Author Topic: 30-06 Handi Did It Again  (Read 1074 times)

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Offline Sourdough

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30-06 Handi Did It Again
« on: December 14, 2006, 01:47:36 PM »
Was out last week with my hunting partner.  We took a new guy along, one that had never been hunting before in Alaska.  Little snow. not good trail conditions, lot of ice.  First day out new guy got on some overflow, lost control of his snow machine.  Slid down the ice and hit my machine from the rear.  Busted the Koplin case into many tiny pieces, that thing shattered like glass.  My TCR in .338 went flying, hit a tree and broke one of the turrents off the scope.  Darn, I was left with my Handi in 30-06, mounted on my sled being pulled by Norman and his big maching.  But unlike the previous time I had two rounds of 180gr Nosler partition in my pocket, along with the 125gr loads I carry for wolves.  We shot three wolves the first day, they were checking out a gut pile, where someone else had shot a moose the day before.   I shot two, Norman shot one out of a pack of five.  Second day we saw a few Moose, but they were spooky and hiding, or running fast.  Third day, saw some wolves on top of a ridge, started working our way up there ran into a cow and Norman shot it.  Forget the wolves, they left at the gunshot.  Next morning I got up early, ate and left an hour before daylite (Not sunup, daylite comes a couple of hours before sunup in the artic.)  Anyway got into position on a ridge, overlooking the river valley and the grubstake  mining claim.  Had seen Wolf tracks going through the mining camp the day before.  As daylite came on, suddenly I realised there was Moose everywhere down in the vally.  I counted thirtyseven Moose down near the river bed in the short willows.  I sat there from 8:30 till 10AM.  Watched as several parties came through on snow machines.  The Moose would hear the machines coming and would either run into the spruches, or lie down in the willows.  Once they laid down they were hidden from view, and the snow machiners would drive right by, not seeing them.  After the snowmachiners were gone, the Moose would stand and continue to browse.  I picked out a big cow that was close to a trail and started working my way down the slope.  It took three hours to work my way down where she was located.  I kept running into other Moose on the way, that caused delays.  Most were young bulls and I only had a cow permit.  Amaising how hard those antlers are to see in low light, it was overcast all day.  A couple of times I started to look seriously at shooting an animal on my way down, but they all turned out to be either a bull, small cow, or the location was bad.  Finally got near the cow I had chosen from the top of the hill.  She had worked herself over to a group of spruces and was browsing along the steep riverbed bank.  I crawled under a large spruce tree and using a large limb as a rest took a shot at 120 yards.  The 180gr Nosler hit her low in the right shoulder.  She took one hopping step forward and then just stood there.  Her right leg was hanging usless.  She stood there for about thirty seconds, then her rear went over and she fell. 

I went down and started dressing her out.  Some people riding the trail saw me and came over to see what I was doing.  They took word back to the cabin for Norman and our young GI to bring the sleds out.  About an hour later, Norman showed up.  Norm was able to drive right up to the Moose, and as we cut her up, we put the pices into the sled without having to carry them any where.  The bullet had hit the leg bone and broken it, then went through the heart.  It also took out the both  lungs  The hole through the heart was big enough to stick my thumb through.  I spent the night at the cabin, got up the next morning went to the kill site.  Hoped to find some wolves in the area.  Ravens and a fox.  The young GI took the fox with my .223 handi. 
Where is old Joe when we really need him?  Alaska Independence    Calling Illegal Immigrants "Undocumented Aliens" is like calling Drug Dealers "Unlicensed Pharmacists"
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Offline quickdtoo

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #1 on: December 14, 2006, 01:58:11 PM »
Congrats Rog, another excitin hunt!! :)

thanks for sharing,

Tim
"Always do right, this will gratify some and astonish the rest" -  Mark Twain

Offline shaner

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #2 on: December 14, 2006, 02:02:52 PM »
sounds like a greattime !!

Offline nomosendero

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #3 on: December 14, 2006, 03:44:34 PM »
Great story, thanks! Those Nosler Part. just plain work.
You will not make peace with the Bluecoats, you are free to go.

