The curse is lifted!!!

Neo

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Everyone has a secret if you care to look for it ... mine was that despite being an Alberta boy, I somehow never managed to shoot a moose. With draw tags taking longer and longer to get, opportunities are fewer these days, but that's really not the reason. Plain and simple, I've been cursed. I run into them when I'm tagless, I seem to have no problem calling them in when others have tags, but for whatever reason I managed to make it to the ripe old age of 48 without ever putting my hands on moose antlers of my own. Life's funny that way ... I've managed to get to Alaska once and Africa three times and collected every trophy I've ever dreamed of plus a whole lot more. But never, ever a moose. Go figure.

Deciding it was time to play the odds, I noted with interest back in 2003 that the best success ratio here in Alberta was at Camp Wainwright (limited entry tags on a military base). The catch was how long it took to actually get drawn for that tag. I finally got it this year, after waiting for a decade. Things were set -- I was finally going to get me a Bullwinkle when the Dec 1 - 6 moose season. I had a plan!

That plan took a bit of nosedive in late September when, during a martial arts class, I managed to break both my wrist and arm so badly that I had to get put back together with pins, screws and a metal plate. For most of the next two months, hunting was looking awfully unlikely. The moose, it seemed, had won again.

But day by day, the wrist healed. And while still painful as I type this, it's more or less working again. The biggest thing, though, was my hunting partner of 18 years telling me that come hell or high water, we were going to find a decent bull and bring him home. So I had help, which I desperately needed (ever try to gut, quarter and load a moose on your own when you can't lift more than 20 pounds with one of your arms?) My pal made it clear that he was quite prepared to carry my moose out himself if it came to that. The only catch was that he could only come out for the first half of the hunt, so we had to get this done in 3 days.

On day two, we did.

And man, oh man, did it ever feel wonderful!

IMG_1727_zpsf1ec8652.jpg


This moose curse, at is turns out, is multi-generational in our family. While my paternal grandfather shot several over the years (both in his native Sweden and then later in British Columbia), my dad somehow never managed to follow suit, even when I called one in for him back in 2006. I guess the curse started with him. But it's over now :)

My dad has been gone these past 6 years, so it's too late to share the story or this photo with him. But how fitting that I managed to end the curse while wearing his old hunting jacket, carrying his hunting knife, and hunting in a military base where he himself served on training exercises when in the engineering corps of the Army in the 1960s. I'd like to think that during those days, he may have driven or marched down the same route from which we spotted that moose. It's hardly the biggest moose I've come across over the years, and we did see bigger bulls during the trip (albeit in very inaccessible spots that would have made retrieval extremely difficult on what is essentially a foot-access hunt). But he's mine, and my father's, and a hell of a memory.

Here's hoping each of you had wonderful, memorable seasons -- and that all of us have many more ahead. Cheers!
 
Congratulations on ending the moose drought. I had a similar thing with moose, although my first one came easy there was a jinx/slump attached to me for years after that. Guys with me would get them, and I did my share of moose loading, gutting, skinning and eating. Once the jinx ended it was like it never existed.
 
Here's hoping that I don't have a jinx between now and the next one -- maybe that particular variant of the curse is a Saskatchewan thing? :)

Mind you, right now I'm not sure I want to shoot another just yet. I also popped two mulies on the same trip, and arrived home with 4 days of meat cutting, grinding, bagging and wrapping ahead of me. Just finished all that yesterday, and glad to be done. Chances are, though, I'll forget all about the work part when next fall roles around!
 
Congratulations on ending the moose drought. I had a similar thing with moose, although my first one came easy there was a jinx/slump attached to me for years after that. Guys with me would get them, and I did my share of moose loading, gutting, skinning and eating. Once the jinx ended it was like it never existed.

Firstly : CONGRATS NEO!

Dogleg,
Thats Almost exactly what happened to me! After finally getting my first moose in Alberta, it became almost easy using bow and arrow! Weird eh!? For years I was helping everyone else get thier bulls, except me! But when I finally got
My tag, I was able to make use of it. Hope you like my picture!
 
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Strange how that works. For me, it was ELK. Shot one early in my hunting career, and then nothing for almost a decade, despite plenty of effort.

Now I have well over 30 behind me, and it's like the drought never happened.
Moose have always seemed to come easy for me, so moosemeat has been standard fare in our household right along.

Enjoy that Moose, Neo, it's a great eating bull, IMHO.

