
This story, “Finest Elk in 82 Years,” was initially revealed within the March 1981 concern of Outside Life.
When my 18-year-old son Dale and I left camp earlier than daybreak that November morning we knew we have been headed for hassle. The great elk nation is several miles uphill from our camp close to the Panther River in Alberta, Canada, so we journey horses up there earlier than looking on foot. We couldn’t journey all the best way this time as a result of the temperature was 24 under.
When it’s that chilly you don’t have sufficient physique motion to maintain heat on a horse. The acute chilly works by even the most effective of woolens, and it begins to jab into you want tiny slivers of ice. We needed to dismount many occasions and lead our horses till we restored sufficient physique heat to journey once more.
Daybreak was a lemon-yellow brightening in a cloudless sky. There wasn’t a breath of wind. It appeared as if the world was locked inside an enormous deep freeze. However there was solely about six inches of snow on the bottom and it was arduous and crisp, the type that makes for simple strolling.
I left Dale in thick spruce and jackpine close to the underside of Heartbreak Hill. He’d taken an enormous six-point elk a number of days earlier, now he was going to strive for a mule deer buck within the decrease elevations. The elk can be greater, so I tied my horse and began climbing.
Heartbreak Hill is effectively named, mostly as a result of its slopes angle upward anythe place from about 45 to 70 levels. Its south facet reveals open grassy slopes that supply preferrred winter vary for elk. Its north facet is roofed with heavy pine and spruce forests that present excellent cowl for the massive animals. The hill is about two miles lengthy and half a mile excessive. It butts up towards Barrier Mountain that peaks in strong rock at an elevation of 8,200 toes. The mountain is one boundary of Banff Nationwide Park.
Banff harbors a giant herd of elk in summer season. When winter comes, and the snow will get too deep and the temperature too low, the animals transfer right down to decrease elevations. They undergo three passes, Dormer, Pink Deer, and the Panther. When the climate turns extraordinarily chilly, because it had the previous couple of days, it’s virtually a certain factor that elk can be transferring downhill.
That’s why I selected to climb Coronary heartbreak Hill. It’s just a few miles from the park’s boundary, however its slopes are harmful challenges for hunters. While you combine a couple of inches of snow with lengthy blades of useless and frozen grass you will have a really slippery combination. For those who slip and fall on these steep slopes chances are you’ll slide a good distance earlier than you cease, and if. you cease suddenly it can most likely be once you crash right into a tree or deadfall.
All of this was nothing new to me. I’d been looking Alberta’s big-game nation for greater than 30 years, and I’d spent an excellent share of the previous 20 hunting seasons as a part-time information. I’d packed out or helped to pack out a number of bull elk and bighorn sheep from this Panther River nation. I knew how one can hunt the realm, and I knew that the climate situations on this morning of November 21, 1977 have been preferrred for recognizing elk on the transfer.
These ideas have been going by my thoughts as I struggled on up towards Barrier Mountain. As I started getting near the highest of Heartbreak, I discovered myself worrying extra about my rifle and the 4X Weaver scope than in regards to the probability of seeing elk. I puzzled if the previous Mannequin 70 Winchester .338 would hearth within the excessive chilly. I had no thought in any respect of seeing a really outstanding bull.
I used to be born in Trochu, Alberta, in 1932. We lived on a farm the place my mother and father raised cattle and grew grain. My dad was a devoted outdoorsman, and on my fifth birthday he informed me I may start taking pictures his .22 rifle. He put a can on a fence put up, balanced the rifle for me, and informed me how one can line up the sights. I couldn’t hit the can, however simply having the ability to shoot a gun was exciting sufficient.
After I was 9, dad gave me permission to hunt by myself. I didn’t have a lot hassle getting sitting rabbits.
My looking fever would come to a boil each time dad introduced dwelling a deer, moose, or elk. I might stand and admire these large animals by the hour, dreaming of the day after I’d be capable to go on a big-game hunt. In Alberta, that magic time is your 14th birthday. That’s the day you turn into sufficiently old to get a big-game looking license.