Offline Mac11700

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #4 on: December 14, 2006, 06:55:57 PM »


Good story as usual Sourdough...Hope you get a few wolves on the gut pile...

Mac
You can cry me a river... but...build me a bridge and then get over it...

Offline EVOC ONE

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #5 on: December 15, 2006, 05:51:35 AM »
I do enjoy the stories about your hunts.

Its a shame about the mishap.  Fortunately no one was injured.

EVOC One

Offline longjohn

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #6 on: December 15, 2006, 07:47:39 AM »
 Reallly great story ,hope nothing was broken beyond repair, my dream is tour alaska with my wife in my restored apache, but hunt there thats icing on the cake...lj

Offline carp

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #7 on: December 15, 2006, 11:36:27 AM »
What a great story! Congratulations!

Offline Sourdough

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #8 on: December 16, 2006, 11:03:44 AM »
You know guys, every once in a while something happens that just sort of smacks you and says "This would be considered unbelivable by people that don't live here in Alaska" .  And to us that live here it is almost mundain.  Like last night, I let my beagles out when they did not come right back as usual, I put my coat on to go and check on them.  I found them about 300 yards out back trying to climb up into my son's old tree house.  I picked up one, and sent the other one to the house.  As I walked to the house I looked back when about 40 yards from the treehouse and a large Lynx jumped out of the treehouse.

 This Sept during our fall hunt while drifting Beaver Creek.  One night I was having a hard time sleeping, I got up and set up one of the camp chairs.  I put my feet up on a deadfall, leaned back and relaxed and fell asleep.  Suddenly something bumped the bottom of the chair, got my attention.  Here I was sitting with my feet up, something unseen around the bottom of the chair, I could see something dark but it was too dark there under the trees to tell what it was.  Scared the heck out of me.  The chair was sitting in the path coming up from the river.  I managed to tipp the chair over backwards, throwing me into the small willows off the trail.  What ever it was took off heading for the river.  I grabbed my rifle that was leaning on the log I had my feet on and looked towards the river.  It was a big Beaver.  But you know having just been rudely awakened, I had no idea what it was bumping that chair.

 Later in October, I went for a ride on my fourwheeler to an area I had never checked out before.  Around noon I saw some sheep on the side of a mountain.  I got off the fourwheeler and walked about 100 yards to a good spot to lie down and watch the sheep.  I watched the sheep, some Caribou, and took a short nap.  Afterabout two hours I got up and started walking back to my machine, suddenly a BIG BULL MOOSE jumped up, looked at me snorted, shook his head at me, stamped the ground a couple of times and then lucky for me walked away.  He had came in after I had started watching the sheep, and lying down in the brush he was well hidden.

 Then while we were on our last hunt, one of my partners was sleeping on the bottom bunk at the cabin.  About an hour after we had gone to bed, suddenly he screamed, rolled off the bunk onto the floor, screaming all the while as he climbed out of the end of his sleeping bag.  It was funny, and serious at the same time, to see a grown man screaming and tearing his sleeping bag apart trying to get out.  A tiny Vole had run down into the bag as he slept.  He was awakened with something crawling around inside the bag with him.  That was more than he could handle, no way he was going to sleep on that bunk again.  I've had them run across me as I slept in the same bunk at night, but luckily never go into my bag.  He spent the rest of the night feeding the fire and sitting by the stove.

 One of the miners I know burns all his trash in a fifty-five gallon drum.  That way there is nothing left to draw in bears to his camp.  The drum is 300 yards from camp and across the creek.  I go over during the spring and sit on the front porch and watch the bears come to the drum.  There is nothing left, due to the miner pouring fuel into the drum to assure a complete burn.  But the smells are still there.  That is enough to draw the bears to the drum.  With 20 to 22 hours of daylite that is enough to keep someone entertained all day.

Ran into Johnny McCarty yesterday at the gym, he's a minister at one of the local churches here in North Pole.  He looks pretty good, I should say normal.  You would never know to look at him that four years ago he was badly mauled by a Grizzly.  Tore up pretty bad, almost died.  If I did not know about it I would never see the scares, or know he had almost been killed.

