Dang look at that tundra!!! Just nothing forever and ever. And what a bull!!! Mr tom with another incredible shot!!! You guys shooting skills are impeccable 💪💪🤘🤘🙏
You guys make it look to easy. Lol. I think caribou have some of the most amazing antlers, and that right there was a great one. Good job guys and again cool video. Thumbs up!
Great video guys .That trip looks like a life time dream hunt. Next time remember snow camo. Even if its painters coveralls hehe. I said to myself this year I`m gona bring white camo just in case it snows. It snow about two feet .Iture helped me get a deer this yaer. Hey CHEERS from Canada.
Caribou are pretty light animals. All the deboned meat on one caribou is around 200lbs, with three guys, packing around 70lbs of meat per person on this hunt.
Hey Guys, Thanks for posting your Haul Road Caribou videos, they are awesome. I am doing my first trip up there this fall and was hoping you could answer a couple of questions for me. I saw that you were using an Intex raft to get across the Sag. 1.What are your thoughts on the raft? Did it hold up ok? 2. How did you determine the five-mile corridor mark? I found some gps programs that claim to do this but dont know how reliable they are and am thinking of using a paper map to verify satellite data. Thanks again for the awesome videos!
Jan Bukac Just from four trips across the sag we had multiple holes, recommend a better raft. On the GPS, it shows the five mile corridor, but we also set a waypoint at the pickup just to be sure how far we really are, and we usually go a little farther just to be safe. Make sure to set a waypoint where you killed caribou so that the Fish and Game can see. They are very strict with that rule. The very next day, we went back across the sag. To watch the hunt we did the next day, click here th-cam.com/video/AJVZlvI1e8Q/w-d-xo.html . We went our 6.5 miles on this hunt
Stuck N The Rut Thanks for the info. I've read mixed reviews on the raft and was pretty curious how it held up for you. I will be setting the waypoints on my gps and will also try this: www.daltoncorridormap.com/. I got some good feedback about this map on Alaska Outdoor Forum so will try it out this fall and see how good it is. Thanks again and maybe see you on the Haul Road this fall!
+Pepsi4815162342 That's strange, because my whole life, I was taught to shoot behind the shoulder, because that is where the heart and lungs lay, and it dropped when I shot it there. Tell me, where would you have shot this animal?
Stuck N The Rut Well i just can tell what i saw on your Video. And Long range Sniping is not hunting. But after all what i've saw it seems you hitting way to far right. If you really hit the heard im apologize. But it doesen't seems like that.
+Pepsi4815162342 If you watch our other videos, you would notice that we are avid archery hunters as well. As being an avid archery hunter, I personally can say that long range is a different method of hunting, and a challenge in itself. We still had to hike five miles in tundra, we still had to find what we are hunting for. There is allot of time practicing before season to make sure we can make shots this far. If you think a 700 yard shot is easy, think again. Please, tell me, what is hunting in your own words? It will help if you share a story of a hunting experience that will make sense to what hunting really is, please share. Thank you
Hutning in my opinion is killing the animal fastes way as possible with out the possibility of just hurt it... Because this is babaric. Thats it. Dont't shoot if you're unsure if you are hitting correctly that the animal is dieing instant don't shoot!
+Pepsi4815162342 Did this animal not die instantly? How much quicker could this caribou have possibly died? He dropped in his tracks. We don't fling led for the hec of it. We take our time, dial for wind and drop. As an archery hunter, you should know that even with perfect shots, animals run a little ways before it dies, sometimes even taking up to a half hour with an arrow. Again, this animal dropped in its tracks. How is this barbaric? Your chances of possibility hurting it are allot higher with archery?
Dang look at that tundra!!! Just nothing forever and ever. And what a bull!!! Mr tom with another incredible shot!!! You guys shooting skills are impeccable 💪💪🤘🤘🙏
You guys make some seriously great hunting videos, please keep it up. thanks for all the hard work
Thank you for your support!!!!!
What an amazing hunt..!! And what a giant trophy... Thanks for sharing guys.
Amazing!!!!Perfect shot!One word AMAZING!!!
Thank you!!!
Great shot...congrats!
You guys make it look to easy. Lol. I think caribou have some of the most amazing antlers, and that right there was a great one. Good job guys and again cool video. Thumbs up!
