Western Hunting Journal, Vol. 1, Issue 3 whj013_final | Page 65

A lone Rocky Mountain goat in the Eagle Cap Wilderness. raged in the Columbia Gorge, sending smoke in our direction creating beautiful sunrises and sunsets. Spirits and anticipation were high after a dinner of fried chicken and potato salad. Over dinner we discussed plans for the next day and what size billy Lonnie hoped to harvest. Dan and Lonnie had expressed that the goat should be just a good representative of what is available in the state. Wes and I knew that the unit held good goats and had seen some very big billies during our summer scouting trips. The next morning, we woke early, ate breakfast and started up Polaris Pass. This took about an hour hike to reach the pass. We worked our way up a shale rock ridge where we would start glassing the backside of Sentinel Peak’s sheer vertical slopes. This was going to be spot and stalk as there are very few other options mountain goat hunting. Finding a place did not take long and our po- sition had a great view of the slopes of Sentinel Peak. Joe made the first spot of two nice goats at 1,000 yards and we quickly set up a spotting scope to see if they were something to go after. They were bedded up against a rocky knife-ridge run- ning down from the peak. They were both good billy goats and both were shooters. Now we needed a plan to get to them. I hiked down to a bench on a finger ridge to get a better look at the side hill we would have to traverse. Joe came down first and he and I went over possible routes to get to a shooting spot within a reasonable distance. We had figured out a route that would keep us close to the same elevation as the goats. It was going to be a tough hike at best, across the very steep and loose shale slope, but there was no better way to get to them. We pointed out a likely shoot- ing spot to the group about 600 yards away and everyone agreed it was a reasonable plan. It would put us close enough for a good shot and for- tunately Lonnie had practiced shooting at greater distances during the summer. We all dropped off the bench and started side-hilling on the steep rocky slopes to- ward the goats. When possible we tried to stay on old game trails but, that was not possible the entire way. When we were about halfway to the shooting spot one of the goats got out of his bed, climbed up on the www.westernhuntingjournal.com 63