That fall dad and two of his looking companions took me into rugged wilderness 130 miles northwest of our farm. We made the final 12 miles of the journey with a crew of horses and a sleigh. The sleigh was filled with looking gear, groceries, and hay and oats for the horses.
In the midst of the previous trapper’s cabin the place we stayed there was a framed field stuffed with soil. The soil supported a range that had been fashioned from a 45-gallon metal drum. Its facet had been flattened to supply a cooking floor. When that massive range was stuffed with blazing wooden the cabin was heat as toast. However when the hearth went out, the sub-zero exterior chilly leaked in quick by holes the place chinking had fallen from the log partitions. We tried filling the holes with no matter would stick in them, however we spent a number of time chopping wooden with a noticed.
The massive factor I vividly bear in mind about that hunt was the tongue-lashing dad gave me after I pulled a dumb stunt. He had left me on prime of a thinly treed hill, and had informed me to stroll to the tip of the hill then watch for him to come back again. His plan was to hike out of the valley under and attempt to flush an animal previous my ready spot. I didn’t actualize that it could take him a very long time to work out of the valley in foot-deep snow. I lastly determined to stroll over to the subsequent hill.
I bought over there, waited some time, then tried to take a shorter route again. The farther I walked the denser the timber grew to become. I knew I used to be misplaced, however I stored looking for my manner again to the primary hill. It was late afternoon by the point dad discovered me. He had adopted my tracks within the snow, and he was actually mad.
The following 12 months my household moved to the Pincher Creek space. Our farm was proper within the coronary heart of nice looking and fishing nation. I hated to depart the realm, however three years later we moved once more and settled on a farm close to Torrington. It’s nonetheless my dwelling. Our farm, which my brother Allan and I’ve operated since our father’s dying in 1959, covers 1,280 acres of blended crop and pasture land. We increase oats, barley, and rape, and we now have a cow-calf operation of 120 animals. There are a number of whitetail and mule deer within the coulees and attracts, and we get our share. Fishing can be nice.
We will’t get critical about looking till the tip of October. There’s no time to spare till the crops are combined, the fields are labored, and winter feed is put up for our cattle.
About 20 years in the past Allan, myself, Artwork Schneider, and Ron and Victor Smith put our horses and looking gear collectively so we may get an clothing store’s license. In these early years we had to make use of packhorses to get into the Panther nation. We had 21 horses, two massive tents, and a full line of packing gear. We have been mainly curiosityed in our personal looking, however we introduced in some consumer hunters.
One 12 months our group and our shoppers bought 37 elk. We packed all of them out by horse, eight miles right down to the place our autos have been parked. A number of of us would take out a load of elk meat about twice every week. On our return journey we’d deliver again extra hunters, plus oats for the horses and provides for camp.

After a couple of years of looking on this manner, Victor Smith give up due to failing . well being. When Victor retired, Allan and I made a decision to start out our personal camp about half a mile away. The Smith/ Schneider camp and ours are nonetheless going sturdy, and so are our friendships.
Proper right here I higher let you know extra about Artwork Schneider and his horse Outdated Pal as a result of each play roles in the remainder of my story. Artwork is 46, a married farmer, and he drives a college bus. He’s probably the greatest hunters I’ve ever met, and Outdated Pal turned out to be essentially the most reliready horse Artwork ever had in camp.
Years in the past Outdated Pal-was a chuck-wagon horse. Her unique proprietor ran her within the chuck-wagon competitors on the Calgary Stampede. When she grew to become too sluggish for racing, Artwork purchased her at an public sale. It took him two years to interrupt the horse into routine looking work, principally as a result of she would need to race away each time someone would get on her again. However she was very clever, and he or she finally realized to do what Artwork needed.
She had a sixth sense about making the numerous and sometimes harmful crossings of the Panther River. Throughout hunting season, the river can turn into very treacherous due to ice. As moodatures drop, shoreline ice retains freezing ever nearer to the center of the river. Although the river isn’t extensive — normally about 50 yards across-its water runs very swift over giant rocks.
