by Boone
Davy Crockett and Bear | Acrylic
by Boone and Crockett Club Member Bob Kuhn
COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WILDLIFE ART, JACKSON, WYOMING
Legendary Hunts
SHORT STORIES FROM THE
BOONE AND CROCKETT AWARDS
Presented by the Boone and Crockett Club Publications Committee
Chairman – Mark B. Steffen
Compiled by the following individuals:
KEITH BALFOURD
MARK O. BARA
GEORGE A. BETTAS
ELDON L. “BUCK” BUCKNER
RICHARD T. HALE
ROBERT H. HANSON
RYAN HATFIELD
JULIE T. HOUK
MARIE PAVLIK
REMO PIZZAGALLI
JACK RENEAU
PAUL D. WEBSTER
Published by the Boone and Crockett Club
Missoula, Montana – 2006
LEGENDARY HUNTS
Short Stories from the Boone and Crockett Awards
Trade Edition 2006
eBook Edition 2011
Copyright © 2006 by the Boone and Crockett Club.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Boone and Crockett Club.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2006929871
Print ISBN Number: 978-0-940864-54-2
eBook ISBN Number: 978-0-940864-76-4
Published September 2006
Published in the United States of America
by the
Boone and Crockett Club
250 Station Drive
Missoula, MT 59801
406/542-1888
406/542-0784 (fax)
www.booneandcrockettclub.com
THE MISSION
of the Boone and Crockett Club
It is the policy of the Boone and Crockett Club to promote the guardianship and provident management of big game and associated wildlife in North America and to maintain the highest standards of fair chase and sportsmanship in all aspects of big game hunting, in order that this resource of all the people may survive and prosper in its natural habitats. Consistent with this objective, the Club supports the use and enjoyment of our wildlife heritage to the fullest extent by this and future generations of mankind.
Executive Committee
Boone and Crockett Club
Table of Contents
Legendary Hunts
Short Stories from the Boone and Crockett Awards Programs
Introduction BY ROBERT H. HANSON
Entering Your Trophy BY JACK RENEAU
Bears & Cougar
LEAN, RAW-BONED FIGHTER | BY FRED PETERS
TERRIFIED | BY PETER C. KNAGGE
WORLD’S RECORD GRIZZLY | BY ROGER J. PENTECOST
PERFECT HUNT| BY JON D. SEIFERT
DARK TIMBER GRIZZLY | BY EUGENE C. WILLIAMS
THE GRANNY AND ANDY SHOW | BY CINDY L. RHODES
MONARCH OF DEADMAN BAY II | BY ROBERT M. ORTIZ
POLAR BEAR NUMBER 9 | BY ROBERT B. NANCARROW
A LONG 27 YEARS | BY GENE R. ALFORD
DETERMINED | BY JERRY J. JAMES
LOCK TAIL | BY BRIAN K. WILLIAMS
Elk & Deer
TEN DAYS AMONG THE ELK | BY WILLIAM D. DEWEESE
CAT AND MOUSE | BY RONALD N. FRANKLIN
MONTANA MEGA BULL | BY CHUCK ADAMS
TEARING UP THE BRUSH | BY KENNETH R. ADAMSON
A HUNTING TRADITION | BY CHARLES J. HOGELAND
IVORY TOOTH BUCK | WRITTEN BY JEROME E. ARLEDGE
KAIBAB NORTH | BY GILBERT T. ADAMS, JR.
THE KING | BY LESTER H. Miller
THE FUN IS OVER | BY DONALD E. THOMPSON
DEER DIARY | BY DON MCGARVEY
LUCKY | WRITTEN BY LES DAVENPORT
END OF AN ERA | BY ROBERT G. MCDONALD
A MEMORY TO BE KEPT FOREVER | BY MICHAEL E. DUPERRET
Moose & Caribou
IN THE LAND OF GIANTS | BY M. NATHAN SABO
THE BEST PRESENT | WRITTEN BY DOUG JOHNSON
YOU’VE BEEN DRAWN! | BY PATRICIA A. WOOD
QUEST FOR THE GIANT MOOSE | BY MARY A. ISBELL
IF YOU HAVE TO LOOK TWICE | BY ROGER HEDGECOCK
INUIT CULTURE | BY KENDALL J. BAUER
Horned Game
THE LONGEST NIGHT | BY MICHAEL J. O’HACO, JR.
