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Protection of the barrel and optics

Protection of the barrel and optics

We talk a lot how to clean the gun and how important to make it in time but forget about protection from the mechanical damage. The ordinary guy doesn’t understand what we are talking about. Who wants to damage the weapon?Though the loss of the qualitative characteristics of guns or even the complete failure of the barrel can be the result of the mechanical damages. The main trouble of all guns is the ingestion of litter (snow) to the barrel’s channel. It can rupture in the place of the jam because of the excessive pressure of powder gases.I have two rifles which have been broken by such reason. The first one is SKS which I spoiled being in the heart. It was fall. The hunt took place after the rain and I needed to go the number but slipped on the clay and the trunk buried into the ground. I had to cease and went to home but there were wild boars in the corral and I desired to continue. I broke the twig, wrapped a rag and cleaned the barrel how I could do in such conditions. We got trophies and I shot few times. But the gun was finished after that hunt. It gave huge dispersion on 100 meters and I didn’t understand that time what had happened.The second case happened with the smoothbore gun. We were driving the snowmobiles along the Akmolinskaya prairie and fall from time to time. Once I’d rolled over and scooped snow by the barrel. Then I fired twice and the trunk inflated. They say, it can be repaired but the danger, that It will break up, increases. Only then I realized how to avoid such situations. The easiest way to cover the barrels. I used the fingertip and duck tape but the best choice is to use the special covers. They unlike the other devises are reusable. You won’t take the roll of duck tape and cut the new piece after the each shot. I know three variants of covers: leather, rubber and neoprene covers. Everyone has their pros and cons. The leather ones look more rich and durable; the rubber covers made by the German company Wegu are more suitable, you can even shot without any aftermath if you have the recoil compensator; the neoprene goods tight fit and camouflage the barrel. They all work well and I used all variants, tried different forms and sizes with places for the sight or the muzzle brake. I suggest to tie the cover to the gun when you are hunting in the mountains because there are chances to lose it.I believe that we have to protect the guns by the special covers, except the cases when you hunt for the feathered game and have to be ready to shoot at every moment.Another problem is the damage of the optics, mostly scopes. Fallings from horses are the usual thing especially in the mountains. One of my Nicon crashed by negligence. It slipped off the rock shelf and hit the eyepiece on the stones, the lens broke (even the eyepieces were not protected).The second loss became my “Vortex”. I was going down from the slope sitting on the ass and used the rifle to brake. The lens was protected but the knobs for adjustments and lights were broken because there wasn’t the right cover.The most part of the optic’s manufacturers provide the special covers but I have just negative experience with them. I used plastic and aluminum ones which screwed directly into the sight. They protected just lens but not tube and knobs and most of them opened spontaneously and broke.My choice is the neoprene covers for the scopes and sights, most of them you can find in the special shops. There are different models which differ in colors, size and density. Such covers reliably protect optical devices from mechanical damage, knobs for adjustment from unwanted twists, and lenses from water, snow and dirt. Two year ago I designed and sewed the cover for the binocular and now it’s protected and is comfortable to use it in winter.
10.07.2019
The main thing is to put the correct task. Part 2.

The main thing is to put the correct task. Part 2.

In August 2017 when the hunting season for the mountain’s ungulates just started I put the ambitious goal to take five trophies of the Snow Sheep, permitted in Russia.I’ve got the trophy of Kamchatka Snow Sheep a year before and need to take others.Number 3It took us 8 hours to drive 70 km by a four-wheeler to the habitat of the Koryak Snow Sheep.I and Alexey Kim arrived to that camp in the second turn. Viktor Kim had arrived earlier and got his trophy of the Koryak Snow sheep already. Alex and I still had to do it. Next morning our team, which included me, the outfitter and guides, went for the hunt. We divided into several groups and each started to examine the definite hill. In 15 minutes one of us had detected the lonely sheep. The only demand to the future trophy was that it had to be not less than 10 years old because we didn’t have much time for the hunt. I and Vladimir (my guide) started to approach the male while another guide monitored it staying in the bed of the river. We climbed 400 meters and I started to look for the comfortable shooting position when the thick fog covered the hills and the rain started. I tried to find the male through the scope but lost it. It moved to three meters aside and we had to go down and ascended to the next hill once again. I approached it 460 meters. It stood near the rock like the aim in the shooting range. The only problem was that its blended with the natural relief thanks to its color. I made one but accurate shot and did the second one just to be sure. Then we made some pictures, took the genetic analyses and went back to the camp. There I knew that Alexey had got his trophy too.Number 4Last time I hunted in Okhotsk and managed to get only the trophy of the Kolyma Snow Sheep but the plan was to take two trophies. I couldn’t take the Okhotsk Snow Sheep. So I returned once again to finish what had started.Next time I visited the Khabarovsk region was October, 2017. I arranged everything with Alexander Malkov and we (I and my cameraman Alexander) arrived to Okhotsk. The weather was good and we could immediately fly to the Base camp. The flight by chopper took us 40 minutes. We spent two day there examining the territory but found just few tracks. It was clear that our chances to find a good trophy at that place were not high. So we asked for the helicopter once again and moved to another region.The traces of sheep presence had been noticed from the chopper while we were flying and it gave us hope. We landed in 60 km from Okhotsk.The camp was set in the very unusual place. The huge forest fire at the beginning of the last century had burned miles and miles trees. They died but remainded stand, amazing natural spectacle of the Apocalypse.We found lots of sheep tracks and dungs and even the places where they had rest. The first animal, it was female with a baby, we met at the end of the day. Later we detected several males but it became dark and we had to delay the hunt for the next day.It was hurtful to watch just females and young males on the Day#4. I full of thoughts that it was a mistake to hunt in that place and the best way out to leave it.Day #5. I stayed in the camp because wanted to have rest while the guides examined the mountains. At 8.30 am one of them –Sergey, told us by radio that detected the group of 7 males and some of them had trophy size. Our group marched 6 km with the climb 700 meters while he guided us by radio. We looked for the group about 15 minutes but they were out of our sight but fortunately we did it! The shooting distance was 680m. I fired and all group ran up to the mountains but one of them halted and stopped. In a few minutes another one stopped near it. What had happened? Could I wounded two males by the one shot? Probably the bullet went through the male and ricocheted. Later we knew that another male stopped because was very curious and wanted to understand what had happened with the leader. Than it followed the others. Thus, I got 13 years old male with the horns 82 sm.Number 5I had to change my hunting schedule because of the second visit to Okhotsk. At the beginning I was going to hunt in Yakutia in October but could arrive there just in November which was considered to be not the easiest time for hunting. I and my cameraman arrived to Yakutsk on November 17th and were informed that the average temperature was -30 centigrade. One more difficulties was that I could hunt just 8 days from twelve which we planned before.Yakutia is the coldest region on our planet and more than 40% of its territory located beyond the Arctic Circle. There are some places where the temperature could drop to -70 degrees Celsius. You one thing to know the theory and another one to feel it yourself.The local outfitter Alexander Motorin met me in Yakutsk. We needed to drive about 750 km by LandCruiser to the hunting area where he and his brother Konstantin organized hunting trips for the foreign hunters. They started to cooperated with our Club from 2017. The Route P504 is known as the Kolyma highway. That huge transport artery with a total length of 2032 km, stretches through the permafrost from Yakutsk to Magadan. It crosses lots of rivers and lakes. In winter the cars travel by ice and sometimes it ends very tragically. Some cars which couldn’t get out of ice and stayed there till summer. But the most part of the road has soil-crushed stone cover. The construction of the road began in 1932 by the prisoners of Gulag and used for the transportation of gold and coal from the local mines. The construction didn’t stop in summer or winter and thousands of people died there. In the conditions of permafrost all dead bodies were laid under the road’s cover and now that was is also known as the Road of Bones.The first night we spent in the village Handyga. All next day drove to the small village Nezhadnskoe, build near the big golden mine. The "filthy lucre" was found in 1951 and it became the point after which the village started to grow. At the nineties its population was about 2000 people but then the economy ruined and most of the people left it. It’s still active but resembles the ghost town.The last part of the road we were going to drive by GAZ -66 and Ural which belonged to the local guy Peter. The last 80 km we would have to move up the riverbed. That way was full of ice hummocks and it was dangerous to drive alone. The jammed car would frost in a minute and if it wasn’t pulled out immediately it wouldn’t drive further. Thus, we used three cars for safety. The locals suggested to start at early morning and spend the night in the village. It was the right decision because all next day we spent pulling out the cars from ice. By the way , that Ural hadn’t brakes because the brake pads would freeze to the disks and you could stop is just using the engine. And even that monster stuck few times. It took us 7 hours to cross the final part of the way. It was the late evening when we arrived to the camp, totally tired after the long and exhausted road. The total transfer time was about 40 hours. It was a pleasure to spent that night in the warm and comfortable cabin.Hunting in November is very effective because sheep used to go down from the mountains. But not all people can appreciate it because the average temperature is -35 -45C. The only positive moment is that air is dry and it seems warmer than it is.We spent daylight hours for the road and I had just one day for the hunt. And don’t forget how tired I was.We started at early morning and I was impressed by the number of animals! I had never seen such high population density of the mountain ungulates. Probably I saw something like that in the North Ossetia but not so. We detected some groups of animals which grazed on the hills just sitting in the camp. We drove about 3-4 km from the camp and spotted 4-5 small groups of animals. There were some trophy size sheep but we detected the definite group while driving to the camp and wanted to find it. The group which we saw, was in 5 km from the camp last time and we drove to that destination. We were lucky because the animals were on the same place. Four big males stood on the top of the hill. We decided to go around the hill and climb. The temperature was -37C and we had to ascend to 600 meters. My feet were cold but after the climb I was wet under the warm cloth.I detected the group of 4 males which moved up to the mountains. The distance between us was 535 meters.The breech bolt of the gun froze and I had to warm it. But I got my trophy from the first accurate shot.I had to note that mountain hunting in the frost -37C isn’t same like hunting in the normal temperature. Each mountain hunting is extreme but if you need to feel new emotions or increase the extreme level, I suggest to make it in -40C degrees. It'll be double extreme. I promise. Thank you very much to Alexander Motorin for the organization of this hunt. Everything was organized on the high level . The only complexity was in the logistic which took us 40 hours driving to the camp. But It worth it!
04.07.2019
Rain, Snow, Wind and Fog