Heavy runoff can change the river’s water stage abruptly and drastically. Chunks of shoreline ice break free and rush downstream with sufficient power to usually kind jam-ups. These jam-ups will again up a number of water in the identical manner a dam does. When the back-up stress will get heavy sufficient the build-up of ice will burst. Someoccasions a wall of water six to eight toes excessive will come crashing down the valley. No man or horse can survive such raging partitions of ice and water.
Outdated Pal may sense when it was secure to cro.ss the river. Sp.e was at all times the primary horse to interrupt ice and decide the most effective route. She was regular and would by no means get excited when ice chunks broke unfastened. She may inform if there was an excessive amount of ice and whether or not or not the water depth would enable secure crossing. She had that very same uncanny potential for being sure-footed once we hunted bighorn sheep far up within the mountains.
Our camps are on Crown Land that’s open to public looking. In recent times we’ve been capable of get all the best way to the camps with 4 WO vans, bringing the horses with us, however we now have to cross the Panther at 5 totally different shallow areas as a result of there aren’t any bridges. Allan and I’ve two vans, the largest is a 3quarter-ton Ford with a winch.
Although camp is simply 115 miles from dwelling, it takes about seven hours to make the journey. The final eight miles are the roughest. It’s uncommon if we don’t get not less than one truck caught or slowed down within the river. That winch will get a number of use.
Our camp’s most important tent is 16 x 20 toes and has six-foot partitions. We use the again half for sleeping quarters. Our beds are bales of straw coated with tarps, foam mattresses, and top of the range sleeping baggage. A giant selfmade range (we use chainsaws to chop up useless spruce bushes for wooden) heats your entire tent. Close to the range is a big selfmade cabinet that holds groceries and provides.
Our different tent is 9×12. It homes our saddles and pack gear, and oats and hay for the horses. We soak up eight horses once we arrange camp simply earlier than the looking season opens. The one safety they’ve from the extreme climate is the thick stand of spruce bushes that surrounds our campsite.
Allan and I take turns in camp. Every of us is in for every week, then out the subsequent. We now have to do that as a result of considered one of us has to feed cattle and do the chores again on our farm.
Allan and my son Dale had been in camp the week earlier than I bought my elk. Our pre-arranged schedule known as for a gathering on the third river crossing round midday on Saturday. Allan can be on his manner dwelling, I’d be going into camp with extra hunters.
My youngest son, 11-year-old Ronald, was with me. So was Don Williams, a 49-year-old fertilizer seller, and Larry Weimer, a 30-year-old farmer. Each males are good pals who needed to get in some looking. Ronald was going alongside for the thrill.
There was about 4 inches of snow on the bottom once we bought up the primary crossing of the Panther. There we put chains on all 4 wheels of each vans we have been driving. After we arrived on the third crossing no one was there. We bounced and weaved the vans on uphill for an hour earlier than we met my brother and son coming down. The very first thing I seen in Allan’s truck was an infinite elk rack. Dale was all smiles. There wasn’t any query of who’d shot the bull.
“Attempt to beat this one, pops,” Dale mentioned.
Properly, a person shouldn’t be outdone by his son, so I answered, “Little bulls like that one we go away a 12 months or so to develop up.”
The kidding stopped in a rush as a result of the six-point rack was so massive (it later formally scored 366, simply 9 wanting making the Boone and Crockett file guide) it demanded critical dialog. Allan and I agreed that the antlers have been most likely the most effective ever taken from our camp. Then I mentioned to Dale, “Let’s hear your story.”
“I began looking under Heartbreak by strolling small hills proper after daybreak,” Dale started. “It was snowing so arduous I couldn’t see a lot of anyfactor. After I was about midway up Heartbreak it give up snowing so I made a decision to cease and look issues over. Immediately I noticed three massive bulls feeding about 200 yards away. Then I noticed two extra elk bedded within the fringe of the bushes under me. They have been bulls too. I may hardly imagine there have been 5 trophy bulls in sight.
