ONE AFTERNOON in August 1946, I used to be driving alongside the underside of a canyon reduce into the rolling tundra of northern British Columbia by slightly creek named after Billy Nevis (pronounced Neeves), an previous trapper. With me was my clothes shop, the dean of the Stone-sheep guides, the late Frank Golata. Beside me rode a relatively plump little physician of precisely my age, who practiced medication within the small Illinois city of Carlyle.
I used to be on my first hunt for Stone sheep. Dr. Wilson L. DuComb, my associate on that journey, was on his second.
Like all sheep-hunting nuts, Doc and I cherished sheep, lofty peaks, excessive ridges, chill breezes, shiny skies, and wild nation. In these days, most American hunters might take sheep or go away them alone, and we had been members of a really small fraternity.
Till that day I had by no means laid eyes on a Stone sheep, however I used to be excited as a result of we had been starting an extended packtrip that was to take us again into the wilderness nation on the heads of the Musqwa and Prophet rivers. Later within the hunt, we pitched our tents in the identical spot the place, in 1936, L. S. Chadwick had camped when he took the world-record Stone, the best sheep trophy ever collected in North America, and one of many best taken anyplace on the planet.
Nevis Creek, a loud, shallow stream with occasional deep swimming pools filled with lazy Dolly Varden trout, fishtailed forwards and backwards from wall to wall of its canyon. I suppose we needed to cross it 30 occasions that day as we rode downstream towards the Bessa River.
We had been a good distance from mountains, however sheep like canyons nearly as a lot as they like mountains, and I used to be nearly anticipating to see some Stones. We had seen tracks.
Presently, Golata pulled up his horse and pointed. Presumably 225 yards forward and perhaps 250 toes above the creek, seven Stone rams lay on a ledge, calmly watching us. In these days, the restrict on sheep was two north of the Prince Rupert line of the Canadian Nationwide Railroad. If a kind of rams turned out to be ok to gather, I already had an excellent likelihood to attain. If I did, I could possibly be extra explicit on the following one.
I acquired off my horse to glass them and sat down within the sand with a scope-sighted .270 throughout my lap. All had been typical Stone rams with grey heads and necks, brownblack saddles, black tails, and white rumps. All had been previous. The one which caught my eye was an historical sheep with heavy, broomed, close-curled horns-a kind about which I’ve at all times been sentimental. He was a wonderful ram, and on that 45-day journey I noticed few higher.
Uphill from the sitting place isn’t the steadiest manner on the planet to shoot, however the crosswires appeared fairly good after I touched off the shot. All of the rams jumped to their toes and took off down the ledge, however after operating 30 or 40 yards, the ram I had shot at tumbled off the ledge and fell proper into Nevis Creek with an amazing splash. He had been hit a bit far again.
That was my first Stone. I acquired one other on that journey that was No. 10 in two document books. I didn’t understand it then, however that Nevis Canyon ram had made me the fourth or fifth hunter ever to gather all 4 forms of North American sheep — bighorn, desert, Stone, and Dall. On the time, I had no concept whether or not I used to be the fifth or the 5 hundredth, however I did know that I used to be fascinated by sheep and by sheep searching.
The time period Grand Slam was fixed to the feat~ my good buddy, the late Grancel Fitz, New York author, OUTDOOR LIFE contributor, promoting photographer, massive wheel within the Boone and Crockett Membership, trophy hunter, document compiler, and pupil of searching literature. In about 1949, Fitz wrote an article referred to as “A Grand Slam on Sheep” for True journal. It involved a profitable hunt he had made for Dall sheep within the mountains surrounding Kusawa Lake within the Yukon. The Dall he acquired on that hunt accomplished his assortment of all 4 forms of North American sheep. Beforehand, he had shot an excellent desert ram within the Cubabai Mountains of northern Sonora, a bighorn in Alberta, and a Stone in northern British Columbia on the Prophet River downstream from the place L. S. Chadwick shot the No. 1 Stone. It was nearly the identical place the place I collected the ram that ranked No. 10 for a time.
Fritz was a seeker after data. One other of his ambitions was to gather an instance of each species of North American massive recreation. He achieved the feat, nevertheless it was costly and took a lot labor and time. The concept of amassing one every of each number of massive recreation present in any nation or on any continent brings me down with an acute assault of the vapors. For instance, I’ve about as a lot want to bump off a tapir or a musk ox — or for that matter, a woodland caribou — as I’ve to gather a large Costa Rican banana-eating fruit-bat — if there’s such a factor.