BIG BULLETS DO BIG WORK | BY HOLLAND D. BUTLER
MY LAST BULL | BY DUANE R. RICHARDSON
GOAT-HUNTING BUG | BY DAVID K. MUELLER
JUST SHOOT IT! | BY GERNOT WOBER
OUR WAY OR NO WAY | BY M.R. JAMES
TWENTY-TWO YEARS LATER | BY JAMES R. WEATHERLY
LADY’S DAY IN THE HIGH COUNTRY | BY MAVIS M. LORENZ
BIGHORN VACATION | BY ARMAND H. JOHNSON
OLD FLARE | BY LESTER A. KISH
DESERT OASIS | BY ARTHUR R. DUBS
PLAY HOOKY RAM | BY JAMES M. PEEK
Fair Chase and Conservation By KEITH BALFOURD
Photo from B&C Archives
Philip L. Wright served as the Records Committee Chairman from 1978 through 1986. Wright is pictured above at the 18th Big Game Awards Program with the well-known Chadwick ram – considered by some the greatest trophy ever taken by a modern-day hunter.
Introduction
By Robert H. Hanson
Boone and Crockett Club Records Keeping
BIG GAME RECORDS-KEEPING HAS ALWAYS BEEN AN INTEGRAL PART OF THE BOONE AND CROCKETT CLUB’S ACTIVITIES SINCE IT WAS FOUNDED IN 1887, BUT METHODS OF MEASUREMENT, RECOGNITION PROGRAMS, AND OTHER ACTIVITIES HAVE CONTINUED TO EVOLVE OVER THE YEARS. IN 1902, THE CLUB’S EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE ASSIGNED THEODORE ROOSEVELT, CASPAR WHITNEY, AND ARCHIBALD ROGERS TO A SUBCOMMITTEE THAT WAS CHARGED WITH THE RESPONSIBILITY OF DEVISING A SCORING SYSTEM TO RECORD BIOLOGICAL AND SCIENTIFIC DATA ON WHAT WERE THEN THOUGHT TO BE THE VANISHING BIG GAME SPECIES OF NORTH AMERICA. LITTLE IS KNOWN TODAY ABOUT THE FRUITS OF THEIR LABORS, AS NO WRITTEN RECORD OF THE WORKINGS OF THIS GROUP HAS EVER BEEN FOUND. IT IS ASSUMED, HOWEVER, THAT THIS SUBCOMMITTEE CONTRIBUTED SIGNIFICANTLY TO THE SCORING CHARTS USED IN THE 1932 AND 1939 EDITIONS OF Records of North American Big Game.
The scoring systems used in those early days were rather primitive and uncomplicated by today’s standards. Most trophies were scored by one or two simple measurements, and then ranked by the length of the longer horn, antler, or tusk. The only method of measurement that remained substantially intact, after the current system was adopted in 1950, was the one used to score the skulls of bears and cats. Otherwise, the methods employed for scoring all of the other categories were significantly changed.
Club members quickly realized that the scoring system used for the first two records books was inadequate. In fact, Grancel Fitz wrote a chapter in the 1939 book in which he urged that a more equitable system should be employed for the measuring and scoring of native North American big game. However, his recommendations were tabled until after World War II, largely because numerous Club members were involved in serving their country, in both military and civilian capacities.
Immediately after the War, Club members gathered with the intention of reinvigorating the Club’s records-keeping activities. One of the first initiatives was the establishment, in 1947, of a program then called a “Competition,” – designed to recognize the most outstanding trophies entered in a given calendar year. While the Club continued to work on devising a more equitable scoring system, the finest trophies in each category were invited to the first “Competition,” held at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where they were
certified by a Judges’ Panel for Awards and Certificates.
The 1950, 1951, and 1952 Competitions were the first to employ the Club’s copyrighted scoring system that was adopted in 1950. That system remains the universally recognized system for scoring native North American big game, with its emphasis on both symmetry and mass. With only periodic refinements and “tweaking,” that system has endured to this day. More importantly, rather than recording data for animals that were originally thought to be on the verge of extinction, the Club’s records-keeping activities now record the successes of conservation efforts and professional game management throughout North America.