Rain, Snow, Wind and Fog

It’s difficult to reply why some people leave their families and   cozy homes and rush to the places where they have never been before. Why they risk when nobody understand them and share their aspirations. Is it the instinct or their thirst for adventure. Probably they want to test themselves? Or that’s all together? I hunted in Russia lots of times and had collected the BIG FIVE in Africa. But in 2017 I slightly opened the door to the new world- The World of the Mountains Hunts. My friends-hunters have told me that mountain hunts stand apart from the others and demand on the hunter to be in a good l physical condition and to have the moral power. I decided to try. The geography of the mountains hunts is the whole world. And I decided to start this way from Russia. My country is the most suitable variant for me. The goal is to take all species which are permitted on this 1/6 part of the Land. In one year I’d been in the Gorny Altai where had managed to take the trophy of the Ibex. I visited Caucasus three times and add to my trophy list three kinds of Turs and two sub-species of chamois. The turn came to the Snow Sheep. I discussed all details with Alexey Podtyazhkin ( Ibex Club) and we solved to start with the Kamchatka Snow Sheep. The best time for hunting on Kamchatka is the begging of August when the weather is more predictable and we’ve booked that dates. Looking ahead, I’d say that the weather didn’t know that it had to be so. So, hit the road! The flight from Moscow to Petropavlovsk was on schedule and arrived on time. The first night I spent in the hotel just in a couple km from the airport (Elizovo)because the next day we flew to Tigil by the domestic airlines. There was the direct flight to Palana (it’s the place which we needed) but we couldn’t buy tickets beforehand though tried to do it in two month before the expedition. The risk not to fly anywhere from Elizovo is very high because everything on Kamchatka depends on weather. I was lucky and we flew in time. I has to note that the cost for the domestic flights, if you are not the local citizen, is very high. It’s about the half cost of the ticket between Moscow and Petropavlovsk, about 50K rur. The pilots on the domestic flighta were very experienced but the planes were very old. The planes resembled those that used for the touristic flights on Maldivas but only by its size. That technique is used for decades and I treated it like to the historical rarity and artifact. The first plane on which we had to fly, broke before we left and they gave us another one. We unloaded our luggage and put it on the next one. That procedure was done by passages. Then we prayed and flew. It was the exciting flight on a nine-seat plane. There wasn’t any sound insulation but I liked it. At last we successfully landed at the Tigil airport. That village is located on the north-west of the peninsula . Its’ population is about 1.5K people. The poor infrastructure causes a sense of deep sadness. However, this applies not only to the village of Tigil but to the whole Kamchatka. The distance between Palana and Tigil is about 200 km by the new built and good (if its’ possible) dirt road. Konstantin Kalin met me in Palana. This outfitter and the pro guy is a very good fellow. His wife accommodated me in the comfortable apartment where I spent the night waiting for the American hunter who would join us next day. We both would try our hunting luck on the fertile land of Kamchatka. The hunter would happen to be the 63 year old guy from Washington.   We loaded all things and equipment to the ATV and started. Our team consisted of nine people: the guide, cook Elena, Konstantin, me and Daniel). I discovered that this transport is the miracle of technology. It could overcome any water obstacles, cope with swamps and mud and hold steady on any surface. Looking how this iron giant stormed the barriers I admired that its constructor was the Russian woman. It’s true that… In Russ hamlets women are dwelling….. It took us four hours to get to the base which was not good, but was gorgeous! There were comfortable cabins with bed and linen, big dining room with the fireplace and nice bathhouse. The comfort level was even higher that we expected. We accommodated, tested the guns (fortunately everything was good), then had heavy dinner and went to sleep. We had to have the rest before the transfer to the base camp. Next morning we drove to the camp. Our way laid through the plain with some hills and it took us 9 hours. The Kamchatka expanses make the indelible impressions especially when you seat on the roof of the old, roaring ATV. It was warm and we enjoyed the trip, saw lots of bears which walked alone or with cubs. Sometimes the distance to them wasn’t more than 30 meters. We made stops for a lunch and fishing and arrived to the base camp which was ready and waited for us. It was located at the foot of the mountains. Our armored car sighed and stood on the siding. It was 3.30 pm. The camp’s organization is worthy of the highest praise. It was very comfortable tent camp set in the very picturesque place in the mountains. It consisted of the mobile kitchen with the stove which gave us its warmth during the cold days, the mobile bath and the Toilet! I and Daniel anticipated how we would come back to this nice camp after the long day of hunting. But there were some nuances…. The three guides waited for us in the camp. They made the survey while the weather allowed. The sheep were detected in three different places ten days ago but then the weather changed and nobody knew whether they’d be there or not. One more thing alarmed us that all these places were a day away from the camp. We had to make the decision quickly because according the weather forecast the storm would come in a couple of days. And we decided to go immediately and not to waste time. The plan was to set the camp as close as it was possible to the hunting area. Our group left the base at 4 pm. It consisted of me, three guides and two horses, loaded by all equipment. In an hour and a half my enthusiasm's gone downhill. The temperature was 25 degrees above Zero, no wind and lots of mosquitoes. We needed to go through the vegetation which didn’t make our movement easier. We overcame about 10 km, which was like the endless ups and downs , and went to the place at 10 pm. So we could set the camp, change the cloth and went to sleep looking forward for the hunt next morning. What does it mean “to be unlucky" We started at the sunrise. Now I accept with all responsibility that I've underestimated the Kamchatka mountains. I thought that I was very experienced after hunting in Caucasus with its steep slopes and rocky gorges, on the elevation of 3000 masl and more and mountains on Kamchatka (1300-1500 masl) which looked like hills, wouldn't be a serious problem. How I was wrong! The fact was that the half of the way to the top you had to move through the cedar woods and reindeer moss. Mountains of Kamchatka are steep enough and rocks are friable. It makes all your movements dangerous and tough. The first hunting day we spent looking for the sheep which were seen there in a week before. I didn’t know how much km we hiked but it took us eight hours. It was sunny and the average temperature was about 20C. It was windy on the top but not critical. I thought a lot about the preparation for this hunt and regretted that hadn’t gone to the gym and kept diet. I needed to prepare for a hard work not the light walking. Take it into account if you are going there. We didn’t see any sheep at that day but the weather forecast was good for the next one and we didn’t despair. But as I told you above the weather knew nothing about the forecast and didn’t know that it had to stick to it. The rain started in the early morning and wind which was like a breeze yesterday turned into storm. The tops of the mountains were covered with dense fog. It had no sense to hunt and nobody wanted to leave the tent. It lasted five days. Bad weather broke out in earnest. Rain changed the winds and vice versa. The fog covered the all mountains or uncovered some parts from time to time. The temperature fluctuated from the frost at nights to the warmth +7C during the day. After spending five days in the tent we knew everything about each other. We told all stories and looked through all photos in the phones of each other. We felt as if we knew each other for the whole life.   Most of the time we slept thanks to the rain and wind which sang their lullabies. I had to pay tribute to the Rangers. They used any minute or any opportunity when the weather was fine to view the mountains and find the animals but hadn’t seen anything. The silent tension reigned in the camp at last, we all thought about smth else. I estimated when I could visit Kamchatka next time because I had busy schedule and only logistic there could take eight days. There was one more problem. We took food for the limited number of days because thought that would hunt fast. But decided to stay there for the final, to trust for God and to hope for a good weather. Kamchatka’s surprises On the third day we were forced to cook hot meal once in a day and checked some places where could pick berries and mushrooms. Once we got out of the tent and saw the bear which stood on the hind legs and looked at our horses with the gastronomic interest. Without thinking twice, we brought down towards the uninvited guest a sophisticated vocabulary (profanity) of Russian language which we knew. It looked at us disapprovingly and withdrew. So we spent days waiting for the miracle, what meant for us - the weather improvement. Day #6. At the lunch time the rains was finished and our guides: Andrey and Evkumye went to the nearest valley. Sergey and I stayed in the camp, built a fire and started to cook. In an hour I noticed Andrey who was running to us and gesticulated. We switched on the radio and called Evkumye. He told us that found sheep and the weather would get worse soon. We didn’t wait any minute and trotted to him. We did run 1.5 km to the mountain! There was snow in the mountains at night and the sheep went down to the half of the slope and stopped to rest. It took us 40 minutes to climb the last 300 meters. Andrey and Sergey staid on the place while I and Evkumye crawled to the males. We were ready to see them every minute. So they were. Two young males (4-5 years old) stood in front of us on the opposite slope. The distance between us was about 250meters. They both saw to our side ready to ran. I and Evkumye looked for the third one which lead them. One, two minutes past but it didn’t appear. Nothing! We thought that it ran away by the other way. But suddenly the experienced PH spotted the male which laid down than the young ones in 160 m from us. I saw just its neck and head but we couldn’t approach. I got on my knees, aimed and fired. I missed it and the ram rushed up the slope after the two young animals. I set the bipod and fell to the ground. Then I caught the target on the cross hair when it stopped for a minute and turned to look at us. 210 meters. The shot! I wounded it and it sat down. One more shot. It fell. Thanks to my old Blazer R93! There was a second of the absolute silence and then it exploded with the cries of joy. We threw out all emotions that had accumulated over those days. The other guys joined us and we hugged all together and congratulated each other. The rain started when we were on the way back to the tent and didn’t stop till the end. We went back to base about 7 hours but it wasn’t a hard way. We all were in a high spirit and felt full of strength. The tasty dinner and warm bath waited for us in the camp. We spent that evening talking and telling stories. Then I went to bed and fell into a deep sleep. Next day the team with Daniel came back. They managed to get one sheep of two but took the nice trophy of Kamchatka Brown Bear. Our way to home was without surprises. We flew back to Petropavlovsk and then to Moscow. Thank you very much to Alexey Podtyazhkin ( Ibex Club), Konstantin Kalin and our guides Evkumye, Andrey and Sergey. And thank your very much to our cook Elena. You all organized everything well and I’ll never forget that time. See you again.
06.06.2019
Баран Марко Поло

Hunt of Sergei Yastrzhembsky in Pakistan

Hunt of Sergei Yastrzhembsky in Pakistan in November, 2018. The trophies – Blandford Urial and Sindh Ibex.
24.05.2019
КГО
Become a mountain hunter

