Willis Mattison / Monday, January 8, 2024 / Categories: Media, State Issues For Brook’s Sake-Bring Enough Gun PHOTO: Willis Mattison “If that’s a moose’s antler, how can we get ’im up?” I whispered to Kenny. We were lying prone on the arctic tundra, our rifles bridged across our daypacks in anticipation. We didn’t know it, but spotting the off-white patch barely visible on the brush-covered hillside above positioned us to fulfill a decades-old pledge in a way that exceeded our wildest dreams. In 1958, two Minnesota teenage cousins had concocted a plan. Kenny would move to Alaska and get established. After graduating from high school, I’d follow and we’d hunt big game like caribou, moose and brown bear in the wilds of the Brooks Range. Kenny who had retired from being an ice-road trucker in Fairbanks finally called in 2009. “Willis, I’m in my seventies and you’re soon getting there. If we still wanna do that hunt, we’d better get ’er done.” By 2011, we’d secured an outfitter with horses to pack food, gear and game. We’d also located a Fairbanks bush pilot. Flying beyond the Yukon Valley and crossing the Arctic Circle revealed an unblemished Brooks Range landscape below that began to satisfy a yearning in our souls. Now here we were, finally living the dream. Before we could decide on a tactic to get the bull up, a nearby cow stood up and nervously pranced back and forth across the ravine. I swung my scope back to the whitish patch to find a massive bull standing broadside 200 yards above us. Our jaws dropped at the sheer enormity of his body and gigantic rack. Kenny already had an impressive moose mounted so we had agreed that any trophy bulls were mine. With his distinctively wry sense of humor, Kenny elbowed me and uttered just two words: “Your bull.” I fired, striking the kill zone. Unfazed, the bull stood there. “Give ’im another,” Kenny said. My second round purposely hit shoulder bone, the distinctive report echoing back.” He still didn’t go down. “Let me give ’im one,” Kenny urged. Never wanting to be caught short of firepower, Kenny carried a Remington .425 magnum—an elephant gun compared to my Sako .300 short-mag. Only when his big gun roared did we see the slightest flinch from the giant animal. Astounded but with wryness still intact, Kenny spawned another backwoods gem: “Willis, we don’t have enough gun!” The bull took one step forward, legs buckling and came crashing down. The momentum of his fall carried the bull down the damp tundra slope toward us at amazing speed. Propelled by his flailing death throes, the huge animal kept sliding headfirst toward us. He finally came to a stop upside down, legs in the air, antlers buried deep in the soft tussocks. The mammoth beast now lay still, some 50 feet below where he fell. We’ve all experienced the deflating phenomenon known as ground shrinkage when approaching what appeared to be a much bigger trophy. But when we walked up to this supreme specimen, we experienced “ground swelling” instead. What an animal! Far larger than we had judged through our scopes or could have imagined. The next morning, I approached downwind of the kill site, stopping to sit on a hill where I could see the entire valley below. Kenny was hiking the five miles back to base camp to direct the outfitter and packtrain to the place where we had dressed, skinned and deboned the moose. I spent the next hour cautiously scanning the landscape for any sign of grizzlies that may have laid claim to our prize. As I sat in that natural amphitheater, I marveled that the nearest human beings were my cousin and our outfitter some eight miles away, and Arctic Village fifty miles further to the South. No humans, no roads, no traffic, no noise, no hubbub of civilization, just nature at her very finest. It was a moment of pure ecstasy with a powerful, compelling sense of “aloneness.” Then as if on cue, snow began falling at the higher elevations. Like powdered sugar sifting over great mounds of bread pudding, it blanketed the peaks of the Brooks Range to the north. I soaked in this magical scene with a deep sense of reverence, one I may never know again. I’m not a religious person, but just a few days in this remote pristine wilderness—so removed from any signs of human desecration—kindled in me an awe so profound as to create a lasting spiritual imprint. Soldiers say there are no atheists in foxholes. I would wager there are no hunters or anglers who, after experiencing the Brooks Range as we did, could escape feeling extraordinary gratitude to whatever higher power they may acknowledge. As hunters and anglers, let’s ask ourselves: Do we have “enough gun” to defeat whatever may threaten the future of this Brooks paradise? PHOTO: Willis Mattison Previous Article Kentucky Public Land- 54,000 Acres Permanent Conservation Easement Next Article BHA Podcast & Blast, Ep. 171: The Conservation History Of George Washington Carver With Mark Hersey Print 0 Rate this article: No rating Tags: Alaska BHAAlaska issues Willis MattisonWillis Mattison Other posts by Willis Mattison Contact author