The Competitions, previously held annually, were held on a biennial basis, beginning with the 6th Competition, which covered the years 1953 and 1954, and continued on this basis through the 13th Competition (1967-1968). The subsequent 14th Competition was the first trophy recognition program that became a triennial event, and also was the last to be referred to as a “Competition.” Club members were of the opinion that it was inappropriate to refer to its recognition programs as “competitions,” when the intent of such programs was to celebrate the outstanding trophies that were the by-products of sound conservation and game management practices. Accordingly, the “Competitions” became a part of history, to be replaced by “Awards Programs,” to better reflect their purpose.
At the close of each Competition/Awards Program, the Club has historically published a poster or photo brochure which features each trophy sent to be rescored by the Judges’ Panel. The so-called Place Award accorded to each trophy is mentioned, while the trophy winning the First Place Award is featured with a photograph. These photo brochures continue to this day, and are distributed at the Awards Banquet for each of the triennial Awards Programs. Until 1983 these brochures were the only written and pictorial publications of the recognitions programs that had taken place over the years. That would change a year later.
In 1984 the Boone and Crockett Club published a book titled Boone and Crockett Club’s 18th Big Game Awards. It was a modest beginning for what has become a hugely successful undertaking. The intent of such a publication was to provide a listing of big game trophies accepted into the Club’s Awards Program for a specific three-year period – in this case the years 1980 through 1982. No longer would those with accepted trophies have to wait until the next edition of the “all-time” record book (published on a six-year cycle) to see their names in print. Moreover, every recipient of a Place Award, Honorable Mention, or Certificate of Merit at the Awards Program Banquet was invited to submit a short story relating the details of his or her successful hunt. Some 909 trophies were accepted as part of the 18th Awards Program, and 68 Place Awards, Honorable Mentions, or Certificates of Merit were presented at the Awards Program Banquet, held in Dallas, on July 30, 1983. Many outstanding stories appeared in Boone and Crockett Club’s 18th Big Game Awards, several of which appear in this anthology.
It is the intent of this anthology both to include outstanding stories that have appeared in the eight Awards books that have been published to date, and also to chronicle the success of the Awards Program itself over the years since the 18th Awards book appeared in print. The stories themselves, represent the “best of the best,” selected for the ways in which the successful hunters captured the essence of their hunting experiences, including their tenacity, their ethics, and their respect for the outstanding trophies they harvested. They are substantially unedited, in order to preserve the original story-telling of the authors, most of whom were more comfortable with a rifle or a bow than with a word processor. It is hoped that the reader will vicariously share with these authors the emotions felt by all hunters – the vagaries of weather, the torment of lung-searing climbs, the hours and days of frustration and disappointment, but ultimately the moment of joy and exhilaration accompanying the taking of an outstanding trophy.
But first, it is appropriate to detail the evolution and the growth of the Awards Program since the publication of the Boone and Crockett Club’s 18th Big Game Awards book in 1984. In the early 1980s the Boone and Crockett Club was housed in modest quarters in Dumfries, Virginia, and had only a very small staff to support the operations of the Club.
Buoyed by the success of the 18th Awards publication, a major decision was made, effective with the 19th Awards Entry Period, covering the years 1983 to 1985. Henceforth, for the Awards Program only, lower minimum scores would be established for most of the big game species recognized by the Club. It was hoped that the establishment of these minimums would result in a greater number of entries, from those who would be able to see their names in print, for one time only, in the next Awards Program publication. More importantly, the Club felt that the submission of more entries would create a larger data base from which to assess game populations throughout North America, both in terms of quantity and quality. Effective with the 19th Awards Program, the Club added two more species to those it recognized – the Sitka blacktail deer and the Central Canada barren ground caribou. Partially because of these changes, some 1,383 entries were accepted for the 19th Awards Program, and 87 awards were presented at the Awards Program Banquet in Las Vegas – substantial percentage increases over previous Awards Entry Periods. Amazingly, the number of accepted trophies for the 20th Awards Entry Period increased once again by over 50%, to a total of 2,079.