Become a mountain hunter

Recently a young man wrote to me that he is fond of my hunting reports and read all of them, then he asked me to tell him how to become the mountain hunter. I was pleased and started to write him when understood that he knew nothing about hunting.  It confounded me.  I had so much to tell him and other guys like he  was. So I decided to write about this topic in details.My reader was interested in the reports which were devoted to the backpacking mountain hunts. I agree that most of them are filled by the harsh romance which attracts young hearts.  These kinds of hunts are the most difficult ones and demand all your strength , the hunter gains experience all of  his life taking part in such adventures.  I guess that the number of mountain hunters is just about 5 percentage from the total number of hunters, and only 5 percentage from mountain hunters used to hunt in such way.  It’s not the official statistic but commutating with other guys in the social nets and on the specialized forums  I can do such assumption.  But nothing is impossible.The “hunting gene” activates our passion to adventures, expeditions and other adventurous inclinations.  Most of us don’t understand why they can’t stay at home in the fall but it’s just their instinct.  The latent hunter can be determined by the passion for gathering mushrooms and berries, fishing and other behavioral symptoms that characterize him as a getter! This passion manifest with different force and lots of depend on the circumstances and heredity. My Dad being the scientist zoologist was absolutely indifferent to the hunting and was lifelong pacifist. But my Grandfather  from Siberia was the bear hunter and I grew up on his hunting stories , he  taught me to understand the Nature . I saw his trophies from my childhood.  The first gun 32cal. was presented to me by my Dad’s colleague when I was 12 years old and that guy become my Teacher. The next example is the former adviser to the President of Russia Mr. Yastrzhembsky.  He took part in his first hunt when he was more than 40 years old and fell in love with it. He is one of the famous trophy hunters now.  I just want to say that if you feel that this passion took possession of you in adulthood, don’t be afraid  the Nature takes its toll! The climbing to the hunting Olympus, mountain hunts are the top among all of them, require lots of investments and force, that’s why you have to be sure that it’s the right choice.  One thing is to read interesting, full of adventures and extreme romance, hunting report, lying on the soft sofa and the other thing to hike when you are cold, frozen, wet and had not strength to move.   I advise you to find real hunters, get on friendly terms with them and asked to takes part in one of their expedition like a helper or a cook. If you really like it and the predator in your heart will wake up, it means that you are on the right way. The next step- you have to become the Hunter! You need to study the hunting rules (hunting minimum), pass exams, read lots of articles about hunting ethics and culture and look through hundreds of hunting pictures. The second stage. The second stage is to buy the smooth –bore gun, which you can use for birds hunting in the mountains.  You can get the permit  for buying rifled-bored gun, which used for trophy hunts, just in three years. It’s very individual what kind of mark, model or type of the gun you’ll choose but if you are going to become the mountain hunter I advise you to take the double-barreled  gun.  It has to be light not more then 3 kg, 12 cal with the replaceable chokes.The producer isn't  important but  the gun has to be applied. Such rifle suits to all mountain's birds hunts, disciplines the hunter, teaches to shoot "seldom, but accurately".  In my opinion that you can use semi auto gun only for goose hunting but it’s difficult to find them in the mountains. The next question to choose clothes, boots and other equipment.  First of all you need to check and read lots of articles published on the specialized forums or editions. You can start from reading this information on our site in the section “Recommendations how to choose the equipment for mountain hunting, what, why and why”.  I’ll write just some words. The minimum kit  includes thermal underwear, the main jackets and pants warm suit with the top membrane, caps, hats, gloves, mittens, all goods have to have the protective coloration.  This kit isn’t enough for the serious backpacking hunts but you have time , three years before it, while you don’t have the carbine. The Boots. I offer to get mountain boots and rubber-plastic boots ( for rain and  the first snow). Later on you ‘d better buy three pairs of boots for different  situations and seasons. Don’t save on the purchase of good sporty socks and protective gaiters for the boots. You need to have a backpack from 30 to 40 liters,better to  use the goods from the well- known manufacture. It has to have single contoured aluminum frame bar. It can be adjusted to fit the shape of your back. Unlikely that you will hunt for several days at this period.   The same reason why you don’t need to waste lots of time choosing the tent.  You can get any double tent which suits for camping or hiking.  The recommended weight is about 3 kg. But take attention for the sleeping bag. It can be heavy but must be warm, with the comfort temperature not less then -10C. Also you’ll need to buy sleeping mat which mustn’t be heavy and has a suitable size.   Cooking kit: You’ll need to have outdoor cooking kit and gas stove. It’ll be enough.   Other equipment: knife – to your choice. My favorite knife is the Swedish mark “ Mora”.   Headlamp flashlight- I advise to buy the proven Amerina one by the Princeton tec. Don’t buy the binocular if it’s cheaper then 200$, The price for optics depends on its quality, you can’t see anything if buy a bad one. You’ll get to the hunting area by horses or car. You can rent the horse on the place but another question is with the car. There aren’t not lots of hunting area where you can drive by car.  Be ready to invest lots of money. There are not good righthand  suves anymore and the you don’t have wide choice now. The most budget one is the new UAZ “Patriot”. It’s not the ideal car but a good one. The used car with good tuning will cost you $ 12000-14000. The next variants are various jeeps from Toyota and Nissan. The best on is Toyota LandCruiser 200 GX. But it’ll cost from $ 40 000 to 45 000, if you buy the used one. You’ll use the car in your usual life for different  reasons that’s why I can’t say that this purchase is a pure hunting investment, but you need to know about it. All of the above gives you the potential opportunity  to hunt  in the mountains and beyond.  Primarily you can hunt for birds such as pheasant, chukar, snowcock then for ungulates: coral hunting which is practiced in some farms or for wolves. You can try to hunt for ungulates from approaching but there aren’t many places where you can approach 50-100m, I mean in Kazakhstan. While hunting in this period you’ll estimate your physical conditions.  The most important skill in the mountains is your endurance. You can make some easy tests, for the hunter who is in good physical condition the climb from the hotel Shimbylak to the Talgar pass (800 vertical meters) will take about an hour and a half, if it takes you more then 2 hours, go to the gym.  Make cardio trainings on the treadmill, an exercise bike or on the  ellipse.  Load your  legs. Read more about physical training in the topic "Physiology of sports, or how to prepare physically for hunting and traveling in the mountains if you are a city dweller." In three year you need to collect all papers and medical certificates and send them , using Gosuslygi site, to get the permit for the purchase of the rifled gun. The third stage. For the mountain hunt you better have the bolt-action gun with the mountain caliber: 7 Rem  Mag, 300 Win Mag. Choosing the carbine you need to know that about 90% of all guns, produced by well –known companies, have good grouping of shots for mountain hunts, about 1MOA (about 3 sm for 100m), so take into account just your budget and personal preferences.  My preferences are so, the first thing is the weight, all of my guns are less then 3 kg without the extra kits, then I pay attention to the modularity and the possibility to change the barrel and caliber ( it’s a very important option for Kazakhstan, where we can’t have more then 2 rifle-bored guns, but the additional barrels are not considered to be the separate one). All other things are not so principal. Such things like muzzle brake, mount for optics, the type of the bolt, the presence of detachable magazine and mechanical sighting devices, the number of cartridges in the store, the presence of antabokes, the type of shutter, the material of the stock  influence on the price and help the hunter. You have to choose the rifle scope too. It has to be with  high optical clarity and objective diameter which allows for quick acquisition of close quarter and fast moving targets. The objective lens diameter has to be from 40 to 50mm, plus tactical turrent shound for the vertical corrections. You'll need  to make the corrections fast because you can shoot for 500 meters or more. Better to choose the gun made be well-known companies form USA, Japan or Europe.  The Chinese rifles are not good quality yet and don’t suit for the serious hunts.  Also you need to buy the binocular with the rangefinder or just Range Finder.  These things like the scopes better to buy from the proven companies, though it’s not critical for the Range Finder, they are protected from the recoil of the gun and measure the distance well but the goods from the Flagman companies make it better. You have to make hundreds of shots to the paper to test run to yourself , to test all distances to 700 meters,   study how to use the ballistic calculator and understand the ballistic base.  You  will gain the skills of shooting with an tactical scope. “The blind aiming” trainings help  much.  Lying down you have to choose the aim by eye ( bush or stone), then close the eyes and point the gun to it, then open your eyes and make the corrections. At last the hand’s mechanics will follow the direction you’ve chosen. Now it’s time to become the member of the Hunting and Anglers Society.  It’ll help you to feel yourself the part of the huge hunting society and you can have the opportunity to hunt on the preferential terms in the lands of societies that make up most of the hunting areas in the CIS.  I’m the patriot of the “Tabigat” society, they have about 12 hunting farms in Kazakhstan, and suggest to enter in it.  We have few of hunting licenses for ungulates and one hunter has the chance to use it just once in thirty years. But your chances to get it from “Tabigat” is much higher.    Before the season.   Repeat the hunting minimum before the season. You need to make to remember the hunting rules,biology, ethics and hunting culture and hunting photography base.Check and test your hunting clothes and equipment in two month before the season.  The more I hunt in the mountain, the more I understand that  there is not the universal hunting outfit.  Mountain hunting season starts at summer and ends in winter, that’s why you need to have outfit for all seasons. Shortly about it.  •             synthetic  underwear (we talk about shorts to the knee and t-shirts; cotton is not suitable because it gets wet quickly and dries slowly) •             thermal underwear- two kits ( one – very thin synthetics for summer camouflage or protective colors, the second one -warm Merino wool or high-quality synthetics same colors •             pants- made from softshell fabrics or stretch synthetic ( for summer) •             pant for winter- softshell windproof fabric with fleece liner suitable for winter •             special winter pants- insulated with synthetics or down, required in severe frosts) •             waterproof rain pant with membrane fabrics, with  oversized leg openings with hook-and-loop adjustments allow the wearer to easily fit the pant over their favorite pair of rain boots/shoes •             jacket- softshell or stretch-synthetic for summer •             jacket – double softshell fabric or fleece ( summer-fall) •             jacket- insulated by synthetic or down with membrane ( needed in the severe frost) •             rain- jacket- made from membrane (you’ll always need it and I advise to take it to the each trip. Better to buy one or two sizes up) •             socks- pairs (two pairs from wool and two coolmax pars for summer) •             summer mountain boots-  non insulated with ankle boots  8’, with lug-andmini-bob tread for secure footing across a wide range of terrain •             ankle boots 14’ , insulated , the weight not less than 1000 gr.  Forged boot hardware offers corrosion resistance and swivels instead of breaking •             Softshell gloves - demi-season and for the  cold) •             Cap for summer •             Warm winter hat baseball cap with ear cover neck warmer •             Fleece cap (thin) •             Fleece cap warm •             White hunting ghillie  I agree that it’s a long list but I’m sure that you’ve bought lots of thing in three years before you’ve got the rifle bored gun.You’ll need to check all your equipment which you’ve bought during  last three years.  The Big Three has to be light and high technology. •             Hunting backpack for 1-2 days hunting. (30-40 Liters, with detachable waist belt and molle webbing •             Backpack for expeditions , it’d be good if you can change its size from 70 to 120 Liters) •             Light single layer double set tent , not heavier  than 2 kg  for summer and two layers tents for the fall. I recommend the Naturehike tents- the best ratio of weight, price and quality •             Sleeping bag ( you have one but better to buy one more warmer) •             Sleeping mat  ( I offer to buy inflatable lightweight mat, insulated with some filler, it will make your nights more comfortable) •             Accessories- trekking poles, sunglasses, multitool, knife, medical kit, flack I have to say that lots of articles devoted to this topic are published in “Magic of the Real Safari” on our site ProHunt.rzThis list isn’t full but all other things are not so important and you can hunt without them. So, you are ready for the Mountain Hunt. First years try to hunt with the experienced guides, follow them, watch them, look through the binoculars, look for the game through the optics though you can thing that it has no sense. Believe me, all hunters have been there, sooner or later the eye will learn to find the game.  You are just semi hunter without the skill to find the game by your own.  Remember about the main rules: The best approach is above from the leeward.  Wild animals hear, see and have the smell much better then you have, that’s why must not make noise, shine and smell. It’s not all what you have to have and know to become the mountain hunter.  This passion will require you to develop skills such as accurate shooting, reading animal tracks, the art of using decoys,  you have to have horse endurance and much more. The main thing is to believe in yourself and in your strength, listen to the advice of experienced hunters and guides, and you will succeed! Not a feather!
06.05.2019
New book "Outfitter's Notes"