In his “Grand Slam” article, Fitz stated the legendary the Grand Canyon of Arizona and within the Sierra Rosario in Sonora about 70 years in the past. When he acquired bighorns I can not say, however he collected many Stones and Dalls within the Yukon and Alaska and, I consider, in British Columbia. He was the creator of a guide referred to as The Wilderness of the Higher Yukon, the definitive guide on the distribution and shade variations of the thinhorn sheep. The guide accommodates a chart displaying the colour variations of the sheep in varied areas. In have hunted in a number of sections of northern British Columbia and in addition in a number of elements of the Yukon, and I’ve discovered that the guide is uncannily correct. Each sheep hunter ought to have a replica, however it’s out of print, tough to seek out, and costly. For years, I’ve been making an attempt to get publishers to reprint it, however I’ve had no luck.
Associated: A Basic Dall Sheep Hunt within the Yukon, From the Archives
Sheldon was a Yale graduate and have become an official of the Chihuahua & Pacific Railroad in Mexico from 1898 to 1902. From 1904 till 1908, he did virtually nothing however hunt and research sheep within the Yukon and Alaska. His guide, The Wilderness of Denali, tells of a yr he spent among the many mountain sheep of Mt. McKinley. He was instrumental within the institution of McKinley Nationwide Park. Sheldon was the best American sheep hunter, however he was not a gun nut. He used just one rifle, a Mannlicher chambered for the 6.5 x 54R cartridge, which was utilized in service-cartridge kind by Holland and Rumania. The ballistics had been modest-a 160-grain bullet at a muzzle velocity of two,300 toes per second.
By trendy requirements, previous Charlie ·was a reasonably bloody man. If he acquired the drop on a bunch of rams, he typically did-in each considered one of them. In all, he shot 500 to 600 head of North American recreation along with his rifle. This whole included 70 to 80 grizzly and Alaska brown bears. Virtually every thing he shot at was killed with one fastidiously positioned bullet. Sheldon, I consider, made a fortune on some gadget he invented for railway automobiles, and he was in a position to go and hunt the place he happy. He was not a picky head hunter. So far as I can inform from studying his books, he by no means in his life shot a 40-inch ram. He died in 1928 when he was solely 61.
The second man to take all 4 forms of this continent’s sheep, Fitz wrote, was Colonel Wilson Potter, a rich Philadelphian with whom I exchanged a couple of letters within the final years of his life. The nice Colonel shot, amongst different issues, the antelope that was for a time the No. 1 pronghorn and is now tied for No. 2. Col. Potter wrote me that he shot this antelope in 1899 within the desert north of Oracle, Arizona, in an space the place I’ve hunted jackrabbits. coyotes, and quail. After I moved away from Arizona in 1948, there have been nonetheless an excellent many desert mule deer and some antelope there. Curiously, Potter’s nice buck was a desert (or Sonora) antelope, a species that usually doesn’t develop massive horns. I do know that Potter hunted desert sheep in Sonora. probably the identical yr he shot the antelope. He might properly have hunted desert sheep in Arizona as properly. In 1899, there have been manv sheep in a lot of the mountains round Tucson.
The third man to gather the 4 species was Dr. Wilson DuC0mb, normal practitioner from Carlyle, Illinois, who was my companion on that hunt for Stone sheep within the Prophet and Musqwa River nation in 1946. He had hunted in that normal space with Golata beforehand. At the moment, he had no concept he was the third man to realize the Grand Slam. He had accomplished it in Mexico, searching with the late Charlie Ren someday throughout World Conflict II. By connections in Mexico Metropolis, I had acquired him his license. The late Ernst von Lengerke, a New Yorker who was a associate in a Manhattan sporting-goods retailer referred to as Von Lengerke & Detmond and which was absorbed by Abercrombie & Fitch, is listed because the fourth individual to get all 4 species. Grancel Fitz listed me because the fifth. Truly, von Lengerke and I accomplished the slam at nearly precisely the identical time and may very well have finished it the identical day, he within the Yukon, I in British Columbia. When Fitz wrote the True article that began the entire Grand Slam enterprise, he didn’t find out about Dr. DuComb, however he quickly corrected the omission. Fitz himself is No. 6. My previous pal, the late N. Myles Brown, a pneumatic-tool tycoon of Cleveland, Ohio, my beloved companion on a number of wonderful hunts, was the seventh. He acquired his desert sheep within the Sierra del Chino in Sonora on a hunt I organized for him. No. 8 was Herb Klein, who accomplished the slam with my previous buddy George Parker as a information within the Sierra Blanca of western Sonora on a license I acquired for him by the affect of George Pasquel, member of a famous and influential Mexico Metropolis household. The late Purple Early went alongside on that hunt with Herb and have become the No. 9 Grand Slammer. That was in 1951 or 1952.
