It was the
first of February in 1991 and a cool, drizzly rain mixed with fog was
falling when my guide picked up my wife Shirley and me at our hotel. We
were about to embark on the rocky road to hunt for purebred Mouflon sheep,
the smallest of the wild sheep of the world. My guide, L. R. Castleberry,
assured me that he had imported the original animals stocked on the ranch
we were to hunt almost 10 years earlier. We would be hunting the descendants
of those animals today. Turkey Run Ranch on the Harper Highway near Kerrville,
Texas was our destination as we drove through the dark, wet countryside.
Arriving at the big wrought iron gate, L. R. punched in the combination
and it swung wide in welcome. We were to start the odyssey of one of the
longest, hardest, and most satisfying hunts for an animal that I've experienced
in over 30 years of hunting exotics in Texas.
Another guide,
Sonny, a friend of L.R.'s, greeted us at that time with another hunter,
a 14-year-old youngster from California. He and his dad were spending
a week in the Texas hill country, home to the majority of the exotic population
of the United States, and pursuing a number of exotic species. His experience
is a prime example of an old saying amongst hunters, "I'd rather have
luck hunting than experience."
The Mouflon
ram is one of the wariest of the exotics. But this young man was lucky
enough to harvest a beautiful ram with 35 1/2 inch horns in less than
an hour.
My story
diverges greatly from his. Sonny took us out that day and it was a long
and wet one. The first four or five hours was spent driving to the top
of the ridges to glass for sheep. The best we did was see a number of
animals running away from us at long distance. Finally, near dusk, with
a drizzling cold rain mixed with fog, we spotted the ghostly outlines
of five rams feeding along the top of a small hill. My guide instructed
me to take the one at the rear. I was able to see only the outlines peeking
in and out of the eddying swirls of fog. I had a hard time finding my
ram in the Weaver 3 - 9 scope and asked the guide, "How far?" He replied
that it was a distance of about 150 yards. Finally finding the ram in
my scope, in spite of the moisture running down my eye glasses, I took
a deep breath, let out 1/2 of it and squeezed off a shot. A miss. An inch
or so over its back. Of course, the whole band just melted into the white
blanket of moisture. Sonny said he saw the bullet hit over its back, but
we climbed to the top of the hill anyway to check for any sign of blood.
We found tracks but nothing else. Sonny said, "Sorry, my fault. That ram
was closer to 50 yards so that's why you shot over his back." Well, too
bad and too dark to hunt any more. Time to head back home to Texas City
and the every day grind of work and normal life. But not before vowing
to return and get that ram yet.
Two weeks
later we were back on Turkey Run Ranch on a bright sunny day looking for
that elusive Mouflon ram again. We hunted hard, glassing many bands of
sheep and stalking a few of them, but to no avail. Mostly we saw rams
and ewes both running away at 100 yards plus. We decided to take a break
for lunch. Since our motel was only a short distance away in Ingram we
left the hunting area. But as my luck was still on the downhill side that
trip, as we passed the ranch owner's house we stopped to tell him that
we were leaving. He said that he had friends coming out that day to tour
the ranch and for us not to come back that weekend and I'd have to come
back another time. My guide said he knew of a couple other ranches we
could try. After lunch we tried again with no luck. We went back to the
motel to wait for another try, another day, tomorrow. The next morning
dawned clear and cool and full of expectation as we searched another ranch
for trophy Mouflon. Search as we might we found nothing that we wanted
to hang on the wall. We had a five-hour drive home, so we checked out
of our motel and hit the highway. But not before setting a date to return
for another try at the big one that got away!
It is said
that the third try is the charm. So on March 1st of 1991 we were back
with guide L.R. Castleberry on the Turkey Run Ranch to hunt Mouflon again.
It was again a clear sunny day. But, unlike the last two hunts, the sheep
were not as spooky as they had been. We were able to glass three small
herds without their running away, but passed on them. We made two stalks
and had shots, but not big enough. On a third stalk, L.R. spotted some
good rams feeding in a big open area. We got down on our hands and knees
and traveled about 100 yards. For some reason we couldn't get on the same
page! I could never spot the ram L.R. wanted me to shoot. The rams ambled
off out of sight, down into a small canyon. Of course, by that time I'd
spotted the ram in question, but no chance for a shot. So it was back
on our all fours and through the cactus and rock covered ground. After
300 yards of punishing my poor knees we came to the edge of the canyon
rim. About 100 yards, almost straight down was our band of sheep bedded
down. This gave us a chance to look them over and decide which was the
best trophy. Having solved this problem, I was faced with another. When
I tried to shoot prone I couldn't see the ram. When I tried to sit up
and shoot across my knees, I only had a little green bush about 6-8 inches
high and 4 inches wide to hide from the sharp eyes of the rams. I finally
took the chest on shot which was all I had as the ram was facing toward
me. The Remington Model 700, 30/06, shooting, a Remington 180 grain soft
point bullet did its duty and the ram lurched to its feet for a final
death run and piled up after about 50 yards.
It was quickly
getting dark so we pulled the ram into some better light for pictures.
We field dressed him and carried him to the top of the canyon where we
could get the vehicle close enough to load him for the trip out. He was
a dandy. His horns measured 32 inches around the curl with bases 10 inches
around. Whenever I look at that mount on my wall I flash back to sore
knees, the rocky road to success and the feeling that I really earned
that trophy. It's a great feeling, isn't it? Written by Steve Mahurin.
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