IDAHO WOLF UPDATE WITH PICTURES

bennybiscut

New member
My dad and I headed out early this morning to try and get a wolf. We walked in about 2 miles to a timber sale that almost looks like a clearcut with a few leave trees dotted throughout the area. I called for about 35 min, using "interrogation howl'" "challenge howl'" and "pup distress." We did not see a wolf, but we did see three white tail does and a cow elk in the unit.

We walked back to the truck and headed off to another unit that was logged two years ago. It was wide open with little brush and about 200-300 yards of visibility. I fired up the foxpro spitfire and started with the interrogation howl and went right into challenge howls and pup distresses. I mixed them up continuously for just under 5 min. I turned my call off and then looked up to my left and there was a HUGE Black wolf starring at me. I raised up my dad's Remington model 7 6mm X 45 wildcat with a nikon buckmasters 4.5-14 and got the wolf in my sights. I initially had the sight on 4.5, but quickly dialed it up to almost 14. The wolf was huge and I could see his yellow eyes looking my way from about 150 yards.

The wolf was facing me so I put the cross hairs right on the middle of his chest and squeezed. Smack, the wolf dropped to all fours, but his head was still up. I quickly chambered another 70 grain TNT and held right behind the shoulder and squeezed another one off. SMACK, and the wolf got up and started crying out a bit and doing circles. While the wolf was doing circles, my dad shot the wolf with his Remington model 600 mohawk with 64 grain speer gold dot ammo. Smack and the wolf let out a big cry and started to run down a ridge. Both of us thought that we had gotten a big wolf, but boy were we wrong. There was about 1 inch of fresh snow on the ground and I could see the blood trail for at least 200 yards going down the unit into the brush. I started to track the blood and thought for sure that we would find the beast piled up in the brush. I was wrong, I tracked that wolf for about a half an hour down into some thick timber where the snow was not sticking to the ground. We were about 1/4 mile from where we initially shot the wolf when the trail went cold. We spent the next 3 hours scourring the area for sign/blood with no luck. It did not help that it was raining like a cow pisssing on a flat rock. So we swallowed our pride and walked up the unit to the logging road empty handed.

In the end, my dad and I were extremely disappointed, yet happy that we had the opportunity to see such an amazing creature. Without a doubt in my mind, we killed that wolf. As much blood as he lost, he was probably laying there dead not 200 yards from where we quit. I had no sign and no blood to continue in the search. We drastically under estimated the toughness of this timber wolf. He was more than likely the alpha male of the pack and we were under gunned. I made two solid hits on this wolf with a 70 grain bullet and my dad smacked it once with a 64 grain bullet. You would think that an animal would go down where it stood. If we had to guess, this wolf was probably 150 lbs or more. We are taking magnum rifles out next time we call. I should have taken out the .264 magnum like I had originally intended, but the old man thought that it would be too much gun. All my blame goes to him.

What a day it was. Here are a few pictures of the area we were hunting.

My stand was on top of the rocks in the center of the picture. Photo was taken from spot of impact.

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Bloody hair from impact

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Spot where it did circles and layed down

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Ridgeline the wolf ran down

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Blood and track next to extra large glove for scale

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Me pisssed off with a clump of the wolf's hair

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Well look on the bright side, that one doesn't count towards any quota, and you can go out and shoot another one. In many rancher's eye's you would be a hero right now.
 
That really stinks that you could not find your wolf! I have a tag also but have to wait until my kids big game hunts are over. Thanks for smacking one of our wolves anyway. I will make sure that I use a good solid bullet in my .270.
 
im just jealous you guys are out hungintg wolves. i just found out ima be a daddy again and well my hunting fund disappeared in a hurry. guess ill just have to settle for some cougar calling. looking forward to the hero shot on the next one
 
Great post. Really good pics and narrative even without the glory shot. It's too bad you couldn't recover it, but there is no doubt based on your photos it didn't go too far at all.
 
Great story. You guys will know what to do different next time. I am very jealous you get to hunt wolves AND with your father.
 
To bad you didn't get to bag him. Tell the ol' man, uncle Satan says "30 caliber holes make invisible souls"
 
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wow good story , suck ya didnt bag em.
Never hunted wolf but here in the North East the coyotes get large Seen many over 60 lbs
I always tend to use my 60 Grain Partitions when I am hunting the northern zone
When I hit the south part of the state not to many make it over 40-45
I cant imagine 150 LBS I would be packing the slug gun LOL
 
To bad you never found it. The 6x45 would not have been my first choice or the TNT bullet. That bullet is made to be explosive, not made to penetrate.
 
Originally Posted By: Ursus21Well look on the bright side, that one doesn't count towards any quota, and you can go out and shoot another one. In many rancher's eye's you would be a hero right now.

I think I'm pretty much in that camp myself.
 
Good job...sorry you didnt get the animal but you did take one out of the count...also thanks for the insight...how you were calling...where you were calling...good info there.
KB
 
Thanks for all the nice responses. Every time I look at the pictures, I get sick to my stomach. I had the opportunity of a life time and I failed to cash in it. Deer season starts on the 10th...if I see 4X4 or better, I will be back up in the hills looking for a wolf. Next time however, the magnum rifle will be on my shoulder.
 
Looks like you coulda used Tony's dog, Gunner, on that hunt. But...you'd want him on a leash, though, just tracking the wolf; because as good as Gunner is, he'd most likely be quite outmatched against a wounded 150-pound wolf. Very nice story & pics...thanks for sharing!
 
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