New book "Outfitter's Notes"

This material is very close and interesting to me because I'm a professional hunter and outfitter in the past. I feel as if I'm walking next to the participants of the events described, when I read it. January 16, 2010 Valery Yankovsky It was the opinion of the famous hunter and writer about the book, the materials of which he helped to edit the author. The author tells about the trials and adventures that he had to go through with his clients - hunters from Russia and other countries, the book is written in the form of travel notes. He also describes the beauty of nature in the vast expanses of our Homeland and the mountain ranges of Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. The book gives an idea of the outfitter profession, which the vast majority of the population of Russia has not even heard of, and reveals the inner world of people who have chosen this hard and risky work. The book will be interesting not only for hunters, but also for travelers and nature lovers. Below is one of the first articles of the book, which can be purchased through the Internet. PROFESSION - OUTFITTER I told myself in my hearts and did it a thousand times, cursing everything in the world during the next crossing in the Sayan Mountains when my arms and legs were torn to blood by acacia, or after I spent a week on mountain passes sitting in the saddle of a horse or when I was spending nights in a tent in the snow in wet clothes, suffocating from hypoxia in the Pamirs. It was your last trip. Just stay at home and forget about it. And then there are hunters who are like ballast. Then I reproached myself for such a short-term weakness once again and walked through snow, rocky, mountain ranges! It is long overdue to tell about our profession. It is not highlighted anywhere, and we do not have a professional holiday, but we work and get great pleasure from our work, what is probably a rarity at the moment. This term outfitter is not mentioned in modern explanatory dictionaries in the sense how it has already been fixed for those people who organize and conduct activities related to being outside (OUT-...) premises, buildings. This definition is applied to the organizers of the hunt, although initially the word OUTFITTER came from the English language and referred to the supplier of equipment, uniforms. But this term has acquired a much more serious and very definite meaning among hunters than simply providing people with equipment. There is a profession of a hunter, zoologist, lawyer, ornithologist, hunter-trapper, taxidermist, translator, psychologist. So, our professional activity includes all of them together and a lot of other little things that the outfitter must know in order to do our work efficiently. I think that the reader has already realized that we are talking about those people who are professionally engaged in organizing people's leisure activities in the open air (or simply in nature). We are also called outfitters, especially when the main activity is hunting tourism. A simple Russian man in the street (especially in the early 90s) has a peculiar idea of our activities. Many people think that we sit in offices, then go somewhere, for a change, to Kamchatka or Tajikistan, and then we just count the "crisp" bills. It makes no sense to prove something to such people. But recently, the people appeared, even among my friends and acquaintances, who began to understand the complexity of that work began. Revealing were the words of one of my friends, who was a witness of how I was insuring the permit for the importation of rifles from Germany to Russia in the customs office at the airport Domodedovo. "You can go crazy from such work!". And I replied him. "You've only seen one hundredth of the iceberg that we have to do in this work!” Therefore, I would like to finally give at least some information about who we are - outfitters. Let's start with the side that is in full view of everyone. Let's start with a formal suit with a hunting style, and a booth at the Hunting Show in Moscow or Dortmund. The difficult work of developing a pricing policy for each hunting region, for each trophy animal, for the development of transport routes lies behind the external conviviality and pomp of such events. You should take into account that basically the companies offer from 10 hunting programs and more, then you can imagine the organizational work that an outfitter company is forced to carry out before the start of the sales season. It is necessary to closely monitor the pricing policy of your partners and competitors, in order to work successfully in the market so that it does not happen that the clients will not go to you because of high prices. Or not to lower the price for a hunting tour to such a limit, beyond which it already becomes unprofitable. Everyone has their own tricks in the field of pricing. Someone works at lower prices and higher sales volumes; other outfitters work at a higher level of service and corresponding prices. The participation in foreign Shows, require large amounts of money to pay for the booth, you should pay to print brochures, pay transportation costs, etc. Many hunting companies, to whom we send clients, do not know how much such events cost us and that we inevitably have to cover these costs. Otherwise, the meaning of work is lost. The work at the exhibition looks simply but it has a certain exhausting shade. Just imagine that we should communicate sometimes only in a foreign language (sometimes in two foreign languages) with people who have a desire to go hunting and do it for three to six days in a row. For a example, a hunter wants to go to hunt for an ibex in Kyrgyzstan. But he had not been in the mountains, had not ridden a horse and had not climbed higher than a shooting tower in Germany before that. At the same time, he claims that he is in excellent physical shape and can climb, if not Everest, then Mont Blanc for sure. You should need to explain him at what altitude and in what conditions the hunt takes place, what clothes should be taken with him. Unfortunately, it happens that a person cannot move at an altitude of about 3000-4000m even after such stories! The physical fitness of some hunters is too far behind the benefits of civilization. Not many hunters can walk well in the taiga in Siberia or on the tundra in Yakutia. I don't talk about mountain hunting for ibex and sheep. There were several situations when hunters form Germany and Austria, which are famous for their hunting traditions, came to capercaillie hunting in clothes that gave it away with their noise even on the approach to capercaillie's place. I want to say that our work is individual and takes place from 9 am to 6 pm every day. By the evening, the voice drops significantly, the dust causes a pain in the eyes. The head is spinning from the large mass of people constantly moving in front of the booth, which is a problem with concentration. You come to the hotel in the evening after such a day and, just fall off your feet. But that work together with Western partners helps our customers to know us better. People have more confidence in us and their Western company when they can see and talk to a representative of the Russian side, who will organize the hunt and accompany them throughout the route. Some hunters come to us only if I personally accompany them. The fact is that it is necessary to issue a whole package of documents in order to register the arrival of a hunter in Russia for hunting. Our legislative framework contradicts common sense and logic in many matters. Registration of documents for the import of hunting weapons and customs formalities at airports, registration of veterinary and other permits for the export of trophies and many other details of trips just sometimes plunges our hunters into a light prostration. And when they see how we regulate all of these problems, many of them imbued with great respect for us immediately and forever and sometimes hold on to us, like children for their mother. If you are also present directly at the hunting camp and help them to pass a difficult hunting route, then your authority becomes simply indisputable! Our main market over the past 20 years has been mainly made up of foreign hunters, that's why many of my colleagues have tried to master foreign languages, at least one. Some can communicate in two or even three languages. I am fluent in English and German. I can explain myself in Italian. Knowledge of foreign languages helps to avoid many ridiculous situations in operational work on the route. So, the Show season is over. What’s next? The painstaking work on the preparation of the hunting tours comes next. It includes voluminous correspondence on the coordination of hunting areas, transfers, flight formulas. When this is agreed, we begin to draw up documents for the arrival of hunters. It's a separate story, and we will not touch on it in detail this time. In February-March, the groups are formed for the spring hunting of grouse, grouse and bears. We will still have to dwell separately on those "problems" that our authority does for us periodically. Our all-knowing apparatchiks has decided on restructuring the organizational structure of hunting management in Russia in in late 2004 and early 2005 and "threw the baby out with the bathwater"! It seemed to them that the ecological expertise, which approves quotas for the seizure of wildlife objects was not carried out by the wrong people. They forgot to establish a state body in the regulatory documents, that controls the conduct of the ZMU (winter route accounting). And they did not find anything better but NOT OPEN the spring bear hunting in the Far East of the country. And most importantly that the culprit for all that mess didn't be found. The result of that action was: 1. People in Kamchatka, Sakhalin, Magadan and other regions of Russia had been left without work and means of livelihood for the next six months. Hunting farms in these regions are focused on seasonal work on the organization of hunts and they have nowhere else to earn money at this time! 2. The authority of Russia as a state that is not able to bear responsibility for its actions before its citizens and before foreign firms has been undermined once again. 3. That situation damaged the reputation of our outfitting firms. It turned out as if it was our fault before our partners in the West and their customers. Is there even a little bit of our fault in this? Absolutely not. But we were responsible for everything, spent a decent amount of money on an advertising campaign and invested money in organizing spring hunts. We were the first who sounded the alarm about the violation of the basic rights of hunting users but not the hunting users themselves. And we did not receive any special support from the hunting companies at that moment. It can be seen that Russian people have stereotypes of the kind that "All this is useless!” "It won't work anyway!". It looks like a disease of respectability, which manifests itself in inadvertently not answering the officials in power. I dare to assure that it will work out if we try to get the authority to think first and then do it. Such a situation is just one example of the difficulties of our work. A separate issue is the importation of weapons by foreign citizens for hunting on the territory of Russia. The state services tried for a long time to shift responsibility for the private property of an individual to us, as legal entities. Such paradox exists because of the shortcomings of the regulatory framework in the Law on Weapons, orders and instructions of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Russia. In Kyrgyzstan, for example, a permit for the import of weapons was issued for a specific hunter, to whom the weapon belonged. But when we did achieve to change that absurd situation after 20 years, we were introduced a new restriction. I can talk about this for a long time, but don't want to pay too much attention to such issues on these pages. In addition to this legislative casuistry, some policeman who does not know his own regulatory documents intends begins to check our visas, documents for the import of weapons, or even more interestingly, veterinary documents for trophies. The statistics of our work are such that there has not been a single case of the use of imported hunting weapons for illegal purposes for 15 years of active activity in the field of hunting tourism. But we know about many armed attacks, which have been committed during this time with the use of Russian standard military weapons?! About 24,000 citizens of Russia die every year from conflicts on domestic soil from axes, hammers, frying pans and other household utensils. From 25,000 to 30,000 citizens die in car accidents every year. And how many people are injured. But no one imposes restrictions on the use of axes or personal vehicles. Many citizens of our country have no idea what a socially significant burden an outfitter sometimes performs to protect the authority of our country. Often, we find ourselves on the edge of an invisible front in the battle for the prestige of the country. It happens when hunters come to us with a certain negative attitude, artfully warmed up by media in the West. They are prejudice from the very beginning. They say that our President is a dictator, who threatens the entire "civilized" world. And people in Russia are unable to govern their own country. And we work as the bridge between our countries, and try to dispelled the informational and moral ignorance of some people just right in the course of a hunting tour. Once we had to make a stop near the Beslan school, while in North Ossetia, where I showed and told Hungarian hunters what happened here and how. Who sponsored those monsters who encroached on the most sacred thing in life - CHILDREN. They knew practically nothing about it at home. I know several foreign hunters who have been living in Russia for many years for some reason but refuse to understand Russia and people. The amazing thing is that, they all strive to get to us again and again to hunt. And I hope that our work as outfitters helps to change their attitude and contributes to this to a large extent. Sometimes hunters change their attitude to our country and people, if they sincerely want to understand the essence of what is happening. So we often act as professional diplomats, and carry the spirit of peacefulness and enlightenment peculiar to our people. When the clients arrive, we meet them at the airport and go to the hunting grounds. The law obliged us for a long time to accompany weapons imported by foreign hunters. So if someone thought that we could be sent the hunters to the Altai Mountains, Kurgan or Kamchatka and then sleep peacefully, then he is deeply mistaken. The day of arrival is also the day of departure to the hunting area. Usually, it happens in the second part of the day. Departure is closer to night. A flight takes from two to nine hours over the expanses of our vast Homeland or beyond its borders to Kyrgyzstan or Tajikistan. For example, we arrive in Barnaul. We should get a gun and then drive by car or by bus and it can also take from 7 to 12 hours of travel to the hunting camp. We have a little rest there and then ride by horses or float by boats to the hunting area during the next day. The flight formula when hunting moose in Yakutia looks something like this. Moscow-Yakutsk - 6 hours flight. The connect flight in Yakutsk. We change the plane to AN-24 and another