“I dropped inclined and appeared them throughout intently with my 4X Bushnell scope. 4 of the 5 bulls had six factors on all sides, the opposite one had 5. They didn’t know I used to be there. The very best bull was one of many three I’d noticed first. Every little thing was occuring so quick I didn’t have time to get excited. I leveled my 7 mm. Remington Magnum and touched off. I heard the 145-grain bullet hit with a whomp. The bull turned, ran a couple of steps, after which collapsed. That’s when buck fever came visiting me, however I bought him disciplinedressed, and it was solely 11 o’clock after I bought again to camp.”
We talked some time, then Allan headed for dwelling whereas Dale joined my group. By the point we arrived on the final river crossing it was froze way over I anticipated. We used a pry bar and axes to clear away sufficient ice to let our vans go, after which drove the final mile to camp.
In Alberta looking is prohibited on Sunday, so we spent the subsequent day reduceting a pile of wooden, adjusting saddles and bridles, and making ready looking gear. The temperature was falling quickly by night. It was effectively under zero exterior once we went to mattress. I put the alarm clock inside my sleeping bag. I needed to verify it could ring on schedule at 4 a.m.
It did, and I can’t ever bear in mind crawling out of a sleeping bag into such bitter chilly. I bought the range going and loaded extra wooden into it than I ought to have. Then I dressed and fed the horses. By that point the range was far hotter than I believed it was. I loaded a pan with bacon, and it started smoking virtually instantly. Inside moments the acute warmth created such a smoke display I needed to throw again the tent flap. By now all people was awake and coughing and really fast with form phrases for the prepare dinner.
“Why within the so and so don’t you learn to prepare dinner!” growled Don Williams.
“Wow,” my son Ronald yelled and ducked again into his sleeping bag.
Larry Weimer is the quiet kind. He simply stared at me whereas muttering, “Nice approach to begin the day.”
After we completed the burned-up breakfast, Dale and I saddled up and rode out into the virtually insufferable chilly.
A few hours later, as I used to be climbing near the highest of Coronary heartbreak, I moved about even with a giant valley that extends over to Hole Ridge. The underside of this valley is closely timbered with giant spruce and jackpines, however the place it edges up towards the slope I used to be climbing the timber thins to a couple small pines. I used to be about 300 yards away from the final pines-in the open on the grassy slope-when I finished to get my breath.
As quickly as I finished I heard somefactor that sounded just like the cracking of branches. At first I believed I used to be hearing issues, however when the sounds got here once more I spotted I hadn’t been mistaken. One thing was breaking branches within the timbered valley greater than 1 / 4 of a mile away. I may hear the noises plainly as a result of the extraordinarily chilly morning was useless nonetheless.
I’d heard such sounds earlier than. They’re the pistol-like studies a bull elk makes when his antlers crash by useless branches whereas he’s trotting or operating. I stood immobile for a couple of seconds, then I spotted that the sounds have been getting louder. The animal or animals have been coming my manner. I figured {that a} bull may burst out of the timber in a rush, so I readied my previous Winchester.
Two bulls materialized. The most important trotted by the final fringe of solarsplashed bushes first. His head was excessive and his glistening antlers have been laid again. The beams have been so lengthy they prolonged virtually to his flanks, they usually seemed to be not less than 5 toes extensive. I had by no means seen an elk as giant as this one.
I used to be conscious that the opposite bull was a big six-pointer. However there was no comparability between the 2 animals. The primary bull was so large in all respects he commanded my full attention.
I feel he noticed me on the market on the open slope as a result of he started quartering away as quickly as he cleared the pines. I’ve shot a number of big-game animals and I usually haven’t any hassle in any respect with buck fever, however I’ll admit I used to be dumbbased by that bull. The vary was 200 yards, and I excitedly triggered my first shot earlier than I bought a correct sight picture. The massive bull slumped a bit when the 200-grain Hornady bullet hit him excessive within the entrance leg, however he stored going. A well-placed bullet from my Winchester will cease any elk in his tracks, so I knew straight away that I’d shot too quick.