Thank you. That's what is so awesome about caribou. Every rack is so different in it's own way.
Impressive shot!!
Great video guys .That trip looks like a life time dream hunt. Next time remember snow camo. Even if its painters coveralls hehe. I said to myself this year I`m gona bring white camo just in case it snows. It snow about two feet .Iture helped me get a deer this yaer. Hey CHEERS from Canada.
Caribou are pretty light animals. All the deboned meat on one caribou is around 200lbs, with three guys, packing around 70lbs of meat per person on this hunt.
Stuck N The Rut wait hold on, I thought caribou were almost extinct in Idaho so why did you kill one?
I enjoyed all videos.
Thank you
That is one big caribou
Great shot dud💪🏼👌🏼
Really was an amazing shot bro...
This is a giant! Do you guys enter all your book animals? If you do it must cost a fortune!
great shot! was this off of dalton highway?
Yes
That is one flat shooting cartridge! 338 edge?
338 ultra mag
I know I'm late here but I was curious if Tom got this mounted and if so were you able to preserve the velvet? Great footage by the way.
Thank you. He did get the Caribou mounted, but we stripped the velvet off and got fake velvet when we got home.
How much meat are you actually able to pack out?
Hey Guys,
Thanks for posting your Haul Road Caribou videos, they are awesome. I am doing my first trip up there this fall and was hoping you could answer a couple of questions for me. I saw that you were using an Intex raft to get across the Sag. 1.What are your thoughts on the raft? Did it hold up ok? 2. How did you determine the five-mile corridor mark? I found some gps programs that claim to do this but dont know how reliable they are and am thinking of using a paper map to verify satellite data. Thanks again for the awesome videos!
Jan Bukac Just from four trips across the sag we had multiple holes, recommend a better raft. On the GPS, it shows the five mile corridor, but we also set a waypoint at the pickup just to be sure how far we really are, and we usually go a little farther just to be safe. Make sure to set a waypoint where you killed caribou so that the Fish and Game can see. They are very strict with that rule. The very next day, we went back across the sag. To watch the hunt we did the next day, click here th-cam.com/video/AJVZlvI1e8Q/w-d-xo.html . We went our 6.5 miles on this hunt
Stuck N The Rut Thanks for the info. I've read mixed reviews on the raft and was pretty curious how it held up for you. I will be setting the waypoints on my gps and will also try this: www.daltoncorridormap.com/. I got some good feedback about this map on Alaska Outdoor Forum so will try it out this fall and see how good it is. Thanks again and maybe see you on the Haul Road this fall!
What they do with the carcass??
How do you get the antlers off
Wow
Good shot ? Check the damn anatomy of this animal!
+Pepsi4815162342 That's strange, because my whole life, I was taught to shoot behind the shoulder, because that is where the heart and lungs lay, and it dropped when I shot it there. Tell me, where would you have shot this animal?
Stuck N The Rut
Well i just can tell what i saw on your Video. And Long range Sniping is not hunting. But after all what i've saw it seems you hitting way to far right. If you really hit the heard im apologize. But it doesen't seems like that.
+Pepsi4815162342 If you watch our other videos, you would notice that we are avid archery hunters as well. As being an avid archery hunter, I personally can say that long range is a different method of hunting, and a challenge in itself. We still had to hike five miles in tundra, we still had to find what we are hunting for. There is allot of time practicing before season to make sure we can make shots this far. If you think a 700 yard shot is easy, think again. Please, tell me, what is hunting in your own words? It will help if you share a story of a hunting experience that will make sense to what hunting really is, please share. Thank you
Hutning in my opinion is killing the animal fastes way as possible with out the possibility of just hurt it... Because this is babaric. Thats it. Dont't shoot if you're unsure if you are hitting correctly that the animal is dieing instant don't shoot!
+Pepsi4815162342 Did this animal not die instantly? How much quicker could this caribou have possibly died? He dropped in his tracks. We don't fling led for the hec of it. We take our time, dial for wind and drop. As an archery hunter, you should know that even with perfect shots, animals run a little ways before it dies, sometimes even taking up to a half hour with an arrow. Again, this animal dropped in its tracks. How is this barbaric? Your chances of possibility hurting it are allot higher with archery?