three hours of flight. After arrival to the place we change the plane to the helicopter and another 1.5 hours of flight by rotorcraft. After 10.5 hours of flight we find ourselves above the Arctic Circle in the Yakut tundra in an 8-hour time zone difference. Sometimes the body does not understand what it needs to do, rest or stay awake. But all this is just statistics. This is a separate conversation what happens next. The expedition is planned with the utmost precision, and even the slightest deviation or delay can disrupt the successful conduct of the hunt. It is worth noting the organization and conduct of mountain hunts. One way to the camp, located at an altitude of 3,000 m to 4,500 m, takes from 7-8 hours to 1.5 days. There are enough adventures while traveling to the camp. One day in 1999, I had to accompany an American hunter to hunt Marco Polo sheep to the Pamirs. We drove for two days. from Dushanbe to the camp by UAZ 452. The reason was a new road along the Afghan border along the Panj River. We were constantly checked by some military of childish age and slightly taller than the famous AKM, which, hanging from their fragile shoulders, dragged along the ground. The whole check at the posts was reduced to the request for cigarettes, or some sharply smelling muck and it happened 42 times throughout the route. They called it "nasvai". It is used instead of smoking tobacco in the east, and the locals put it under the tongue After our escorts gave them, what they asked, we could continue on our way. The locals warned us not to get out of cars in open places and not take pictures, because somebody can shoot from the Afghan side, taking the camera lens for the sight of a sniper rifle. The times were turbulent. Once we got stuck in the mountains, unable to share the road with oncoming cars, and we had to take the UAZ back, I stopped the driver so as not to fall into the abyss. Suddenly a few seconds later a boulder the size of half a car flew from above half a meter from the back of our car. I'm still grateful to heaven that we didn't let him drive an extra half meter. At last, on the second day we stopped in a mountain valley in pitch darkness in the Pamir mountains, at an altitude of about 4,000 m, because the local guide could not orient himself and take us to the camp. The temperature overboard was - 20 s. Dizziness and nausea in the first days of staying at altitude was a normal phenomenon, but it was perceived differently after two days of such a journey. Next should follow the hunt for the most prestigious trophy – the Marco Polo sheep. But sometimes you don't want anything after two days of such a road and being at such a height. You walk 100 meters from the dining room to your house with two stops. You have to constantly run to the toilet, because moisture flows out of you like from a cracked vessel. At the same time, you must constantly make up for this loss and drink a lot of fluids to restore the water balance in hypoxia. You shouldn't move abruptly until the adaptation is over. Any sudden movements lead to a sharp change in the activity of the heart and respiratory organs. You feel like you're being squeezed by a vise from the inside. If you are negligent about your health in these conditions, you are provided with altitude sickness. The consequences are as follows: severe heart failure; pulmonary edema (at this stage there is a chance to survive); brain edema, when nothing will help you anymore. The reader may ask, how do I know all this? A real outfitter should be well informed about what can happen in different climatic conditions. I have studied this issue a lot and have gone through certain stages of this disease myself! But, sometimes after going through all this stages, the hunters and I have few opportunities to make a full-fledged hunt due to bad weather conditions, which is not uncommon in the mountains. Sometimes we have to come back empty after going all this way. Fortunately, it happens extremely rarely. Another challenge that has to be overcome there is riding horses in mountainous terrain. We organize such hunts in the Altai Mountains, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan. We have nothing to do in the mountains without horses, if the hunter is not in a good physical form. Horses in the mountains are special. They are very hardy and walk well in the mountains. They help a lot. There are enough impressions for a long time when you sit in the saddle for 5-7 days in a row from 5 am to 5-6 pm. Once in Kyrgyzstan, we climbed on horseback on a slippery rock to a height of more than 4,800 meters in search of sheep. This is the height of the highest mountain of the Alps - Mont Blanc! In Tajikistan, we had to climb even higher when we're chasing the beast, although this word didn't suit for a slow ascent, to a height of more than 5,000 meters. There are other problems with horses. The worst thing for a horse is to get a hoof into a groundhog's hole. Then the horse may hurt its leg and you will have to walk back to the camp. But the most dangerous thing is when you fly over its head forward when the horse stumbles. If your foot get stuck in the stirrup, and you are guaranteed very serious problems. One of my colleagues in Kazakhstan got hit by a horse that dragged her about 500 meters over rocks. She was in the hospital for a long time after that. I was a little «luckier» in the same situation. The horse just crushed my legs pretty badly, without damaging the internal organs. But I still remember her hooves whistled near my head, which I covered with my hands. I was saved by my backpack with photo and video equipment and our guide, Beschen, who was there in time and restrained the horse with great difficulty. The second guide, who knew the seriousness of the situation, was ready to shoot the horse with a carbine. I will briefly tell you what other difficulties I had to overcome during my work. I hiked 10-15 kilometers a day in half a slope of mountains with two backpacks and a carbine at a temperature of +25-30 C in the absence of sufficient water. The special place takes the horse crossings in the mountains for 20-40 km per day from 4 to 7 days. I remember the riding horses through a snowy pass at a depth of 1.5 meters of snow cover. I should to mention about the night in a light tent in the snow at a temperature of - 15 C in the complete absence of clothes corresponding to winter conditions. Even waiting for a bear for 6-8 hours on a very light sitting in Siberia in the spring will not seem like a simple entertainment. Waiting for animal the same 6-8 hours in winter on the shooting tower at a temperature of - 20-25 C will seem like a great test of willpower and the whole body. You can ask me, why do you have to sit? The hunter cannot know which board is large and trophy size for the definite area so that it can be shot. The local hunters look at you as an oddball sometimes when you tell them about the need to be together with a client, though they receive the bulk of the money from the hunting tour. The outfitters in Russia are those people who were the first to instill in the local population the culture of real trophy hunting. Statements like: "And why do they come to shoot deer in "my" lands? I'm hunting here and I don't care about nobody", - I often heard especially from tipsy aborigines in Khakassia, Tuva, and the Altai Mountains. Fortunately, the bulk of local hunters began to understand that commercial trophy hunting is not only way to get meat, but decent earnings too. But it took many years to bring this idea to the consciousness of local guides. It cost us many "failed" tours, and most importantly - undermining the reputation, which is more expensive for us than money! Recently, already in 2017, I had to hear such a phrase addressed to my profession. "The main thing for outfitters is to have as many clients as possible!". Obviously, the author of this statement was referring to the flow of customers, in order for us to make a big profit. He omitted the main meaning of our work - to do the work efficiently. The author of the statement confused the outfitter with a clientele like in the travel company. Our reputation is formed, which is much more expensive for us than any money, is from the high quality of work. Not many people realize that only one hunter out of 3-4 willing to take part in the expedition, goes with us to the mountains, because it often happens that many of them cancel the trip after a detailed description of what he can expect in the mountains, many are aware that they simply will not get such a hunt both mentally and physically. Some hunters almost cry with such heavy loads, without calculating their strength, others are silent, bend their heads low, unable to squeeze out a word. It happened that I was told that they were just dying I always look into the client's eyes in such cases. Everything is written there. ( but you should read it). Do you remember how the referee behaves in the boxing ring. He looks into the eyes of a boxer sent to a knockdown. The "muddy" look speaks of the inability to continue the fight. I have seen such a look from clients. Then you don't think about hunting, but about saving the hunter himself. The first help includes urgent rest if it's needed, water and dried fruits, especially dried apricots. It was dried apricots that helped me to bring one client to the camp in the evening in pitch darkness after a whole day's journey (about 20 km) in 30-degree heat in the mountains. It happened in 90s, we haven't had sports nutrition on free sale, which I can now use effectively in such situations. The local guides also provide us with great help in such difficult situations. But I would like to tell you about them separately. I would like to note the statements of the guides that sometimes we and our clients walk along such routes and in such conditions that some employees of the special forces who come to them to hunt cannot move. Though they had to hunt with such specialists. One more duty of the outfitter is to control the process of how the taken trophy would be prepared for transportation. Unfortunately, the hunting staff still does not know everywhere how to skin an animal properly and how to preserve it, not to mention the specifics of the requirements of veterinary services in different countries. Here again we have to roll up our sleeves, pick up a knife and help the guides. I had to prevent outright spoiling of the trophy several times. It's another important point, for which our partners and customers respect us. Our work is impossible without a good knowledge of hunting weapons and their compliance with the conditions of the intended hunt and the stopping ability of the cartridge relative to the beast that is being hunted. We should give advice on choosing the caliber and type of bullet for a more successful hunt. This experience comes over the years and from the practice of hunting. The hunter's equipment and clothing, especially shoes is the most important point in preparing for any hunt. How to dress and what the weather is like in the hunting area is one of the very first questions that we have to answer to our clients. You could hardly offer the best clothing option for a particular type of hunting without going through all the hunts and having tried several types of equipment on yourself. Another circumstance without which we cannot work is the ability to determine the quality of the trophy at a distance. It's mainly the work of a guide, but it happens that the guide is young or just inexperienced and you have to take all the responsibility on yourself. We must honestly admit that the local guides sometimes try to expose an animal with clearly undervalued trophy qualities in relation to the price, it's because the of a certain system of trophy payment. Sometimes the huntsman cannot tell at all about the age of the red deer by its "roar" and the approximate weight of the horns by visual assessment, unlike African PH who can tell about the quality of the trophy and the length of the horns with an error of only 1-2 cm. So, we also have to regulate all these issues. And you need to know very well every kind of animal that you organize hunts for to do it. Imagine our schedule from the beginning of the hunting season in August. Approximately it may look like this. Caucasus, Kurgan, Yakutia, Altai Mountains, Kamchatka, Kyrgyzstan or Tajikistan, Khakassia. All this with a return to the center of Russia every time and with small breaks. Different time and climate zones, weather conditions. Height and pressure differences. Once I calculates how long time i have spent in air in one season from September to February, according to rough estimates, it was more than 100 (!) hours of pure flight time only in the air. In one of the seasons, I flew to the Pamirs three times in 6 months. What health you need to have in order to withstand all this together with the loads on the hunts. We are not accompanied by medical staff. You have to take care of your health and your insurance yourself. My masseur, with whom I take the course 1 time in 6 months, clicks his tongue every time and is surprised: "How can you clog the muscles of the shoulder girdle, lower back and legs in such a short time?” Although he knows perfectly well what and how I do. These rehabilitation courses are extremely necessary, and if I do not pass it in time, then I can "stand up" somewhere in the middle of the route due to the fact that the muscles will simply be "wooden". The desire to make video of the results of hunting for advertising purposes developed gradually into an independent direction of my activity. I shoot a lot of nature where we hunt, flowers and wild animals, what is i a separate "photo hunt". And how can I pass by the beauty created by the greatest creator – Nature! Photo hunting is perhaps even more exciting than usual hunting. You have to get much closer to the beast than when hunting with a carbine. A good picture is shot only from a distance of 10-20 meters. I had the good fortune to be at such a distance from the moose in Yakutia; a bear, a roe deer and a maral in Khakassia; a spotted deer in my Vladimir region, a roe deer in Kurgan, a Dagestan tour in North Ossetia (Alania), a Kuban tour and a bear in Adygea. Even experienced Yakut hunters told me, after they saw me 10 meters away from the giant moose, that it was the first time in all their practice that a hunter had approached a moose at such a distance. And it happened in full view of our entire field camp. It became possible thanks to the hunting skills that I acquired in my professional activity. I approached very cautious turs in the Caucasus by 20 meters, which caused genuine surprise and respect of the mountaineers with whom I was hunting. I bring a lot of photos and videos from each trip. They serve as a good base for my information products in addition to pleasant memories. The ability to present your product well is another component of our work. It so happened that I did not go on vacation for more than 15 years due to certain circumstances, with such enormous loads. Many of my friends say: "Why do you need a vacation? You already have a rest every time you travel!” And I offer them to join with me along our routes and "relax" in full with me. But none of them has expressed a desire yet. But I would not have endured so much time without rest if I did not love Nature, animals and my work! Being an outfitter is not just a job - it's a way of life! And it can't be any other way.
18.04.2019
East Sayan – under our feet