In the early 1990s the Club moved its operations to the Old Milwaukee Depot, in Missoula, Montana, and occupies those facilities to this day. During the decade of the 90s, and into the early part of the 21st Century, the scope and outreach of the Club continued to expand, and the Records Program continued to evolve. New categories continued to be recognized, including non-typical American elk, tule elk, non-typical Columbia blacktail deer and non-typical Sitka blacktail deer. In connection with each Awards Entry Period, the Club continued to invite outstanding trophies and potential World’s Records to be sent to the site of the Awards functions for judging by panels of veteran Official Measurers. Until the turn of the century, the rules were fairly simple and rigid – the scores of the Judges Panel, up or down, were final, and a new World’s Record could be determined only by a duly appointed panel.
Photo from B&C Archives
Jack Reneau, pictured here at the 18th Awards Program, has been the Director of Big Game Records for the Boone and Crockett Club since 1983. Prior to that he handled the day-to-day operations for the Records Program for the NRA when they cosponsored the program with Boone and Crockett.
For as long as the Club’s present scoring system has been in place, there was a mandate that trophies could not be scored until they had air dried at normal atmospheric temperatures for 60 days. It was felt that during such a period any normal “shrinkage” would have run its course. Unfortunately, it was noted that many outstanding trophies were not being sent for panel judging, particularly those taken early in each Awards Entry Period. The Club surmised, correctly, that many trophy owners were fearful of their entry scores being reduced by the Judges Panel because of subsequent and additional shrinkage. Accordingly, under the leadership of C. Randall Byers, Chairman of the Records of North American Big Game Committee, substantial data was assembled, and the conclusion was reached that there was indeed additional shrinkage taking place after the original 60-day “drying period.” As a consequence, and after considerable study and deliberation, so-called “shrinkage allowances” were developed, effective with trophies entered in connection with the 22nd Awards Entry Period, and Judges Panel are now permitted to accept an original entry score if they produce a lower measurement that falls within the bounds of the shrinkage factor. Initially, this procedure was not utilized with respect to potential World’s Records, but subsequent discussion and deliberation accorded such treatment to those trophies, effective with the 25th Awards Program. Additionally, it was felt that a potential World’s Record trophy should not have to wait until a triennial Judges Panel certified it as such, and on August 15, 2001, the Club assembled the first eve
r Special Judges Panel of four veteran measurers, who certified two new World’s Records, at an afternoon session in Missoula. A subsequent Special Judges Panel was convened on May 24, 2003, to verify the World’s Record status of two other trophies.
Finally, one of the enduring roles of the Judges Panel is its ability to determine that a specific trophy should receive the Sagamore Hill Award – the highest award that the Club can bestow. The Sagamore Hill Medal is given by the Roosevelt family, in memory of Theodore Roosevelt (Founder and first President of the Boone and Crockett Club), Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., and Kermit Roosevelt. It was created in 1948, and as noted, may be awarded by the Big Game Final Awards Judges Panel, if in their opinion there is an outstanding trophy worthy of great distinction. Only one may be given in any Big Game Awards Program. A special Sagamore Hill Award may also be presented by the Club’s Executive Committee for distinguished devotion to the objectives of the Club, and since its inception there have been seven recipients of special awards. Since the publishing of the 18th Awards Program book in 1984, four trophy hunters have been recipients of this prestigious award – Michael J. O’Haco, in 1986, for his outstanding pronghorn; Gene C. Alford, in 1989, for his cougar; Charles E. Erickson, Jr., in 1992, for his non-typical Coues’ whitetail deer; and Gernot Wober, in 2001, for his Rocky Mountain goat. Inside these pages the reader will not be disappointed when he relives the experiences of Gene Alford, who, by his own admission had been hunting cougars for over 40 years, finally taking the Number Two cat, along with the Club’s highest award. Similarly, Michael J. O’Haco’s taking of a World’s Record pronghorn is a classic tale of the tactics involved in hunting North America’s fastest land mammal.
So, as these words are written in mid-2006, to what level has the Awards Program risen? First, beginning with the 23rd Awards book, field photos were published in full color – a dramatic and striking improvement over earlier editions. One has only to look at the 25th Awards Book, published in late 2004, to see to what level, and standard of excellence, the Awards books have evolved. That book, encompassing 673 pages, and featuring many color photographs, details the 4,000 entries accepted into the 25th Awards Program, as well as the stories of the 118 award winners at the 2004 Awards Program Banquet in Kansas City, Missouri. Readers of this anthology will be able to read several outstanding stories selected from that book. The Club’s 26th Awards book, covering the years 2004-2006, will be published in 2007.