An Ontario Moose hunt pictorial (dial up & blood warning)

John Y Cannuck

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Took the camera with me on my wanderings this year.
We had only Calf tags :( but, I still got fresh air, scenery, and a few wildlife shots. Some even with the camera.

See how many white tailed deer you can find in the photo's

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We were almost skunked.
The guys saw eight cows, no tags. One had a calf, but there was no shot, as the cow stayed between the shooter and the calf.

He's my story on the calf in the photo:

Friday Afternoon, I dogged around the 'motorcycle trail' to try and get the calf one of the guys had seen calf to move to the hardwoods watch , no dice.
Went back to camp, dropped my pack, changed coats, and went to another block to sit.
On entering the trail, I saw a cow and calf track coming out, maybe the one I had been trying to dog out, from earlier in the day?
Then, further on, found a really fresh set, with apparent calf ####, going into my block. That track turned up the first gut towards the island trail. The leaves were very crunchy, and I figured there was no way I could get close. So, I went to the next bump on the ridge, and waked down it, to try and get in front of the pair.
I knew there was a bunch of hardwoods near the ponds where I had snuck up on a cow, a few years ago, and the moose like to browse and I aimed for there.
I sat down and waited. It started to rain lightly, and it started to get dark. About 5:30, I saw what appeared to be a wild turkey on the opposite ridge. Then I realized it was a cows head, just visible above the ridge. There was something shorter, and black behind her I could have shot, but was unsure at this point as to weather it was indeed a calf. 150 yards away, they went behind a big clump of trees, and I waited, but they did not appear. It was 6:00. I got my radio out, and whispered that I was stalking a cow and calf, they would likely run to the hardwoods when they saw me. (of course everyone was already in camp, but I didn't know that, and my message was not heard).
I stalked across the gut, three steps, pause, three steps pause. I saw the cow plainly now. I slowed to one step pause, and only when she looked away.
She finally made me. When she ran, the calf appeared behind her, but dropped out of sight in a hole, they were running for the spot we call the stone dam.
As they climbed the ridge, I got a quick shot on the calf, and it slid down the hill into a hole.
See flash pic in the post above.
I fired the shot at 6:30. They heard it at camp, and listened to the radio for me. (my radio SUCKS!) insert expletive here.
They did not hear my requests for aid, or the several more shots I fired to get them to come.
I did a very hasty gutting job, hung some tape, marked the calf on GPS, and made quickly for the trail out of the block. My flashlight was in my pack back at camp. I found the trail tape as light faded, it was quite dark when I got to the main trail.
I hiked back to camp, meeting a search party looking for me on the flats.
I sent them back to camp for chain saws, and lights, one was to bring a trailer to the muddy trail that is our main road.
We cut the trail wider for ATVs, by flashlight and watching the GPS, made a straight line trial through a big blow down to the calf.
Getting one atv in there required guys standing on the sides of the trail in places to keep the machine upright.
It had to be winched 50 feet up from the hole it had fallen in.
We were back at camp at 9:45pm
Hung the moose, finished gutting, and cleaned up.
Supper was good, beer was good, slept like a dead man.
 
Here's the easiest one, there is a doe I estimated at 200 lbs, standing broadside 30 feet from the camera, near the center of the image.
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This is why we have guys from out west not understanding why we can't see deer 300 yards off. They are hard enough to see at under 50 yards in Ontario bush conditions.
By the way, there are four deer in the photo. I saw them in real life, but I can find only two maybe three of them myself now. Two are to the right of center, one to the left.
One of the pictures further up in the thread shows them running away tails up. You can't find them in that either!
 
This is why we have guys from out west not understanding why we can't see deer 300 yards off. They are hard enough to see at under 50 yards in Ontario bush conditions.

And guess what, we have Boreal forest just like that in Alberta, Saskatchewan and BC too. I could never understand why easterners always think the west is bald ass prairies :confused:

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Onterrible is not the only place with thick bush guys, please stop thinking that.
 
Maybe this is why I haven't even seen a deer during my hunts this year yet, or maybe your picture taking skills suck:p. Or maybe you're.....:onCrack:

Anyway I think I see the doe in the one pic.
 
And guess what, we have Boreal forest just like that in Alberta, Saskatchewan and BC too. I could never understand why easterners always think the west is bald ass prairies :confused:

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Onterrible is not the only place with thick bush guys, please stop thinking that.

I live in what is considered to be the bald ass prairie. I will also tell you that I've walked within 15 feet of a 227" mule deer without being able to see him.. There's bush everywhere..
 
And guess what, we have Boreal forest just like that in Alberta, Saskatchewan and BC too. I could never understand why easterners always think the west is bald ass prairies :confused:

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Onterrible is not the only place with thick bush guys, please stop thinking that.
As it happens, my sister lives near Grand Forks, so I have hunted there.
You do have bush conditions, but you also have much larger expanses of areas you can see for miles. Somewhat like Southern Ontario Hunting.
Walking in the area I hunt is dirty.
Prairies, yeah, I found them to be more treed than I expected, but only the most southwestern portion of Ontario is that flat.
 
As it happens, my sister lives near Grand Forks, so I have hunted there.
You do have bush conditions, but you also have much larger expanses of areas you can see for miles. Somewhat like Southern Ontario Hunting.
Walking in the area I hunt is dirty.
Prairies, yeah, I found them to be more treed than I expected, but only the most southwestern portion of Ontario is that flat.

I am not talking about the prairies but more like the northern three quarters of Alberta for instance. It is the same thick bush, swamp, muskeg, boreal forest as most of Ontario. See the green on the map, same type of bush more or less...

I have spent time in the northern Ontario bush as well, hunting and fishing. One side of my family still lives there.
 
Maybe this is why I haven't even seen a deer during my hunts this year yet, or maybe your picture taking skills suck:p. Or maybe you're.....:onCrack:

Anyway I think I see the doe in the one pic.

Oh - Yeah I see many in the first pic , as they passed last night and drop some gifts for early morning shoe scrubs
 
I am not talking about the prairies but more like the northern three quarters of Alberta for instance. It is the same thick bush, swamp, muskeg, boreal forest as most of Ontario. See the green on the map, same type of bush more or less...

I have spent time in the northern Ontario bush as well, hunting and fishing. One side of my family still lives there.
Actually, what you see in the pics is not boreal forest. Boreal forest is further north of where I was hunting, and much much thicker.
I hunted there years ago, for both moose, and bear.
Think trees as thick as the hair on a dogs back in places.
 
Bob.......errrrrrr i mean JYC:D...what wierd cal and bullet you use:confused:

BTW...............:cheers: congrats on some great tender meat
Weird cal? Cartridge was 308Win
Weird Bullet, 165 Hornady Interlock
Tremendous shooting distance, an incredible 40 yards. I originally thought it was 80, but a visit in the morning, proved me wrong.
I guess I didn't believe I could stalk in that close.
 
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