East Sayan – under our feet

The bare rocks of the the Sayan ridge sank in the milk of the low clouds,  whirlwinds moved fast along the fluffy gorges and flew up to the harsh "gendarmes" of gray granite. The hunters stood on the steep ledges, letting their faces to  the warm flow of the rising air.  They smiled happily and the amazing picture of the Yenisei River, trapped in the rocky gorge, opened under their feet. The professional traveler is always searching for the place, where no man had ever set foot, where human beings didn’t spoiled the masterpieces created by the Nature or God.  My family asked me, Why did I want to go to the Sayan. And I replied without hesitation: “ I want to see it!” The Sayan Mountains are very different, from the one side on the West, it has Mid Asian landscape but from the other side behind Altai, the Eastern Siberia is the Kingdom of the mighty Yenisei, which filled the space between the steeps.  The combination of the  severity of  rocks and the softness of  water, the turquoise of the sky and the emerald of the summer taiga haunts me from my last visit to the Baikal Ridge and makes me look for such places in different parts of the world. Last year I came across to the photo report of the Swedish hunter where he showed the unknown places of Russia. I took me some time to know what hunting place was mention in that report and who was its owner. I ascertained that that area was very popular among Scandinavian hunters and all good dates had been booked for the next three years already. I need to mention that I promised my Spanish friend to organize the hunt for the Altai Ibex but it was closed in the national parks of Kazakhstan and I couldn’t kept this promise. That’s why I suggested him to try to get the trophy of the Siberian Ibex. The outfitter recommended November as the best period but Jordy had lots of work at that time, that's why we had just one possibility to hunt in August. Fortunately we were able to  arrange it. We knew that Ibexes preferred to hide in the highlands at that time but it couldn’t stop us. The countdown to the end of August 2018 began. It took us long time to reach the place.  First of all we flew from Almaty to Moscow and then to Siberia, then we drove about two hundred km by car to the Yenisei River and several hundred km went upstream by high-speed boat. What could you feel when left the civilization and the nearest human settlement was in hundreds km from us? You are right- HAPPINESS!ACCURATE SHOT  The base camp was done in the Scandinavian styly, very clean. In the evening we got acquaintances with the guides and early morning went up to the mountains. The temporary camp was decided to set at the watershed, the tents, food and water had been delivered there already. We climbed and carried our sleeping bags and tents in the case if we had to move between bare rocks (goltzy).  We detected some herds of Ibexes when stopped for the first time. They included young males and female with cubs but it was a good sign.   Finally we came to the place where vertical one km rise started.  We made several stops and even drank tea while climbing. The  powerful thunderstorm with hail, thunder and lightning covered us on the top. We waited out the weather under the piece of polyethylene which our guide grabbed just in case. We observed Ibexes while ascending – some groups, from 2 to 15 animals, grazed on the  open spots after the rain.  In two hours before the sunset we reached the temporary camp. We didn’t have time to set the camp because went for the reconnaissance and encountered nose-to-nose with the group of young males which pose before us and went down in 200m lower. Suddenly the herd of males came out of the forest where we were going to spend the night. It included more than a dozen and a half of males from 5 to 8 years. I has to remind that the trophy of the Siberian Ibex is smaller than the trophy of the Mid Asian one. The champion of Altai Goat  has 135 sm, thought the champion of the Tian Shan has 160 sm. We weren’t upset by the absence of the old male because our adventure had just began and we took pictures and video with the great pleasure. The day came to the end, Ibexes grazed in 200m below us. Suddenly the group of animals led by the old male appeared from behind the cliff.  Its white neck was clearly visible in the twilight. We checked its size in the optics. It had the trophy size. Jordy decided not to tempt the fate and it was the professional decision. If you find the trophy , take it! I had to make video and assist him if necessary.  The goats huddled together but he made the shot at last. The Ibex fell like a log. Accurate shot! We were happy, hugged and congratulated each other.  We made the photo shoot in the last rays of the sun, cut meat and came back to the camp. That evening was continued in the culinary and folklore way. We cooked the liver and the tenderloin, drank  Rom and narrated hunting stories. ADVENTURES  In the morning we packed up the camp leisurely and started to descend , we had to make primary trophy processing and kept meat.  The sun was burning mercilessly. I didn’t know who that, but I tired more than in a day before while climbing. In the camp we had rest, swam and steamed in the bath. Our cook Vasily created culinary masterpieces and fed us in every way. In the evening we went for fishing with spinning rod. The locals treated it with some skepticism, but when r we caught excellent perches in a half an hour, they also armed with tackles. Next day Jordy decided to stay in the base he wanted to hunt for a roe deer in the evening. I and our guide Vasily went to the mountains at 5 am. The first aim was to get the mountain camp and take some things and food from there, the second one to move to another hunting area.  We rose by the southern slope, it was hard because we carried water. In the half way we noticed deer, two more males  fighted in the bushes and we could hear them. It was hard to scramble without the path but we did it in two hours. It was a pity that I didn’t understand well our outfitter and took not the right backpack. It seemed to me that we'd set the booth near the river and would go up for a hunt each morning, that why I took just the small assault backpack. If I knew that out trip would be in the trekking style I’d choose the bigger one. So, my backpack was covered by equipment and was bloated like a barrel. There was the climb once again. Sometime the path led by the ridge but mostly through the forest.  Taiga in this part was very different, sometimes it was light, nice and not cluttered but sometimes it looked like the dense forest from the horror. Trees were covered by lichens, overgrown with mosses and thickets of rhododendrons. In a couple hours after we left the first camp, the disaster almost happened.   We were walking and talking with Vasily when in twenty meters from us the bear rose up. It was the big, black male. I tear the rifle and click the shutter reflexively, the bear stood on the hind legs but then turned and ran away.  Nothing extraordinary, the bear slept when we disturbed it. We went on, when noticed something flashed  in the bushes in two hundred meters from us by the right side. The bear ran away to the left. I said to Vasily that something was wrong. We chose to come the open glade because there weren’t trees or bushes. I took off the backpack and we waited. Soon we saw  the crouching  bear, it tried to reach us behind the scrubs. We moved like the bullet to another side of the glade and the bear hid in rhododendrons.  Vasily was very surprise because it looked like the bear hunted for us.  “Let’s wait and see- I suggested.- If it appear from the other side I’d shoot”. In thirty seconds the bear came from the bushed definitely to our backpacks. I looked to his eyes and understood that he was thinking whom he would eat first.  I realized that I should pay two thousand dollars for the bear’s license and we’d lose two day going down and up and fired over the shaggy head.  He jumped up in surprise and rushed away.  Suddenly in three hundred meters the wolf, whom we also disturbed, pop up and disappeared in the forest while I was deciding to fire or wait for the bear attack. -!!!... !!!! – Vasily cried to side where the bear ran away.  It was the first time in his life when the animal behaved in such way and the third in mine.  Just imagine what can happen if we don’t have rifles? We took a little breath, cursed the clubfoot  and went on. It was the hot day and we drank a half of all water we had before we reached the camp. At 5 pm we set the camp and went to scout. Unfortunately we didn’t see anything at that day, just females with cubs. We were so tired that went to sleep after eat a little bit of soup. THE OTHER MAN We got up before dawn, drank the rest of the water and went to check other places. The mountain crest was littered by the burned woods. Probably the lightnings often strike here. To walk through such windbreak is a special pleasure. The grass brained the fallen trunks of the fir trees and you can fall and scrap your feet on the branches there. We tried to step on the trunks only and jumped from one to another like equilibrists. In few hours we observed several km of the rocky slopes where the Siberian Ibex inhabited but detected just females and young males.  According the map it wasn’t the main mountain massif there and I hoped that we’d move to the next location and tried to look for the trophy there because the next place looked more promising.  I hinted my guide about it but he avoided the question what looked strange.  At last he broke down and confessed that we couldn’t move to that place because  THE OTHER MAN was there at that time!  It explained the activity in the base camp and why the main manager was so mysterious and other things. It was shown on TV later. The guide felt very uncomfortable but I calmed him and said that we’d find our trophy here. And really at 9 am we spot a trophy size male in three km from us in the gorge.  We knew what to do next.  While I prepared Vasiliy distinguished the sleeping maral and it rose our mood even higher.  We just needed to came back to the tents, find water, shift the camp and spot this goat once again in the evening. And we did so!  TO FIND WATER Most of all I worried how we’d find water in the forest. I remembered Confucius’s words about the black cat but Vasily ensured me that we would find wet spots- the natural puddles. In Russian he called it “mochazhina” and it sounded similar like “urine” and  it confused me. Moreover I didn’t see any puddle while we crossed the forest, it was absolutely dry.  I was afraid that we’d lose the last strength trekking in the forest and wouldn't find any water. But we found it  in an hour when we went to the camp #3. The “mochazhina” was the ordinary puddle with green water. There were plantations of the wild blackberries and cowberry about it. We arranged a halt and boiled tea! It made us peaceful and calm.   Taiga around us was light. A thick carpet from mosses and lichens softened our steps,  mushrooms of all colors and shapes burned like the bright decorations on the green velvet of the grass, cranberries and stone berry glowed ruby color under the sunny rays.  Sharp pyramids of rocks stood under the crowns, like in the lost world of Cameron's "Avatar". Sometimes a stone capercaillie soared with the loud noise or  a flock of grouse flew with the thin squeak. I really wanted to believe that we were the  pioneers here. Though I realized that it wasn’t true. The forest saw people and not once. Vasily spent here more than thirty years.  We came to the small top and found the geodetic beacon there. It was settled in 1932. The time of the pioneers ended between 30 and 60 years of the last century, when geodetic and geological expeditions meticulously investigated and described in detail the entire territory of the vast USSR. The sharp whistle and movements in the forest interrupted my thoughts. “What’s going on once again?”  But it happened to be a musk deer- small deer with the long fangs instead of horns hid in the thicket, near the rocks. It stood there for a moment and disappeared in the twilight forest. -Taiga opens before you- said my guide with respect. - Ya, it opens- I agreed and joked-  but hope I won’t strangle in its arms. My friends say that hunting luck loves me but if you spend so much time in the forest as I, it will love you too.  One old hunter said that the God of Hunt pays us for doing good and because we  love Nature. I liked this thought but could devoted much time to  it because we arrived to the camp #3. It was about 3 pm. We set the camp , take on sleeping bags and fell asleep without hind legs. The body during the days of the expedition ordeal exhausted but isotonic “Isostar” helped much.  The humidity there was high like in tropics, we constantly sweated and lost electrolytes which had to be restored. I drank about three liters of water each day plus some tea and soup. I didn’t have appetite and eat just carbohydrate bars, chocolate and  rusks.  THE TROPHY I prepared everything for the evening hunt, cleaned the barrel of the rifle with the soft ramrod, greased the swivels with the lard and wiped lenses. We were ready.  It would became dark at 7.56 pm according my Garmin, but thanks the low cloud the twilight started at 7pm. The first males appeared in ten minutes but they all were too young.  They made strange maneuvers coming in and out from the forest in 60 meters below us.  They used to hide in the forest during the day because the sun beat down mercilessly. I guessed that it could be colder in the Zailiyskiy Alatau at that time.   It was almost the sunset but we didn’t see big males yet.  Suddenly the youth gathered together and moved to the other decay. We also decided to change the place and ran to the left, there was the slope with the dominant rock.  In the twilight I saw the trophy males which came from the wood and started to graze. We approached them and did it so fast that the sweat filled my eyes. I made the final approach alone, left the guide on the ridge.  The only thing which I worried was to have enough light to see the aiming mark ( I didn’t remember when changed the battery last time in my old Wortex). The information for those who needed: I used the rifle Christensen Arms custom carbon 300 Win Mag; Vortex scops Viper 4-16x50; Federal ammunition 180 gr Accubond; Kryptek gear; Shlumberjack carbine 2500 backpack; Harris bipod. There were two big males at first but I found just one when  reached the place from where I could shoot. I meant that I didn’t choice. I took the comfortable positon but at the last moment the Ibex jumped up and disappeared. I changed the position and spot the other goat. It was that the good-looker which we observed before. I took the aim at its shove and fired without hesitation. The males and a couple of females ran away just the one female left and watched to the bush. I looked through the sight and saw that I got it. Vasily shouted to shoot because it ran away but I showed him that we won! We made pictures before the sun went down, cut meat and hoisted the head on the nearest tree to prevent the wild animals would damage it. Then we gathered the last force and went up six hundred vertical meters along the slope which was covered by the thorny Bush. We arrived to the camp late at night.  The forest path was lit by the Moon and it wasn’t scary to go. We could only drink some “puddle” tea and went to sleep. In the morning we had to work once again, we packed the camp and went back to the trophy. It took us six more hours to get the boat. We stopped just once in Vasily’s cabin. In the evening after the bath we drank some wine, which Jordy took from Spain, and told our stories.  My fellow didn’t seat quiet too and got the good trophy of the Siberian roe. I had to add just one thing. Our outfitter was  Prohunt. KZ, thank you very much to them for this adventure.
29.03.2019
Али Алиев
Phylogeographic history of Eastern Siberian snow sheep populations