 That's our way of life here, just part of our everyday routine.
Where is old Joe when we really need him?  Alaska Independence    Calling Illegal Immigrants "Undocumented Aliens" is like calling Drug Dealers "Unlicensed Pharmacists"
What Is A Veteran?
A 'Veteran' -- whether active duty, discharged, retired, or reserve -- is someone who, at one point in his life, wrote a blank check made payable to 'The United States of America,' for an amount of 'up to, and including his life.' That is honor, and there are way too many people in this country today who no longer understand that fact.

Offline Markus

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #9 on: December 16, 2006, 04:01:05 PM »
If I didn't have a large chunk of paid for real estate with a new home being built on it I swear I think I'd move to Alaska.
PROUD REDNECK CONSERVATIVE

I'd much rather be remembered for being a great shot than having the most expensive gun

Offline handirifle

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #10 on: December 16, 2006, 05:42:06 PM »
Must be nice, is all I can say.  You get to live the dream!

Am planning in the fall of '09, hopefully to come up there moose hunting.  A fellow I work with has lived there for the last 20years and we both retire in Jan of '09.  He says he'll take me up there.  It's the main reason (well sort of) I converted my Savage 30-06 to a 338-06.

He lived (lives actually, still has his house there) north of Achorage, cannot remember the town.  Where abouts are you.  His last name is Foster.
God, Family, and guns, in that order!

Offline EVOC ONE

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #11 on: December 17, 2006, 02:05:11 AM »
My father spent his military hitch stationed in Anchorage in the mid-late '50.  He was there when Alaska became a state. My grandfather finished his committment in Fairbanks, after returnuing from WWII. My father recently gave me many photos he took while up there.  An avid hunter, he met and became friends with a miner who lived in a cabin out in the wilderness.  A few of the pictures are of he and the miner mining for gold.  He said they never produced much more than dust, but the experiances of staying out there were great.  While in Alaska, he bought a Win Mod 70 in .338 and Ruger Standard Auto and Single-Six.  He shot a Moose and Elk with the .338, but sold it before he came home.  He did keep the Ruger's, however. The photos he gave me are fantastic and really depict Alaska at that time as a frontier. Alaska must truly be one unique place. 

Thanks

Joe

Offline James B

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #12 on: December 17, 2006, 01:32:45 PM »
good job.                 
shot placement is everything.

Offline Sourdough

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #13 on: December 17, 2006, 02:18:15 PM »
handirifle:  The biggest town North of Anchorage is Wasillia, two others are Palmer, and Houston.  It's 380 miles from Anchorage to Fairbanks, then another 20 miles out to North Pole where I live.  By all means if you get the opertunity to come to Alaska come.  The fishing and Hunting is the best.  You just have to have someone that knows where the game is and the capability to get there.  That usually means a plane or boat.
Where is old Joe when we really need him?  Alaska Independence    Calling Illegal Immigrants "Undocumented Aliens" is like calling Drug Dealers "Unlicensed Pharmacists"
What Is A Veteran?
A 'Veteran' -- whether active duty, discharged, retired, or reserve -- is someone who, at one point in his life, wrote a blank check made payable to 'The United States of America,' for an amount of 'up to, and including his life.' That is honor, and there are way too many people in this country today who no longer understand that fact.

Offline MSP Ret

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Re: 30-06 Handi Did It Again
« Reply #14 on: December 17, 2006, 02:33:55 PM »
Great stories and a great time reading them Sourdiough, as usual. I enjoy Northern Maine but it seems to pale in comparison to Alaska. Perhaps someday I will make it up north. Thanks for the stories and the dreams.
I'm telling you buddy, you should publish a compilation of your short stories and anicdotes, from the proceeds you can get you gun and snowsled fixed, and perhaps buy a couple hundred acres and build a nice big camp where we all (at least me ;D) could come and visit....<><.... :)
"Giving up your gun to someone else on demand is called surrender. It means that you have given up your ability to protect yourself to a power that is greater than you." - David Yeagley