Check out these brand new mule deer fawns birthed in our blogger's back yard.
We'd been eyeing it on our maps for years. An unnamed trout lake nestled deep in the peaks of Colorado's rugged Gore Range. It looked like nobody would ever hike in there to fish, but we'd done our research, and knew that the Department of Fish and Wildlife had once stocked it with cutthroat trout. It took the four of us (me and my friends Jeff Rogers, Charlie Bloch, and Ben May) years to coordinate our schedules, but we finally set a date: Labor Day weekend, 2006. Boy was it worth it. Here's the story of our trip in pictures. Photos and text by Tim Romano
The Gear Hunting mule deer out west requires a vastly different strategy than what I'm used to in the east. It's all about glassing the sage brush and oak thickets, stalking to a setup that will offer you a shot, and then taking that shot -- at distances that would make most eastern hunters cringe. This isn't a 50-yard game played in the woods, 150 to 300 yard shots are the rule. To make these long shots we were using Browning .270 WSM bolt-action rifles with Dura-Touch armor-coated stocks, shooting Winchester Supreme XP3 ammo with 130-grain bullets, and glassing with Swarovski optics. All proved extremely satisfactory. To book a hunt contact Elkhorn Outfitters at 970-824-7392; elkhornoutfitters.com. --JC
This 33-inch long, 17-pound Snake River cutthroat has been confirmed as the new Colorado state record.