We were stoked! This season was going really well. We'd been in the field five days and treed a lion on three of them! That's almost as good a record as a mountain lion has on the days it hunts.
We left camp about a half hour before dawn and met one of the outfitters we'd worked with before who was nicknamed Bobcat and his friend. Bobcat and his friend took one truck and Chuck, Gray and I took another. We split up near Long Gulch. Bobcat found a large track that wasn't very fresh and so drove up the power line road to see if they could find a fresher one, possibly where he had crossed the road further up. No such luck so they returned to the original one and turned Bobcat's hounds loose on it then radioed us. We later discovered they had missed a fresher track in a bunch of deer tracks. It would have saved us a lot of effort if they had found it. As it was they muddled around trying to get the track sorted out.
When Gray, Chuck and I arrived we could hear the hounds trailing and decided to drive further up the road. We found what we thought was the same track as it continued north. We turned Chuck's three hounds loose and followed them on foot. We traveled north most of the day until we were almost across from Nipple Mountain when the track turned west. Sometime during the chase Bobcat's hounds had joined Chuck's.
Bobcat and his friend found us and we continued following the hounds until dark. It sounded like the hounds had treed the lion in some very rough country nearby but I probably wouldn't be able to see the lion well enough the dart him. We decided to leave them all doing their thing and come back in the morning. Bobcat's friend wasn't used to such exertion and was feeling nauseous so Gray and I stayed with him next to the road while Chuck and Bobcat hiked down to a nearby ranch. The rancher drove them back to their trucks then they came and got us.
The next morning we drove as close as we could to where we had heard the hounds barking "treed" and set out. We couldn't hear them yet so we climbed a high ridge hoping the sound would travel to us. It was steep and rocky but when we got to the top a faint sound could almost be imagined. We clamored over the next ridge and could definitely hear the occasional bark. It was not the constant baying of excited hounds looking the lion in the eye but it was enough for us to locate them.
What a sight we saw! Most of the six hounds were exhausted but happy to see us. They immediately perked up and started baying albeit hoarsely again. The lion looked so peaceful sleeping in the tree. He looked big so I named him Fat Albert. We tied up the hounds then I took careful aim and darted him in the flank. What a wake up call! He snarled, checked out the scene and bailed out of the tree. We were afraid of a repeat with the faulty dart with Mickey Mouse so Chuck put Pup on a leash and started following him immediately. We didn't need to worry. Fat Albert succumbed to the drug a short distance down the hill.
Bobcat took his hounds back to the truck while Gray, Chuck and I processed Fat Albert. All went smoothly. When he started to rouse we left him. On the trail back we met an excited Bobcat sans hounds. In the two hours we had been working with Fat Albert another mountain lion had passed behind the truck! Bobcat had turned his revived hounds loose on the track and come to get us.
A depressing sight met us when we arrived back at the truck. Bobcat had started his hounds off in the right direction but at some point the lion must have treed unbeknownst to the hounds. They were so excited because the track was so fresh that when they didn't find any more tracks going in the direction they were headed they turned around and followed the back track which smelled just as good. Bobcat threw his hat on the ground in disgust.
What happened next was like slapstick comedy!
We left camp about a half hour before dawn and met one of the outfitters we'd worked with before who was nicknamed Bobcat and his friend. Bobcat and his friend took one truck and Chuck, Gray and I took another. We split up near Long Gulch. Bobcat found a large track that wasn't very fresh and so drove up the power line road to see if they could find a fresher one, possibly where he had crossed the road further up. No such luck so they returned to the original one and turned Bobcat's hounds loose on it then radioed us. We later discovered they had missed a fresher track in a bunch of deer tracks. It would have saved us a lot of effort if they had found it. As it was they muddled around trying to get the track sorted out.
Nipple Mountain |
When Gray, Chuck and I arrived we could hear the hounds trailing and decided to drive further up the road. We found what we thought was the same track as it continued north. We turned Chuck's three hounds loose and followed them on foot. We traveled north most of the day until we were almost across from Nipple Mountain when the track turned west. Sometime during the chase Bobcat's hounds had joined Chuck's.
Bobcat and his friend found us and we continued following the hounds until dark. It sounded like the hounds had treed the lion in some very rough country nearby but I probably wouldn't be able to see the lion well enough the dart him. We decided to leave them all doing their thing and come back in the morning. Bobcat's friend wasn't used to such exertion and was feeling nauseous so Gray and I stayed with him next to the road while Chuck and Bobcat hiked down to a nearby ranch. The rancher drove them back to their trucks then they came and got us.
The next morning we drove as close as we could to where we had heard the hounds barking "treed" and set out. We couldn't hear them yet so we climbed a high ridge hoping the sound would travel to us. It was steep and rocky but when we got to the top a faint sound could almost be imagined. We clamored over the next ridge and could definitely hear the occasional bark. It was not the constant baying of excited hounds looking the lion in the eye but it was enough for us to locate them.
Asleep |
What a sight we saw! Most of the six hounds were exhausted but happy to see us. They immediately perked up and started baying albeit hoarsely again. The lion looked so peaceful sleeping in the tree. He looked big so I named him Fat Albert. We tied up the hounds then I took careful aim and darted him in the flank. What a wake up call! He snarled, checked out the scene and bailed out of the tree. We were afraid of a repeat with the faulty dart with Mickey Mouse so Chuck put Pup on a leash and started following him immediately. We didn't need to worry. Fat Albert succumbed to the drug a short distance down the hill.
Leaving the tree |
Fat Albert waking up |
A depressing sight met us when we arrived back at the truck. Bobcat had started his hounds off in the right direction but at some point the lion must have treed unbeknownst to the hounds. They were so excited because the track was so fresh that when they didn't find any more tracks going in the direction they were headed they turned around and followed the back track which smelled just as good. Bobcat threw his hat on the ground in disgust.
What happened next was like slapstick comedy!
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