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Upland Hunting in Snowshoes

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If it weren’t 5 degrees, this would be sand

Just a little report on the past couple of hunts, which I did in snowshoes because I didn’t feel post-holing was the way to go. Yes, we have that much snow.

Shallow snow on the road; deeper off-road.

Snowshoe Pros:

Me in the middle, after busting about 2.5 million birds from 80 yards away

Snowshoe Cons:

Chukar or Hun wing pattern from liftoff

I managed one Hun each day, and hiked between 2 and 2-1/2 miles each time. I enjoyed being out — stunning scenery, very quiet (aside from the crunching of each step), and the dogs had a blast. I saw lots of interesting wildlife, including a porcupine lodged in a bitterbrush (a first), bald eagles, an elk calf lounging around with a herd of cattle, about a million rooster pheasants (also lounging with the cows), and a peregrine falcon dive-bomb a covey of Huns along the road (less successful than I was). Clearly, I’m in denial that the season looks about over unless we get some sunshine and burn-off up in here. But that’s okay. It’s been a great season. Maybe we’ll get some days in January, but who knows. Here are some more images…

Porcupine in bitterbrush; it didn’t want to show its face, and I’m glad I was able to keep Peat from this thing.
Calf elk with cows.

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