I inform all this for the sake of the document. Sometime. a scholar might need to dig by the information of OUTDOOR LIFE to do a guide on the historical past of North American sheep searching.
When Grancel Fitz wrote that piece on his Yukon hunt and coined the phrase “a Grand Slam on sheep.” he knew not what he wrought. The accomplishment struck lots of of hunters as being the most-prestigious caper a big-game hunter might pull off. Varied tales and articles in outside magazines publicized the Grand Slam. It grew to become the Holy Grail of American searching, and dozens of hunters began working towards it. Now properly over 200 folks declare to have shot all forms of North American sheep. I’m satisfied that the time period Grand Slam and the attendant publicity have made the mountain sheep the No. 1 North American trophy. In my time, I’ve written an excellent many tales of sheep hunts and articles on sheep. Among the increase in sheep searching could be laid on my doorstep. I hope that after I arrive on the Pearly Gates, previous St. Peter doesn’t maintain it in opposition to me, but when he does, I cannot argue. I’ll merely bow 1ny head, flip round, and go down beneath the place I belong.
Bob Housholder, an Arizona author and part-time sheep information, has shaped a membership with membership restricted to those that have made the Grand Slam. He retains the data and sends out a number of newsletters a yr. Members are entitled to put on a shoulder patch displaying the top of a Dall ram and the legend “Grand Slam—North American Sheep.” One taxidermy agency has created a gold pin with 4 sheep heads alleged to signify the 4 species. Membership within the membership is meant to be a matter of nice status, and a few lads who’ve fallen into the clutches of the regulation for poaching desert sheep pleaded their want to belong to the membership. I’m a dues-paying member myself, since I prefer to sustain with sheep-hunting gossip.
All this hoopla could be very unhappy. I want Grancel Fitz hadn’t began it. The old-timers hunted sheep as a result of they cherished sheep, as a result of they needed to be up on these excessive wind-swept ridges the place they shared the bottom with the sheep, the grizzly, the hoar-y marmot, and the hovering eagle. Once they introduced again a trophy, they weren’t looking for mere status — they had been bringing again recollections of icy winds aromatic with fir and balsam: of the scent of sheep beds and arctic willow; of tiny, good Alpine flowers, grey slide rock, and velvet sheep pastures. The old-timers had sheep and sheep nation of their blood.
In his final years, my previous pal Myles Brown suffered a stroke and will hardly get round. However. yearly he went to the Yukon mountains he cherished a lot, employed a pack outfit, arrange camp in lovely sheep nation, drank within the smells of willows and water, and watched the sheep with binoculars and recognizing scope. I understand how the old-timers felt as a result of I knew lots of them and am now considered one of them myself. I’m certain that many younger sheep fans additionally really feel the identical manner. Any mature ram is a trophy of which a person will be proud, whether or not or not it’s listed within the document guide. These wrinkled horns are a document of the ram’s life and his loves. his good occasions and dangerous, his feasting and his ravenous within the wild excessive locations.
As we speak, alas, some sheep hunters apparently care little for sheep and even much less for sheep nation. They’re after glory and status, and the earlier they get the tiresome enterprise of searching over with and slap these ram heads on the wall, the higher they prefer it. It took me properly over a decade, however I loved each minute of it!
As taking pictures editor of OUTDOOR LIFE, I acquired many letters yearly from hunters who needed a Grand Slam. I needed to discourage most of them. The feat turns into harder and harder to perform. Permits for desert and Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep are tough to get, generally not possible.
Again within the days after I was searching desert sheep, I might at all times get a particular allow. I had influential Mexican buddies. In Mexico, if the fitting folks or have some huge cash, you will get a allow to do many issues. I didn’t have any cash, however I did have buddies in Mexico and on the College of Arizona, who might put in a phrase for me. I additionally know the Sonora sheep nation and knew sufficient Spanish to get purchase.