Phylogeographic history of Eastern Siberian snow sheep populations

This material is based on the article published in Ecology and Evolution (8/2018) under the title "SNP genome analysis reveals the genetic structure and phylogeographic history of populations of snow sheep (Ovis nivicola) inhabiting the Verkhoyansk Mountains and Momsky Ridge (northeast Siberia)". The authors: Arsen V. Dotsev, Tatiana E. Deniskova Innokenty M. Okhlopkov Gabor MSzRos, Johann Zilker, Henry Ryder, Klaus Wiemers, Gottfried Brem, Natalya Zinovieva. The Snow sheep or the Siberian bighorn (Ovis nivicola Eschscholtz, 1829) occupies the northernmost range among all Asian sheep species: from the Putorana Plateau in the west to the Chukotka Peninsula in the east and from the coast of the Sea of Okhotsk in the south to the coast of the Arctic Ocean in the north. Being the only large herbivorous mammal in the mountainous regions of the north-east of Russia, snow sheep play an important role in the ecosystems of the region, the main features of which are weak stability, vulnerability and low ability to restore the environment. Snow sheep inhabit in several natural zones with different types of climate and natural environment. They could not survive environmental changes caused by anthropogenic factors, despite the fact that the snow sheep have a high resistance to various climatic conditions. The snow sheep has been displaced by human activities such as mining, road construction, industrial development and intensive reindeer husbandry. The reason that many subspecies of snow sheep are found mainly in high-altitude areas was prolonged human pressure. This is confirmed by the data that a number of populations that have lived in lowlands, coastal areas and mountains of medium height several decades ago do not currently exist. Consequently, the distribution of snow sheep is now intermittent, they live in fragmented territories in various mountain systems. According to the Ministry of Natural Resources and Ecology of the Russian Federation, in 2016 the total number of snow sheep amounted to 78 thousand individuals. The largest groups inhabit Yakutia, Kamchatka and the Okhotsk Sea coast. A few years ago, the Putorana and Chukotka snow sheep subspecies received a special conservation status – they are listed in the Red Book of the Russian Federation. It is necessary to study their genetic diversity to characterize the importance of individual populations for the survival and adaptability of species, as well as to develop measures for their conservation. DNA analysis allows to make this. DNA is the main molecule of the smallest unit of a living organism and is a "double helix", two complex biochemical molecules are twisted spirally around each other. Each of the helices consists of a certain sequence of smaller biological molecules - nucleotides. Each nucleotide of one helix is reliably connected by chemical bonds not only with the preceding and subsequent nucleotides, but also with one of the nucleotides of the second helix. Roughly speaking, DNA forms a kind of rope ladder twisted spirally along the longitudinal axis. Thirty-five years ago, the English geneticist Alec Jeffries discovered that the DNA chains of different individuals have unique sequences of nucleotides, it means that they do not repeat in different individuals. Since then, a method of DNA analysis has appeared, which has been seriously improved over time and has been actively used to identify the slightest differences in the composition of DNA samples taken from different organisms in order to identify the degree of their relationship. Most of the DNA sequences of different animal’s match in composition, but there are repetitive elements (tandem repeats), the number of which varies from individual to individual. The more sections of the genome (or loci) is analyzed when compiling a DNA profile, the higher the accuracy of the study. DNA analysis remains a technologically complex procedure, despite scientific progress, since we are talking about the study of microscopic structures consisting of millions of "letters", the sequence of which should be established. We should make a great job before to "read" a molecule. First of all it has to be isolated, then copied (amplified) repeatedly, and then sequenced – "cut" into small pieces convenient for subsequent analysis. The most promising method of studying genetic diversity and population structure is the analysis of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP). Special DNA microchips are widely used to identify them. DNA microchips are a set of small single-stranded molecules (probes) that are covalently sewn to a solid base. Each such probe has a strictly defined sequence of nucleotides and a place on the microchip. Fragments of the DNA under study are labeled with various fluorescent labels (for subsequent detection) and applied to a microchip. The hybridization of complementary single-stranded molecules occurs during incubation, under the action of the polymerase enzyme. All non-complementary parts of the DNA are removed during the subsequent washing of the chip. After that, the microchip is scanned using a laser, which causes fluorescence of the labeled molecules of the sample. A microscope connected to a computer evaluates the fluorescence of each site of the DNA microchip, and identifies the sequences of nucleotides in the DNA of the test sample. The creation of the SNP database of wild animals would be an important step for a better understanding of their phylogenetic relationships and genetics in general and could be used in the "fingerprinting" of wild animals. But the problem is that there are no reference genomes. We have made an assumption that the interspecific use of commercially available SNP chips intended for livestock will also be useful in studies of their closely related wild relatives. It is known that in 2009 the population structure of the European bison was evaluated using the BovineSNP50 BeadChip chip created for cattle. The same chip was used for local deer species in North America, when they were differentiated in 2012, including mule deer, black-tailed deer and white-tailed deer. In 2015, Russian researchers demonstrated the applicability of BovineSNP50 BeadChip to study the complete genome of reindeer. In 2011, the scientists used the OvineSNP50 BeadChip "sheep" chip, for SNP genotyping of two wild Ovis species - the snow sheep and the Dall sheep was performed. The aim of our study was to study the genetic diversity and population structure of snow sheep (O. nivicola) in the north-east of Russia and to obtain information that could be used in the development of conservation strategies and in understanding the taxonomy and evolution of snow sheep based on genotypes. Research Samples of snow sheep muscle tissue were collected under permits issued by the Hunting Department of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia) during scientific and hunting expeditions. Some samples have been given by representatives of indigenous peoples who have a license to hunt snow sheep for personal consumption, in accordance with the Federal Law of the Russian Federation. The sampling sites of snow sheep are shown in Figure 2a. The samples selected for analysis (n = 80) were extracted in different parts of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), in the territory between 63- and 71-degrees north latitude and between 128- and 146-degrees east longitude during 2011-2016. They were divided into five groups according to their geographical location. Four populations represented the chain of the Verkhoyansk mountain system, including the Kharaulakh ridge near Tiksi Bay (TIK, n = 22), the Orulgan ridge (ORU, n = 22), the central part of the Verkhoyansk Ridge (VER, n = 15) and the Suntar-Hayata ridge (SKH, n = 13). The fifth population included sheep inhabiting the Momsky ridge (MOM, n = 8). The isolation, DNA processing and analysis of single nucleotide polymorphisms were carried out in accordance with accepted methods using the BeadChip Illumina OvineSNP50 chip. Statistical analysis and mathematical processing of the results were carried out using appropriate software. A total of 80 samples from different animals with at least 90% SNP genotyping were examined. It was shown that MOM, SKH, VER and ORU are related to each other, TIK was an isolated group associated with ORU only , it means that the Orulgan ridge is the territory where the two groups mixed. We found that the levels of heterozygosity in the populations of snow sheep increased to the south; the minimum values were observed in the northernmost population – TIK, and the maximum values - in the southernmost population – SKH. Discussion The snow sheep (Ovis nivicola Eschscholtz, 1829) is the least genetically studied species within the subgenus Pachyceros, which also includes the Dalla and Stone sheep (Ovis dalli), the Rocky Mountain bighorn and the Desert bighorn (Ovis canadensis), which inhabit in North America. The sample collection is problematic due to the inaccessibility of the habitat of snow sheep, and such studies are limited. To date, Bunch and co-authors (2006) have conducted a phylogenetic analysis of four samples of snow sheep of the Magadan region. Danilkin (2005) analyzed the mitochondrial DNA of 40 samples obtained from the Kamchatka Peninsula, the Koryak Mountains, Chukotka, the Putorana Plateau, the Verkhoyansky Ridge and the Kodar Ridge. Denisova and co-authors (2016) demonstrated the successful use of the BeadChip OvineSNP50 chip designed for domestic sheep in the evaluation of snow sheep. We analyzed 80 samples of snow sheep with the usage of the BeadChip Illumina OvineSNP50 chip developed for domestic sheep. All samples had been harvested in various ranges of Yakutia, namely in the Kharaulakh and Orulgan ranges, the central part of the Verkhoyansk ridge, the Suntar-Khayat ridge and the Momsky ridge. The number of snow sheep inhabiting these territories is about 40 thousand individuals, which exceeds half the number of species. 