buck got up and quickly worked his way up to his does. He was headed for an opening above a rock outcropping that would be a perfect shooting window. As he approached, Zack got the range and called out 530. Keeping my eye in the scope, I reached up with my trigger hand and counted 2 clicks down from what I had dialed for 550. The buck stopped perfectly quartering away in the opening, Zack gave me the okay that the Phone Skope was rolling and I executed my shot.

The blowing snow made visibility difficult but was a perfect wind indicator. Wind is rarely ever consistent, usually pulsing, either building or dropping. At the shot, the snow was falling straight down meaning the wind had either dropped completely off or was directly behind us. Either way, I held for zero wind and hit directly behind my crosshairs.

I watched the bullet impact and the buck dropped. It was a touch high but had directly impacted a rib and sent shrapnel into the spine making it look like a direct spine shot. He rolled off the rock outcropping before getting hung up on the steep mountainside in a mess of bushes and trees. I distinctly remember the sound of the bucks antlers clicking off the rocks as he rolled.

As we finished cutting up my deer, I asked Zack what he wanted to do tomorrow. With no hesitation, he excitedly stated he wanted to shoot the sticker buck!

We packed my buck to the base of the ridge where our camp was set and cached my rifle and the meat from my buck. In a moment of pure vanity, I decided to pack the head some 1600 vert up the ridge to our camp so I could get pics of him by the tents and the fire.

 

We slogged our way up the ridge in what started as rain, eventually turning to snow. It had been dark for hours now. When we reached camp we built a fire and fried some mule deer tenderloin in coconut oil with salt and pepper. I got the pics I wanted of my buck by the fire and we crashed hard that night hoping we’d be able to turn the “sticker buck” up the next day.

Similar to the day before, we glassed hard all morning. Somehow the “sticker buck” had vanished. As noon approached I began to question our sanity a few days before when we had both walked away from a prime opportunity on him.

As the day drug on, Zack felt we should give it one more good glassing and if we couldn’t find him we’d move down the ridge and look for him lower in the basin. Just moments later Zack spotted him, bedded on a cliff at the very head end of the basin. It was a remarkable spot with binos and our hopes immediately soared.

We made the smart decision to climb all the way back to the top of the ridge and circle around the basin which would allow us to stay mostly out of sight of the buck and give us the best chance of the swirly winds not giving us away.

About an hour later, we were set up in reverse of the day before at 430 yards of the buck. Zack in the prone on his rifle and me running the spotter and Phone Skope. We patiently waited for the buck to stand out of his bed, discussing the current wind condition anytime either of us noticed a change.

Soon enough, the buck stood. After a stretch and a turn to face uphill, the buck was completely broadside to us. Zack executed his shot with one perfectly placed bullet from his 28 Nosler right behind the shoulder and he died in his bed.

While self induced, the added difficulty and effort to get the “sticker buck” killed made the moment all the more special. We sat on that cliff at the very head of the basin and admired these two bucks and the inhospitable country in which they live. It’s a moment that can’t be bought, planned for or earned but simply given to us by our Creator and I’ll be thankful for it for the rest of my life.

Six years. It seemed like forever before I drew my first rifle antelope tag. Finally it would be me behind the trigger on a Montana antelope hunt and stoke was high. I’d been on a few other rifle antelope hunts and they always were a blast ending with a good goat on the ground and tasty meat in the cooler.

antelope hunting montana, maddie sieler, travis boughton

Maddie with her 2017 buck and Travis with his from 2015

SCOUTING

Some hunts I try to get some intel on and others I just go in blind and use my skills built over the years to try to find success. I chose the later on this one. It was just me, my gear and some maps. It would be a lot of miles but I knew if I spent the time driving and glassing, driving and glassing I’d find some good bucks worthy of my tag. The first day had me rolling into my unit about 5:30pm. Just enough time to look over a little country and start inventorying bucks. That night I found the first good buck.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy

I really liked the look of this buck from head on with both cutters and horn tips curving in

I knew he wasn’t huge but he wasn’t small either. A few text messages confirmed that he was a good goat. I had 4 more days before opener so I knew I’d keep searching. The next morning I woke to rain and fog. Visibility was pretty minimal.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy

I’d actually camped in a spot where I’d hopped to hike down into a coulee and glass for mule deer. With the fog I decided to hit the road and move to my next target area for antelope. After about 3 hours of driving dirt roads I’d only turned up a few smaller bucks. Antelope seemed to be a rare commodity in country that seemed like ideal habitat for many, many more animals than was present. My map was a combination of mule deer spots and antelope spots. I’d drawn this tag with the intent of scouting for mule deer as well and before I knew it I was again in a spot that screamed mule deer. With fresh snow on the ground and a stiff 20mph wind I wasn’t excited to get out of the truck but finally I manned up and hit the hills.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy

Muley country

Soon I was at the head of the coulee and it was much deeper than I’d expected. As I crest over the top I spotted multiple bucks bedded on the other side. A quick look through the spotter revealed a few 4 point bucks but nothing over 150”.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy, mule deer, buck

The “big” buck, pretty typical for Eastern Montana.