I have to pause right here to inform a narrative. A wealthy European of my acquaintance discovered himself in Mexico Metropolis some years in the past. He determined to see if he might get a sheep allow. He went to the correct workplace, noticed the person who might challenge particular permits, and advised him he could be glad to donate $500 in American foreign money to the official’s favourite charity if the allow had been issued. The official indignantly refused the poorly disguised bribe and advised the European sportsman that he was an trustworthy man. The European was a person of the world. He sighed, dug down deeper, got here up with $2,500, and requested the official if a donation of that measurement would curiosity him. The official pocketed the 25 C-notes and wrote out the allow.
For the would-be Grand Slammer, the desert sheep is the hardest nut to crack. For the previous a number of years, Mexico has held an open season by particular allow in sure areas in Decrease California. A couple of authorized rams are additionally taken in Sonora. The permits are very costly.
Arizona has a reasonably truthful desert-sheep herd, with the animals scattered over dozens of dry rugged ranges, and a focus in a few federal reserves. In 1971, the heaviest ram ever taken in Arizona was shot nearby of Tucson within the Santa Catalina Mountains. Arizona points solely a small variety of permits, and nonresidents are eligible for under 10 % of them. In 1971, there have been 915 nonresidents who utilized for the quota of eight permits. Nevertheless, because the time Arizona had its first desert-sheep season about 20 years in the past, 86 nonresidents have surmounted the desert-sheep hurdle there. As we speak, a nonresident’s possibilities of drawing a desert-sheep allow in Arizona in any single yr are lower than 1 in 100.
Nevada has a good herd of Nelson’s desert sheep, however there are dozens of candidates for every allow. Maybe symptomatic of the state of affairs in Nevada is a brand new regulation enforce for the 1972 season. It appeared this fashion in The Bighorn Bulletin: “Commencing with the 1972 sheep season, each individual killing a desert-bighorn sheep shall have their tag validated and the cranium sealed by personally presenting the cranium and head to the fish and recreation [department] inside 5 days after the sheep is killed. It’s illegal for any individual to have a sheep in his possession with out the division seal completely hooked up to the horn. Any bighorn sheep taken legally previous to the 1972 season are exempt.”
California has a large inhabitants of desert sheep however has by no means had an open season. With antihunting sentiment so sturdy in California, I’m certain that the sky would cut up open and game-department officers could be torn asunder by wild horses if a restricted open season on sheep had been really useful Utah has some desert sheep however no open season. In New Mexico. hunters have taken a couple of desert sheep from the Hatchet Mountains within the southwestern a part of the state, and in addition a couple of Rocky Mountain bighorns.
All in all, the possibilities of with the ability to accumulate a desert bighorn are about pretty much as good as a person’s possibilities of being elected president of the USA or successful the Irish Sweepstakes. Truly, a person in all probability has higher odds on changing into a film star or inheriting one million {dollars}.
The bighorn state of affairs is best — however not a lot. Colorado has a substantial variety of bighorns, however nonresidents usually are not permitted to attract for sheep permits. Idaho has someplace between 2,000 and a pair of,500 bighorns centered within the space of the Center Fork of the Salmon River, one of many roughest items of nation on earth. For an excellent variety of years, any resident or nonresident who had a normal searching license was allowed to hunt sheep after shopping for a particular allow for a nominal payment. Rams had been badly shot out. and Idaho has gone again to issuing restricted numbers of sheep permits. Wyoming has a reasonably truthful sheep herd, and 25 % of the sheep permits are reserved for nonresidents. The Wyoming sheep nation could be very beautiful, and there are glorious sheep outfitters and guides within the state. I’ve shot just one Wyoming bighorn, however I’ve seen an excellent many rams when searching elk there. As soon as I shot an enormous six-point bull, and two wonderful rams I had not seen got here tearing round a degree. The rams and the bull had been bedded down on the identical shale slide.
Montana has a couple of very powerful areas the place anybody can get a allow to hunt sheep and in addition some areas the place trophy rams are moderately plentiful and permits usually are not too tough to get. Montana borders the realm in southwestern Alberta and southeastern British Columbia that has produced the biggest bighorn heads and the heaviest sheep. An acquaintance of mine who’s younger, powerful, and an skilled sheep hunter, shot a 43 1/2-inch bighorn in Montana final yr, and I heard of one other ram that went 44 across the curves and can place among the many high 10 within the data.