While you’re in a state of affairs like this, and that your trophy of a lifetime is getting away, it’s extraordinarily difficult to regulate your self. However I did, and I put the second slug into the bottom of his neck. The bull dropped. When his physique hit the very steep slope it immediately started sliding downhill. I watched in awe as the large black form picked up velocity and started plowing snow.
The bull slid like a runaway sleigh for 80 yards earlier than he crashed into small pines edging a V -shaped gulley. I heard branches smashing because the carcass disappeared from my view, then eachfactor grew to become useless nonetheless. I glanced again up the slope. The smaller bull was standing immobile, gazing me. I famous that his most important beams would meacertain about 50 inches lengthy and that his antler unfold was about 45 inches. A trophy for certain, however his rack seemed to be a lot smaller than the one carried by the bull I’d killed. The conclusion of this reality nearly overwhelmed me as I watched the animal flip and run again towards heavy timber.
I appeared downhill for Dale, and spotted him climbing in my route. He was having a tough time making progress on a steep sidehill. When he stopped for a breather I waved my cap. He picked up the motion, then zeroed in on my place.
Half an hour later Dale met me close to the gulley. The primary signal we noticed of my bull was one antler protruding of a snowdrift. The sight stopped us in our tracks. “Properly, pops,” Dale mentioned, “Your bull beats mine by rather a lot.”
The 1,000-pound elk had taken a number of snow with him when he skidded into the gulley, so we had an infinite job of pushing and pulling earlier than we may get the carcass on its again for disciplinedressing. We agreed that the antlers have been not less than a fifth bigger than any elk rack we’d ever seen. I spent a number of time close to the hearth we’d began with useless branches-you want a hearth when field-dressing massive animals in temperatures effectively under zero otherwise you’ 11 freeze your hands-but principally I simply stared at these wonderful antlers.
We lastly propped the elk’s chest cavity open with branches, then headed for camp. On the best way we met Artwork Schneider who was headed as much as hunt the identical space. We informed him the place my bull was. That night Artwork stopped at our tent and mentioned, “Clarence, your bull is the largest elk this nation has ever seen. It certain can be a disgrace if these antlers bought broken whilst you’re packing them off the hill. I’d prefer to take Outdated Pal up there and aid you out.”
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It was unbelievable how rigorously that horse handled these antlers the subsequent morning. She appeared to know there was one thing particular about them as a result of she took a number of time figuring out the most effective routes alongside the steep hills. After we bought down into heavy timber the horse maneuvered between bushes in order that the antlers on her again seldom touched even a twig. A number of occasions she stopped as a result of she sensed that the antlers have been too extensive to get by limbs. The horse wouldn’t transfer till we reduce the branches that have been in her manner.
After we reached camp we discovered Ron Smith, Artwork’s brother-in-law, waiting with a tape measure. We have been all accustomed to the Boone and Crockett scoring system as a result of we’re members of the Central Alberta Huge Recreation Trophy Membership, however Ron was an official scorer. He stored shaking his head in gainedderment as he made measurements and wrote down numbers. When he added them up he mentioned, “The antlers will shrink a bit through the required 60-day drying interval. However I’ll let you know Clarence, your elk can be within the prime 5 for certain.”
It turned out to be the third finest on the all-time listing. The ultimate official rating lists the correct antler size at 62 3/8 inches, the left 62 2/8. The within unfold is 49 2/8. All of these measurements are a couple of higher than the comparable dimensions of the No. 1 elk taken by John Piute in Colorado in 1899, however Piute’ s trophy scored greater as a result of its tines have been longer and thicker. My trophy has six factors on the correct facet, eight on the left. Whole Boone and Crockett factors come to 419 6/8. By the use of comparability, the No. 1 elk, shot by Phite in 1899, scored 442 3/8. The No. 2 elk on the all-time listing, shot by an unknown hunter in 1890, has a complete rating of 441 6/8. In different phrases, success and arduous looking introduced me the most effective elk taken in additional than 80 years.
Probably the most astonishing statistics is the 41-pound weight of the antlers. Think about that! My bull was carrying a battering ram on his head. No surprise I may hear branches breaking like pistol photographs when that massive bull was operating towards me.
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