Pretty standard for Montana. They really need to do something about such a long rifle season and allowing it to run straight through the rut. It’s made for poor age classes of deer in much of the state and good genetics quickly get shot out. I snuck closer and decided to make a quick stalk on them for practice. As I got to the last ridge I looked below me. There was a smaller 4 point buck bedded facing away. I quickly ranged him at 40 yards and drew holding my pin on his vitals. It wasn’t easy holding in the wind but was good practice. I let down and headed up the hill looking for the main group of bucks. As I crested up higher the buck below me caught my wind and spooked up the draw collecting about a dozen does. That group stopped on the hill and I could see my group of bucks was now on alert. They were just 66 yards away. They slowly crept up over the top of the hill before fleeing to the next draw. Oh well, at least he wasn’t a big one. I glassed a few other pockets before heading back to the truck and going back to searching for antelope. That night I found one antelope buck. It was slim pickings out here but at least it was a buck and not a terrible one either.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy

One lone buck in dozens of square miles of perfect habitat

The next morning I kept moving west headed for new country. Right off the bat I spotted a few groups in a field. A quick rip down the road put me just a few hundred yards from them and I threw up the spotter. There was one buck in the group that I’d say was a shooter.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy

The group’s leader. Unfortunately never to be seen again

I watched him for a while before they trotted off to the north end of the field. I kept searching that day only to find a few other small bucks. Over the last month I’ve been working on getting a new rifle all dialed in and setup for mountain elk and deer hunts. It’s a Weatherby Ultra Light Mark V in the 300 Weatherby Mag caliber. Overkill for antelope but this hunt would be in-the-field practice which I wasn’t going to say no to. I needed to double check my zero and then shoot 400 and 500.

montana, antelope, hunting, rifle, public land, diy, weatherby, 300 mag

Trying to verify my zero at 200 in a strong wind. Not fun

Of course the wind was ripping so I tried to find a spot where it was at my back. I shot and quickly found my zero wasn’t exactly on. Weird, I’d just shot it at the range a week ago and it appeared to be on. I fiddled with it and adjusted it to the best of my ability given the winds. I wasn’t ultra confident in it but would have tomorrow to shoot more before the opener. That night was a hearty dinner of mule deer backstrap courtesy of Maddie and some mashed potatoes. The next morning I decided I needed to shoot the rifle while the wind was calm. I quickly verified my zero at 300 yards on my coyote steel. First shot was money and actually blew a hole right through the steel. Ouch.

steel target, hole, hunting, rifle

I’m pretty sure my bullet will penetrate on an antelope

From there I drove down the road to some state land and shot 400 and 500 to verify my drop at each distance. First shot hits at each yardage told me all I needed to know and my confidence was restored after yesterdays tough shooting.

That evening I went back to the area I’d seen one of the better bucks and glassed from a high vantage point.  I saw antelope spread out over a 2-3 mile range and were well back off the road.  With an idea of where to expect to see antelope I found a camp spot and prepared for opening morning.

THE HUNT

The next morning started with a beautiful sunrise but no antelope in the usual spots by the main road.

montana, sunrise, prairie

I drove back around onto a county road and started glassing into a field they had been calling home.  A few small bucks showed up in the field down low but they were small.  A drive further down the road revealed two other larger groups of antelope, but all the bucks appeared to be medium sized through my spotter.  I wasn’t sold on a stalk yet and decided to check one last area before going and hiking to the back end of the public section.  As I pulled up on top I looked down to my left and saw a buck.  He was on the small side and I decided to go up and turn around and see if some hiking could produce something larger.  After turning around I was coming back down the road when I looked back down where the smaller buck had been.  There now were four other antelope and one buck that looked to be worth a closer look.  They were just about a 1000 yards off the road and I quickly grabbed my stuff and headed down on the back side of a ridge.  I thought the ridge would have a lower field on the backside where the antelope had fed to but I was wrong.  It actually just came straight up onto the field by the road.  By the time I got down there and peeked over the antelope where now up on the flat only a few hundred yards off the road.  Unfortunately I couldn’t get close enough for a shot and they crossed the road and ran way out into a large flat field.  Dang, I should have just stayed up by the road and could have easily shot a buck just a few hundred yards from the truck.  Oh well.  I put the spotter on the buck and verified that he was right on the cusp of what I was hoping to shoot.