Regards, Dave.
 
Here's hoping that I don't have a jinx between now and the next one -- maybe that particular variant of the curse is a Saskatchewan thing? :)

Its probably a Dogleg thing; my long term luck is average if a combination of extremely good and extremely bad luck still counts as normal.

In any case I'm sure you will be OK from here on out; especially if you did the good moose mojo banning bad juju happy moose moonlight ritual ceremony and dance afterwards. You did; right? Oh god, tell me you did:yingyang:
 
Everyone has a secret if you care to look for it ... mine was that despite being an Alberta boy, I somehow never managed to shoot a moose. With draw tags taking longer and longer to get, opportunities are fewer these days, but that's really not the reason. Plain and simple, I've been cursed. I run into them when I'm tagless, I seem to have no problem calling them in when others have tags, but for whatever reason I managed to make it to the ripe old age of 48 without ever putting my hands on moose antlers of my own. Life's funny that way ... I've managed to get to Alaska once and Africa three times and collected every trophy I've ever dreamed of plus a whole lot more. But never, ever a moose. Go figure.

Deciding it was time to play the odds, I noted with interest back in 2003 that the best success ratio here in Alberta was at Camp Wainwright (limited entry tags on a military base). The catch was how long it took to actually get drawn for that tag. I finally got it this year, after waiting for a decade. Things were set -- I was finally going to get me a Bullwinkle when the Dec 1 - 6 moose season. I had a plan!

That plan took a bit of nosedive in late September when, during a martial arts class, I managed to break both my wrist and arm so badly that I had to get put back together with pins, screws and a metal plate. For most of the next two months, hunting was looking awfully unlikely. The moose, it seemed, had won again.

But day by day, the wrist healed. And while still painful as I type this, it's more or less working again. The biggest thing, though, was my hunting partner of 18 years telling me that come hell or high water, we were going to find a decent bull and bring him home. So I had help, which I desperately needed (ever try to gut, quarter and load a moose on your own when you can't lift more than 20 pounds with one of your arms?) My pal made it clear that he was quite prepared to carry my moose out himself if it came to that. The only catch was that he could only come out for the first half of the hunt, so we had to get this done in 3 days.

On day two, we did.

And man, oh man, did it ever feel wonderful!

IMG_1727_zpsf1ec8652.jpg


This moose curse, at is turns out, is multi-generational in our family. While my paternal grandfather shot several over the years (both in his native Sweden and then later in British Columbia), my dad somehow never managed to follow suit, even when I called one in for him back in 2006. I guess the curse started with him. But it's over now :)

My dad has been gone these past 6 years, so it's too late to share the story or this photo with him. But how fitting that I managed to end the curse while wearing his old hunting jacket, carrying his hunting knife, and hunting in a military base where he himself served on training exercises when in the engineering corps of the Army in the 1960s. I'd like to think that during those days, he may have driven or marched down the same route from which we spotted that moose. It's hardly the biggest moose I've come across over the years, and we did see bigger bulls during the trip (albeit in very inaccessible spots that would have made retrieval extremely difficult on what is essentially a foot-access hunt). But he's mine, and my father's, and a hell of a memory.

Here's hoping each of you had wonderful, memorable seasons -- and that all of us have many more ahead. Cheers!

At 51 I am still the moose virgin lol, my 26 year old son shot his first one last year, I was so happy to be nearby to help him, was an amazing experience
 
Neo..........my nemesis animal with full blown curse was leopard, I spent so many nights in a blind by the time I actually got one......22 years from first try, I was an expert blind sitter. The first lion hunt my PH said he had never sat with a quieter client, it was on this same hunt that I actually bagged my leopard and it was about as big for a leopard as your moose is in moose terms, but after 37 nights in blinds it will do nicely.
You've cracked the dam now, from here on out they will be every where and you will be rewarded every time out, seems to be the way it goes. Congrats !!!
 
Congratulations. Determination paid off as it would have been way too easy to stand back and wait another year. Always good to have buddies who prop you up and help you achieve goals. Well done
 
In any case I'm sure you will be OK from here on out; especially if you did the good moose mojo banning bad juju happy moose moonlight ritual ceremony and dance afterwards. You did; right? Oh god, tell me you did:yingyang:

If, by "ceremony and dance", you mean did I also shoot a couple of mulies on the same trip, well yes ... yes I did :)
 
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