Washington has made profitable transplants of California bighorns from British Columbia into varied sections the place comparable sheep had been as soon as current however had turn into extinct. Nevertheless, the possibilities of anybody’s getting a Washington bighorn allow are about pretty much as good as his possibilities of hitching a experience on a spaceship to the moon. In 1971, there have been roughly 3,500 candidates for 27 permits to hunt Washington bighorn.
The standing of the bighorn in Canada is best than in the USA however not significantly better. In 1972, for the primary time, sheep searching by nonresidents is prohibited within the southern half of the Alberta Rockies. The species is preserved by the nice string of parks alongside the crest of the Rockies. Starting with Glacier Park in Montana subsequent to the Canadian border, there’s Waterton Park in Alberta, then Banff and Jasper. The perfect bighorn trophies taken at present are rams which have matured in these parks and are shot in open nation outdoors their borders. Elsewhere, the Canadian Rockies are in a frenzy of exploitation — oil exploration, lumbering, grazing. Roads have been thn1st again into the mountains, and wherever the car and the meat hunter can go, the sheep are quickly shot out and finally disappear.
I’ve seen many horns of two, three, and four-year-old rams tacked up on barns in British Columbia and Alberta. A couple of decade in the past, British Columbia misplaced a big proportion of its bighorn herd as a result of the forestry division leased out the winter bighorn vary for grazing. When the snows got here, the sheep went all the way down to their conventional vary and starved. The person who desires to make a Grand Slam goes to discover a trophy bighorn harder and harder to return by.
Associated: Welcome to the New, Unsure Period of DIY Sheep Looking
The so-called thinhorn sheep — the Stone and the Dall — current fewer issues, however northern British Columbia, the Yukon, and Alaska are growing quickly. A railroad up the Rocky Mountain trench in British Columbia is below building, and the route is correct within the midst of the Stone-sheep nation. New roads in northern British Columbia and the Yukon are making new areas accessible to car hunters.
As we speak, most trophy hunters are flown in to one of many many lakes within the Stone and Dall-sheep nation. They typically hunt sheep the identical day they arrive. Lots of them, alas, need to get the disagreeable enterprise of searching within the boondocks over with as quickly as attainable. Due to ease of entry from the nice variety of lakes, these northern sheep are weak.
The aircraft has cheapened and revolutionized sheep searching. It’s in opposition to the regulation to make use of a aircraft to scout for sheep, however I’m advised the regulation is often ignored. I’ve additionally heard of many cases wherein small planes with doughnut tires have landed hunters on easy ridges above the sheep. Then the information and hunter seek out. Later the aircraft picks up males and trophies.
Using helicopters is even worse. The will of on the spot big-game hunters to knock off a trophy ram and get the hell out as shortly as attainable has given rise to the price-tag system of searching. It’s notably prevalent in Alaska. The clothes shop ensures a ram or a grizzly for a flat payment, normally substantial. Go in, get the trophy, get out. Bingo! It’s similar to shopping for a steak or a can of corn within the grocery store. Value is plainly marked, and satisfaction is assured.
Searching for the status of the Grand Slam has given rise to an amazing quantity of mendacity, poaching, and dishonest, notably as regards the desert bighorn. One yr I went to the annual award dinner of the Boone and Crockett Membership. One of many prize-winning trophies was an excellent set of desert-ram horns on a really small scalp that had been stretched to the restrict in mounting. It was apparent that the cranium had been picked up someplace and a taxidermist had stretched the scalp of an immature ram over it. How the judges might have been fooled, I’ll by no means know. I’ve seen a number of such mounts. A outstanding taxidermist has advised me {that a} excessive proportion of desert-sheep trophies despatched to him for mounting by varied outfitters had been picked-up ram horns with scalps from ewes or immature rams.
One well-known trophy hunter, who has now handed to his reward, is listed by Householder as having multiple Grand Slam. After his demise, this man’s greatest buddy advised me that the person had by no means shot a desert bighorn. When he hunted desert sheep, he despatched his information up with a rifle, and the trophies had been introduced down for his approval. Desert sheep searching could be very onerous work!