I watched them feed off and drove around to start a hike back into the area I felt they were headed.  Forty five minutes later I was hiking up a draw trying to gain some ground yet remaining low and staying out of sight.  I looked up and spotted white up ahead of me.  I pulled up the binos only to see that it was a coyote hunting his way down the draw.  I rarely pass on the chance to hunt a coyote and I quickly put a bullet in the chamber and grabbed my distress call from my cargo pocket.  I knew if he was going to come it wouldn’t take much coaxing.  I blew on the call just a few times and got ready.  Soon I could see a head bounding over the grass.  He came down intently looking for the dying critter he had just heard.  I put the crosshairs on the coyotes chest and started to pull.  Nothing.  My safety was on and before I knew it he was coming closer.  The coyote was on a mission and I thought for sure he would key in on me sitting behind my backpack in the knee high grass.  I panned my gun with him as he swung to my left side.  He was oblivious to my movement and was soon about to hit my wind just 30 yards away.  I barked and he finally stopped.  I aimed low and squeezed one off.  He spun a few circles biting behind his shoulder and then was dead.  I’d made a perfect shot and the new Weatherby had it’s first kill.

coyote hunting montana, montana, coyote, hunting

I took a few photos and looked the coyote over.  His buddy came up on the hill while I was dinking around and I could have shot at him but he was skylined and I only had 7 more rounds of ammo for my hunt.  I passed and soon had my pack back on and was headed to find these antelope.  Soon enough I spotted the main group.  I backed around and shortly was within 400 yards of about 15 different antelope and 5-6 bucks.  The problem I soon had was that they were all smaller than I had hoped for.  The stalk and being able to get within range gave me confidence that I would be able to put the hammer on one as soon as I could locate a shooter.

antelope, rifle scope, hunting

A small buck with no idea how luck he is

antelope buck

A better buck that decided to peel off the main group. I’d end up passing on him later in the day.

I went back to the truck and made lunch and considered my options.  I’d seen 2 if not three bucks in this area that I’d shoot and I just needed to find one.  It was too early to relocate and I’d noticed that a portion of the antelope were using an adjacent state section that I needed to drive around to access.  I couldn’t glass into it but figured it would be worth a shot for the afternoon hunt.  I drove around and again grabbed my pack and gun and headed out.  I dropped into the bottom and soon was glassing up mule deer bucks and does across the drainage.  Nothing special and they just watched me from a distance as I proceeded down the draw.  Soon I saw a buck just a few hundred yards out.  He saw me at the same time and stood up.  I was able to put my spotter on him and noticed he was the same buck I’d seen earlier that left the large group.  He’d moved about a mile and half and was by himself.  I deemed him not quite a shooter and started walking towards him.  He wasn’t too scared and would run off to about 2-300 yards and just snort and blow at me.  I kept going and wished he would give it up and just run off, little did I know he would soon come in handy.  As I slowly rounded the next bend I saw a buck bedded down the draw facing me.  I quickly ducked down and worked up about 50 yards to the last roll of terrain I could get to before being exposed.  As I peeked up over it I saw the buck on his feet and moving to my right.  He apparently had seen me or heard the other buck and was inquisitive.  At this point he was looking towards the other buck behind me and too my right but circling my position and not coming closer. He was just over 500 yards out and with the wind this was just too far.  I knew I needed to get closer or else he would run off and that would be it.  There was one knob down below me about 150 yards and I knew if I could get there I could make a shot.  He’d see me but I didn’t have any other options.  I grabbed my gun and back bag and started jogging down to the hill.  The buck looked at me and I soon was out of sight behind the rise.  I snuck up and quickly laid down on the hill top as the buck looked my way.  I was breathing heavy and thought the buck would run very soon.  I hustled to range him and get a round in the chamber.  He was 360 yards out and as soon as I got him in my scope he started moving.  This time though he was coming closer.  I don’t know if he was mad the other buck he’d heard and saw was in his area or though I was possibly another antelope but he was going to find out.  Soon he was at 300 yards and I put the gun on him again.  Before I could settle he was on the move again.  He stopped about twenty yards later and this time I was ready.

