Western Hunting Journal, Vol. 1, Issue 3 whj013_final | Page 75

WHAT’S THE SCORE? Having perspective and knowledge helps alleviate some of the pressure of shooting an animal that scores high. By Chad Dotson I T HAD BEEN A VERY difficult hunt, to say the least. Myself and my hunting buddies were on an elk hunt in New Mexico and things were not going as planned. Not only were we not find- ing any bulls, we were having a very difficult time finding elk at all. We had hiked hard, glassed hard and even moved camp a few times, all to no avail. We listened to other groups of hunters with similar frustrations exclaim they had never seen the hunting in this area this tough. After a week of both mental and physical fatigue, I was able to connect on a 6-point on the final day of the hunt. It was the only bull seen the entire trip and I was extremely proud to place my tag on him. With packs fully loaded, we reached the bottom of the canyon and crossed the river just as darkness closed in. It was still several miles back to camp. I counted each step as we followed the dimly lit bobbing of our headlamps, hoping it would distract me from the arduous climb up the other side of the drainage. Finally around midnight, I staggered into the tent on wobbling legs. It was the hardest I have ever worked for an elk, or any animal for that matter. Sometime after the hunt an individual saw the bull hanging proudly in my shop and made note to ask me about him. “Where did that bull come from?” he asked first. “That bull came from New www.westernhuntingjournal.com 73