In one other case, an acquaintance of mine advised me of two magnificent rams he had taken. He described the hunts in breathtaking element. Some years later, I chanced to run into the clothes shop and information who had taken him out. I innocently inquired the place this mighty hunter had polished off these splendid previous rams. They laughed so onerous they nearly fell off their bar stools. One head, they advised me, was a pickup that had been given to him by an previous trapper, and he had purchased the opposite from an Indian who had discovered the ram the place it had been killed by a spring snowslide.
The poaching of desert sheep is widespread. I’m advised that it isn’t frequent in Arizona now, however again within the 1920’s and 1930’s, it was routine for the lawless to hunt Arizona sheep for trophies and meat. One Arizona clothes shop marketed Mexican sheep hunts in these days, however in Sonora the rurales (cell police) had been in search of him. As a consequence, he advised his shoppers they had been in Mexico however did all his searching in Arizona. One citizen of California has bragged that lately he has shot a number of desert rams in Arizona alongside the decrease Colorado River.
One other Grand Slammer, who has quite a lot of {dollars}, knocked off his desert bighorn in Utah. Even at present, Nevada recreation officers consider poaching considerably limits the variety of Nelson’s desert bighorn.
A person who has lengthy been within the desert-sheep-poaching enterprise is Hugo Castellanos, a Mexican nationwide, who till not too long ago lived in a suburb of San Diego, California. In December 1971, Castellanos was arrested by officers of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. An Related Press story with a December 16 Los Angeles dateline quotes the Service as saying that through the years, Castellanos had taken 200 sheep-poaching American hunters into Baja California. The newest phrase is that Castellanos jumped bail and is now working from the Mexican aspect of the border.
I do know one man who accomplished his Slam with Castellanos. I perceive that Castellanos assured each shopper a trophy. So as to have the ability to do that, he stored Mexican hunters out within the mountains. They shot rams and introduced the heads and scalps to Castellanos, who had a warehouse on the Mexican aspect. If the shopper didn’t handle to shoot a ram, he took a kind of heads dwelling. The payment was $1,000 for the primary head. If the shopper needed to be a “actual” desert-sheep hunter, he might get a second head for S500 and a 3rd for $250. That’s merchandising!
Such excessive jinks have been occurring for a very long time. Method again within the early 1930’s, I knew a Mexican who lived within the Sonora village of Sonoyta. He made a uncertain and precarious residing by smuggling dope and Chinese language and by operating off an occasional cow and promoting the animal on the American aspect. He additionally shot massive rams for a Los Angeles taxidermist, who got here round every year to select them up.
Essentially the most-famous instance of barefaced poaching of desert sheep was revealed by the Swanson case in California. Swanson, a California taxidermist, took trophy-hungry hunters out to poach rams within the Anza-Borrego State Park and different remoted areas within the California desert. His charges had been excessive. Swanson pleaded responsible. He had good bookkeeping data, and a substantial variety of hunters had their desert-sheep heads seized and paid fines. One in every of Swanson’s shoppers, who had simply accomplished a Grand Slam was about to obtain a prestigious award that goes to excellent big-game hunters. It was realized that state in addition to federal authorities had been going to place the arm on him on the award ceremony. He landed in California, however he was warned. He rotated and went again to the place he had come from.
Bob Housholder, keeper of the Grand Slam data, tells me that over 200 folks have presumably collected all 4 forms of.North American wild sheep. It’s a Large Deal! A number of have now had the respect of knocking off all 4 varieties in a single season. That’s a reasonably breathless operation and requires lots of speeding about, however it may be finished if the hunter has ample scratch. I famous that seven girls had taken the Grand Slam.
I heard someplace that one lad of 17 or 18 has finished all of it inside one season, I consider.
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Of the 200 or extra Grand Slammers, Bob Housholder tells me that 60 have accomplished the slam with Arizona rams. The place did all these different desert sheep come from? No huge quantity have come legally out of Mexico, and positively not all hunters who took authorized desert rams have taken the three different forms of sheep.
I really like sheep searching! I really like sheep nation from the recent, barren mountains of Sonora to the slanting sheep pastures far above timberline in northern British Columbia and the Yukon. Within the days when hunters packed in to wilderness areas, climbed, sweated, appeared over sufficient sheep to get excellent rams and shot their very own, I believed it the best subject sport on the planet. It’s nonetheless an awesome sport, however the on the spot sheep hunters out for status and the crooked outfitters out for the quick buck are making sheep searching stink fairly dangerous across the edges.
This story, “The Grand Slam Caper,” first appeared within the January 1973 issue of Outside Life.