My crosshairs were on him and I knew the wind would cause a slight shift in my point of impact.  I held 1 MOA left for wind and squeezed one off.  The shot was crisp and in my follow through I saw the buck drop right in his tracks from the frontal shot out of the 300 Weatherby Mag.  I’d done it!!! I’ve hunted antelope a lot with my bow and with other people but this was the first time I’d got to kill one with a rifle and it was a blast!  I gathered my stuff and was soon headed to check him out.

zack boughton, antelope, buck

I shot some photos and then proceeded to cut up the antelope.  The temps were perfect for cooling the meat and flies were nonexistent!  Soon the meat was off and I was ready to load up.

antelope, montana, hunting

kifaru, antelope, montana, hunting

Kifaru 22 Mag is hands down my favorite day pack

Soon the Kifaru 22 Mag was loaded with all my gear and my buck.  I hoisted the pack and began the mile and a half back to the truck.  Life was good and the setting sun made for a beautiful end to an awesome day.

montana, antelope, hunting

This hunt ended on a high note.  I had many points leading up to this that had me down though.  From no visibility, to snow and cold temps, to few antelope, muddy roads, gun sight in issues, bucks disappearing and lots of gas burned.  A hunt with no challenges is not much of a hunt and to end up on top with a respectable buck in the cooler made what started as a tough hunt one that I will remember and cherish forever.

montana, antelope, hunting

Mud and my 2018 antelope buck

Written by Zack Boughton

The, crags, hunting, film, tour, sitka, montana, wild, mule, deer, spot, and, stalk, buck, first, deer

Last fall Travis had a handful of days to fill his first ever, archery mule deer tag. Boots tight and arrows dialed in, we set foot in the badlands of Montana, with hopes of capturing this adventure on film. The result was an unforgetttable hunt, with the ups and downs that come with hunting spooky public land mule deer. Make sure to catch the full film in the 2015 Hunting Film Tour. Check here for a showing near you: huntingfilmtour.com

[vimeo https://vimeo.com/130697123 w=580&h=440]

 

black bear, hunting, spring, montana, wild

Today is the release of ALL NATURAL. The film is completely all natural audio. No music, no sound fx, just a day following Zack on a successful spring black bear hunt.

[vimeo https://vimeo.com/124184661 w=580&h=440]

Want to find more info on the rifle used? Go here: http://www.snowymountainrifles.com

 

 

-Travis

Well the calendar keeps rolling forward and Montana’s General Archery opener is quickly approaching.  This past week we were able to get the time off to go brush up our archery skills by chasing around some of the elusive antelope.  Conditions started off with temps in the upper 70s and low 80s but deteriorated quickly by the time mid-week hit.  The last 4 days of our hunt saw rain for the most of every day.  Quality gear was a must this year as the rain can quickly put you back in the truck if your not prepared.  After getting some real good stalks in early we decided to go meet up with our good friend Branden VanDyken who is the co-owner over at BeTheDecoy.  We quickly got started with him as Travis was able to lay down a nice goat our first day out as a crew of three.  I was able to get one down on the last day after a long and stressful day prior spent in a constant downpour.  Life is total chaos right now trying to get ready for elk/deer so I’ll leave you with some photos from the hunt.

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This is what it looks like when the 3 bucks you just stalked in their beds pop up and don’t give you a shot at 30 yards.

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The sun sets on Day 1.

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Zack hunts smart before hunting hard on Day 3. Being able to wake up and pull out the spotter is the nice part about living out of your truck.

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Travis uses some natural barriers to get to 30 yards before slipping an arrow through this bedded buck’s chest.

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Travis with his 2014 Montana antelope.

 

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The guys packing out Travis’ goat. Not much weight when it’s split in half.

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Looking for the “Hundred Dollar” buck in the pouring rain.

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Tony being a turd and forcing us to bump him out of the wheat.

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The final stalk. The antelope was bedded below the rock and Zack was able to slip down the hill using the rock as cover. After getting to the rock it was an easy 20 yard downhill shot that ended our day with the 2nd tag being filled.

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Zack with his 2014 speedgoat.

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The final pack out and the lightest we’ll have all year.

If you have never bowhunted antelope I’d highly encourage it.  When we set out on Day 1 I told Travis that I didn’t feel very deadly.  I hadn’t hunted in months and it was awesome to get back out and start hunting again with the bow in hand.  By the end of the trip we definitely felt ready to tackle just about anything we could encounter come elk and deer season.  Good luck to everyone this year!  And thanks to the companies we work with that make some of the best gear out there – Vortex OpticsBear ArcheryMystery RanchSitka GearYETI CoolersFHF GearDanner BootsTrophy Taker

-Zack