9/29/99
Weather: chance of showers. Lows in low 50's. Highs in the upper
60's. 1 ¾ inches of rain yesterday.
After 2 very rainy and foggy days we are going to make it into the Goat lake today. We were scheduled to fly yesterday with Taquan Air but it was a no fly day. We spent the morning putting the final touches on our gear for the hunt. After taking our gear to Taquan and doing a little last minute running around town we headed out in the skiff to get some fresh air and doing a little fishing and sightseeing (as we did on the eve of the 28th). The fish were playing hard to catch but the scenery was beautiful but wet. Yesterday we even got some sunset colors in the clouds. When we returned we had a message on the phone that we were scheduled to fly at 6:30 AM. And after coffee (Tang for Mike) we are on our way. The first Mt Goat hunt of the season is underway!
July 29, 1999
The alarm went off. Mike and I were up early. Taquan Air had rescheduled our flight after a no fly day yesterday due to low clouds and fog. We had taken most of our gear to the freight room yesterday. The sun was already up but we could see a large fog bank hanging in the east Tongass Straight as we drove down to the plane dock. We checked and weighed the rest of our gear. JJ was the first pilot to show up and was assigned to take us out. We said our good mornings. JJ warmed up the Beaver and we helped load our gear. We were in the air just before 6:30 am. JJ said it looked pretty iffy but we would give it a try. We viewed a lot of seiners hauling their nets as we flew southeast. There was fog and low clouds as we approached the Misty Fjords. We were surprised to see the little lake open and workable. We took a flight among the cloudy peaks we would be hunting. We spotted 8 or 10 Goats on the snowfield covered mountaintops. The landing was smooth on the glass like lake. We said our good-byes to JJ after unloading our gear on the beach. We packed our gear over to the base campsite and repacked our packs and hung the extra gear in the trees. Then the work started. After about 2 hrs of wet thick rainforest jungle we reached the lower Muskeg. Another hour and a half of hard hiking got us to the Camp II site. Fog moved in and out of the valley and we set up our tents and rain fly in a light drizzle. We settled in for a nap. As we were on fire wood detail we noticed the fog lifting and spots of blue sky. We glassed Nannies with Kids and 2 or 3 Billies, about 14 or so in all. After freeze-dried dinners and a dessert of Peaches & Cream Pie we called it a day.
7/30/99
We were up about 5 am and after breakfast of Scrambled Eggs &
Pork Sausage Patties (freeze dried) we packed up our packs for
a day hike up the West Ridge. The sun was coming over the East
Ridge and there was a thick valley fog hanging over the lower
rivers and bays. We let the brush dry out a little before starting
our climb. After a couple of hard hours we topped out on the lower
portion of the West Ridge. Looking across to the large mountain
in the west we could spot 9 Mt Goats moving around in the morning
sun. After a break we climbed up to the next level of shelves.
We hadn't spotted any Goats in our Valley yet. After a lunch break
we continued our climb. The valley fog burned off and the sun
got hot. We worked our way up to a very good overlook a pass.
We started to continue our climb to the top when we spotted a
Goat feeding its way around the upper part of the pass. We glassed
as it thrashed some bushes with its horns and moved up on a shelf
and dug a bed out. The bugs were giving it a hard time. It couldn't
stay in one position for very long. The bugs were also giving
us a hard time. We watched for awhile and eased our way back down
out of sight. We started sighting Goats over on the East Ridge
among the snowfields and high mountain meadows. As we were working
our way back down another Goat came across the top just above
us. We glassed it for a little while and headed on back to Camp
II. We had seen around 20 Mt Goats for the day. After dinner and
dessert we turned in.
7/31/99
After an oatmeal breakfast we packed 1 tent and gear for a few
days. We headed back up the west ridge. As the morning winds died
down the bugs came out with a vengeance. It was going to be a
hot day. After a couple hours of hard hiking we topped out on
the West Ridge. We set up the tent and rested and waited for it
to cool off a little. After having a freeze dried dinner we stashed
a few things in the tent and continued to the lower top shelves
to set up a bivi-camp. We crawled into our bug netted bivi-sacs
to escape the attacking bug swarms and drifted off to sleep.
8/1/99
Mike was up before me. A pair of Ptarmigan landed on our sleeping
bags and really carried on. I rolled over and went back to sleep.
After breakfast we headed up the ridge with excitement on this
opening day of Mt Goat season. The wind was kicking it up out
of the east keeping the bugs down. We eased up to the pass overlook
into a stiff wind. A Goat bedded 30 yards away. We dropped back
and slowly crawled over the top. A young Billy jumped up and bailed
off the top. Looking over the edge we sighted a Nanny and 2 Kids
at 15 yards. We looked and waited but nothing was right there.
We started climbing up over the top. As we watched our backtrail
we noticed another young Goat walking out from the sheer East
Side and then a large one. We watched the smaller of the two while
the big one eased out of site to the sheer West Side. We played
the waiting game. No more there. We eased up to the top. There
were 5 Goats just coming over the top. We watched as the 3 Nannies
and 2 Kids fed and bedded and did their Goat things at about 100
yards. We worked our way on up over the top. Sighting more goats
down ridge. I tried to find a way onto the lower North shelves.
No good; too shear. We watched a nice Billy as he started in our
direction. We needed more supplies so I left Mike on top and headed
for the Lake Base Camp. We scheduled a radio contact for 9pm.
