Western Hunting Journal, Vol. 1, Issue 3 whj013_final | Page 28

READER STORY Jason Inman with is Rocky Mountain goat, which scored 51 4/8 and is tied for the 9th largest goat in the state of Oregon. Lightning Strikes Twice T Oregon’s Jason Inman draws two “once in a lifetime” tags in same season and fills both. o call it a stroke of good luck would be a gross understatement. Maybe a double or triple dose of good luck is more appropriate, but even then, that doesn’t do justice when you hear that Jason Inman was drawn for not one, but two “once in a lifetime hunts” for the 2015 hunting season in Oregon. The Mulino, Oregon resident drew a Rocky Mountain goat tag, and a bighorn sheep tag two seasons ago and filled both with two impressive animals. Inman, who sent in photos for the Bone Yard Photo Contest, graces the cover of this issue with his Rocky Mountain goat. When we reached out to him to ask permission to use his photo on the cover, that’s when we learned he struck lightning in a bottle twice that year. Inman, 38, drew the Elkhorn No. 3 Rocky Mountain goat tag, and the Aldrich No. 1 bighorn sheep tag, defying odds that are too astronomical to comprehend. It has happened only one time before. In Oregon both bighorn sheep and mountain goat hunts are random draws. Preference points 26 WESTERN HUNTING JOURNAL do not apply and once a hunter is drawn for these highly coveted tags they are no longer eligible to apply. “Honestly, with both tags it didn’t real- ly set in until I went to the sheep orienta- tion meeting,” Inman recalls, referring to the ODFW’s one-day seminar for goat and sheep tag recipients. “That’s when it started to sink in. But I suspect it’s like winning the lottery. It doesn’t really set in until the cash is in your hand.” Speaking of the lottery, when asked if he bought tickets that day he laughed. “That was the number one question people asked when I told them. I didn’t, but probably should’ve.” Following the orientation meeting held in July, Inman set up a game plan that in- volved weeks of scouting for both hunts. His first order of business was scouting for his sheep hunt, which took place in August. The Aldrich hunt falls within the Mur- derer’s Creek Unit, and is concentrated in the Aldrich Mountains, located on the breaks of the John Day River. There are very few roads and the terrain is steep and rug- ged. It is anything but a walk in the park. “Aldrich has produced some good rams over the years, but it’s not a Booner unit. I looked at the rams that were killed in that unit and there were a lot of 140s and 150s,” he says. “That is what made me nervous. If I could help it, I didn’t want to shoot a 140 ram.” Over seven days of scouting, Inman and his hunt party saw several good rams, and one in particular that caught their at- tention. They figured it to be in the 160- to 170-class. Throwing a wrinkle in their plans, several wild fires in the area threatened to postpone his hunt. “That was a little un- nerving,” he recalls. Inman and his hunt party arrived the Wednesday before the season began and they had to coordinate their scouting trips with fire crews, each time leaving their keys with the fire fighters should their vehicles need to be evacuated quickly. Fortunately, the state opened the area on Friday allowing Inman and his crew to find the one ram they spotted earlier in the summer. That evening they watched him