At 9pm we were talking. I could tell by Mike's voice that he was
very excited. I can't remember his exact words but there was good
news and bad news. Good news was he saw the Billy come up and
over the top. Bad news was a very big Brown Bear had sneaked up
on him. After I left him on top he was waiting and watching the
Billy move up toward the top. He heard footsteps in the snowfield
just above him, hoping it was I coming back for some reason, wrong.
He new it was a bear when he heard it breathing, testing the wind
to get a make on Mike! Mike didn't look around. But saw the lower
Goats bail off the top! After a little while Mike made it for
bivi-camp. As he crossed the snowfield he saw fresh tracks of
a large Brown Bear (about the size of an 8x11 sheet of paper).
The Brownie had tracked him across the snowfield. He stopped to
watch his back trail to make sure the Bruin wasn't on him. A Nanny
and the Billy crossed the top right where he was! Mike had a restless
night.
8/2/99
I started up the trail before 7am with the resupply load. We made
contact at 8am as we had arranged. Mike was back on top spotting
Goats but had also noticed some fresh Brownie tracks in the snow
banks. It made him nervous. He decided to move back down the ridge
closer to bivi-camp. We had planned to meet at the bivi-camp at
around noon or so. After I made the climb and got some rest we
headed up on top on this yet another bug infested very hot day.
We made our way up toward the top stopping at the pass overlook
for a bit. Just above that on the first snow bank we cut a lone
goat track. Looking over the edge Mike spotted a goat laying about
30 feet away. We moved up the ridge for a better vantagepoint.
We made it to be a lone Nanny. Good size with good horn length.
She got up and headed in our direction. She bedded down just below
us at about 40 feet. Not a good shot. She was just above a snow
bank that dropped probably 1000 feet straight down. As she got
up and moved up toward the pass we moved into position and waited.
She didn't show. We waited. Then we split up and eased out looking
for her. I spotted her moving down the sheer West Side. She had
changed her mind and headed down the mountain for the afternoon.
We worked our way back to the pass overlook again. After spending
awhile-glassing Goats across the canyon we headed back up to the
top again. On the same snowfield we cut fresh tracks of 5 Goats.
Easing over the North ridge 1 very large Nanny was bedded down
just below about 25 yards. No shot again. She was bedded on the
snow just above a vertical drop off. We watched as she got up
and walked down the vertical icefield as if were level ground.
We worked our way back toward the bivi-camp. I had noticed earlier
that the big Brown Bear track was on Mike's track headed down
toward the bivi-camp. They were almost melted away by the warm
sun so the big boy did track Mike yesterday after all. After dinner
we settled in for another uneasy night with the big Brownie in
the area.
8/3/99
Mike was up before 4:30 glassing for Goats. He spotted one feeding
in the pass and headed up there. I rolled over for a little more
rest being tired from my resupply hike yesterday. I got up shortly
and caught up with Mike at the pass overlook. It was another hot
day in the making but there were high clouds drifting in from
the Southeast horizon. There was thick ocean fog hanging on the
outside bays. Mike spotted a medium sized Goat feeding on the
upper part of the pass on our side of things. We watched as it
moved in and out of sight. Then it appeared to be moving on up
to the top. Mike wanted to try for it and we put the move on.
As we neared the top we split up. I eased over to the edge where
we last sighted it and Mike moved slowly up the top. I looked
up just to see Mike bringing his rifle up to his shoulder. Mike
decided to take the shot on the medium Nanny. The Remington Model
700 in 300 Ultra Mag (180-grain Nosler) did the job. It was a
clean quick kill at less than 50 yards. It came to rest against
a rock in a perfect location with sheer icefield drop offs on
each side. After the photo session we set in to work on it. Mike
caped it out while I boned out the meat. Mike is a taxidermist
and is very handy with a knife. We were back at bivi-camp and
headed down the mountain by about 10:30 am after a call to Taquan
Air confirming our flight for tomorrow. We stopped at the west
ridge camp for a rest and change of socks. There was thunder in
the East. We packed it up and headed for Camp II. We took another
rest and packed it up and headed for the Lake Base Camp with very
heavy loads. We made it in after 5:30 pm; very tired. A refreshing
bath in the lake was refreshing. We turned in early after dinner
and dessert and slept sound.
8/4/99
After sleeping in to 7:30 am or so we got up and had breakfast.
It was a partly cloudy warm humid morning with a light shower
drifting through. As Mike worked on the cape'skin (fleshing, turning
the lips, splitting the lips) I broke camp and started packing
it over to the beach for our 2 pm scheduled flight back to town.
Sal showed up in a Beaver just before 2 pm. After quickly loading
the plane we were making our take off. Sal aborted the first try.
It was to hot and the plane was just too doggy for him. We unloaded
some gear and Mike stayed on the lake beach while Sal flew to
the saltwater and dropped me off with a little gear on a rock.
Shortly he was back with Mike and we were on our way to Ketchikan.
After loading up our gear in the Muskeg Mobile we headed for the
US Customs Office for the paper work so Mike could transport his
Goat and meat through Canada on his drive back to Beaverton Oregon
where he will be coaching high school varsity football at Southridge
High.
Mike spent the next 2 days resting and fishing before catching
the ferry to Prince Rupert. The Mt Goat will make a beautiful
half wall mount which Mike will do himself and he took home a
good load of Mt Goat meat.