1121 polymorphic SNPs distributed across all autosomes were selected for analysis. Multidimensional scaling (MDS) showed that all the samples in our study were grouped according to their geographical location (Fig. 2). Then an assessment of individual origin was carried out to identify the level of impurity between populations. The new data have suggested that TIK and MOM have either different hereditary origins or long-term isolation, and the three remaining populations are characterized by different levels of admixture between them. TIK (99.4%) and MOM (100%) showed no traces of admixture with other populations. There is only a minor ORU component (0.6%) detected in TIK. ORU (84.3%) was significantly mixed with TIK (10.5%) and VER (5.1%). A higher level of impurity with TIK was observed for the northernmost ORU samples. Only minor components of other populations were found in VER (94.9%) and SKH (96.6%). Such results show a low level of gene flow between populations of snow sheep. It can be explained by the fact that snow sheep are non-migratory animals. This has been confirmed by other methods. When they say that an organism is heterozygous, it means that the copies of the genes (or this gene) in each of the homologous chromosomes are slightly different from each other, that is, they have small differences among themselves. SNP analysis showed that heterozygosity in snow sheep populations increased southward. This can be explained by the fact that these parameters are influenced by gene flow rates and genetic drift. TIK, which is characterized by the lowest values of heterozygosity, is located on the northern border of the distribution of the species. The only gene transfer for this population is possible with ORU population. Probably the decrease in diversity occurred due to the loss of rare alleles (a heterozygous organism contains two different forms - alleles - of the same gene located at the same loci of homologous chromosomes). The highest level of heterozygosity was found in the CX, which is located at the intersection of various ridges, including Central Verkhoyansk, Chersky and Sette-Dabban, where the animals from different populations can mix. Such an admixture makes it possible to maintain the parameters of genetic diversity at a higher level. It was found that the origin of TIK is different from MOM, SKH and VER. ORU has been characterized as a mixed population. Most likely, ORU was an isolated population from other groups of snow sheep during the Late Pleistocene glaciation of the Verkhoyansk Ridge. Glaciers in that region reached their maximum extent about 140 thousand years ago, and further series of glaciations lasted up to 50 thousand years ago. Ice masses were concentrated in the mountains and did not extend more than 270 km beyond the ridges. Apparently, the low Kharaulakh mountains played the role of a glacial shelter for the population of snow sheep. When the last melting of glaciers occurred in the Verkhoyansk ridge about 50 thousand years ago, its territory was inhabited by animals that inhabited glacier-free territories in the south and southeast, as well as animals of the Kharaulakh Mountains. The groups of snow sheep met in the Orulgan ridge and gave birth to a mixed population - ORU after several thousand years in isolation. These results demonstrate the main role of glaciation events in the genetic diversity and distribution of subarctic species, such as bighorn sheep, and are consistent with studies on the survival of a group of Dall sheep (Ovis dalli) in a small refugium (Sim, Hall, Jex, Hegel & Coltman, 2016). Conclusions Our research has shown that the studied populations of snow sheep are genetically structured in accordance with the geographical structure. The parameters of genetic diversity (observed and expected heterozygosity and allelic diversity) increased southward with minimum values in the northernmost population - TIK and maximum values in the southernmost population - SKH. It was found that the snow sheep, which inhabit the territories of the Verkhoyansk Ridge and Momsky Ridge originate from two different ancestral populations, although they were usually considered one subspecies, known as Yakutia snow sheep (Ovis nivicola lydekkeri). The studied population from the Kharaulakh ridge (TIK) represents the descendants of a group that has been isolated from other groups of snow sheep for a long time, most likely during the glaciation of northeastern Siberia. A mixture between that population and migrants from other studied groups occurred on the Orulgan ridge. We suggest that the group of Haraulakh snow sheep should be treated with extreme caution since the number of their population is quite small, and they inhabit a limited territory located in a low-mountainous area, which makes them easy prey for poachers. We propose to classify this group as a separate subspecies, as one of the solutions. Gratitude The work was carried out with the financial support of the Russian Science Foundation with project No. 14-36-00039. We are grateful to Eduard V. Bendersky and the Club of Mountain Hunters (http://kgo-club.ru) for providing samples. We thank anonymous reviewers for their careful reading of our manuscript, comments and suggestions.
21.03.2019
Арсен В. Доцев
Баран Марко Поло

Hunting of Sergey Yastrzhembsky in Tadzhikistan

Hunting of Sergey Yastrzhembsky in Tadzhikistan in December, 2018. The trophies- Marco Polo and Pamir Ibex.
05.03.2019
КГО
I will remember it

I will remember it

December is the last hunting month for ungulates in Kazakhstan. This period is favorite among hunters and not only because of the last opportunity to close the license. The goats leave the hard-to-reach mountain peaks and go down to the leaf area at that time. It’s easier to wait out bad weather there. Though there are some animals which stay on the height if there are enough food and open places. I had one license for the Siberian Ibex and decided to hunt in Almaty region before the New Year holidays. I decided all organizational questions with my guide and started to prepare for the hunt. Day temperature was always below zero that’s why I chose the warm clothes from the activity range clothes. I use Kadog model of the well-known hunting brand Kryptek for many years. These clothes suit well for the cold weather, even -15C and keep you warm and dry, especially when you add sweat-wicking and breathable Merino underwear. My list of equipment: sleeping bag (one for me and another one for the guide, sun-glasses (must have), a couple of shovels and chains. I always use chains just for the back wheels, good winter spikes tires work well on the ice road. That’s all, everything is ready. Mountains wait for us. I picked up the guide at 10 pm not to waste time in the traffic jam. We drank some coffee and refueled the car on the way. The road was dry and comfortable in comparison with the way back, we talked and discussed plans for tomorrow morning. I’d been in that hunting grounds before and knew where we’d hunt. The only thing, which I worried, was the place near foothills where the river is covered by ice and it’d be difficult to cross it. We turned away from the road and put on chains just not to make it on the slope. There were not much snow in the gorge but we pushed through it few times. The chains helped us on the ice. It was strong and we crossed all dangerous parts without any problems. It took us three hours to drive to the base camp (the place where we were going to leave the car). There we drank tea and went to sleep. We had enough time and woke up with the first sunrays. Our plan was to track down animals. For the breakfast we drank tea and eat buckwheat with bear’s meat. We went to the mountains following the wild pig tracks and noticed two roe deer on the opposite slope. They lay across each other watching for predators. We walked about six km and gained 400 m altitude when used the binoculars. The first group was noticed in 3 km from us. It included 5 female goats and the young male. We watched for them for a while and went on further. Our goal is an adult male. There were some males here according my experience and guide’s talks. We saw the group of snowcocks while walking. It’s was interesting contrast when all northern slopes were covered by snow but you could seat and take the sun bathe on the southern one. We came down to the car and decided to change the location and drove to another gorge. The slopes there were steeper but I could observe more tracks there though they were far. We are the strong guys and used to conquer mountains. I gave my frame backpack to the guide and it helped us in future. It was sunny freezing day. We saw lots of tracks on the snow and the higher we walked the more fresh they were but didn’t notice animals. We walked about 15 km and climbed 600m height when saw the group of Ibexes. There were 3 trophy size males with good horns and three females with two cubs. They grazed on the opposite slope through the gorge. It was unusual that they were so close to the forest. I started to creep them up and shortened the distance to 500 m. It’d be possible to shot but I’d prefer to come closer and increase my chances to hit the aim. The unsuccessful shot could dream all your life time after time. I dislike shooting through the gorge because you don’t know how the wind will blow. It’s difficult to define its destination if there isn’t any grass on the slope. I snuck like a leopard and looked for the place where I could shot. There weren’t any big stones or trees and suddenly I thought about the backpack. It was a good idea and asked the guide to take it off. I measured the distance –about 380 m and angler of 35 degrees. The guide bent down the bush and put the backpack on it and I pushed the bipod. The constriction was so unstable but I didn’t have choice. The Ibex stood breast to me. The finger slowly pulled the trigger,The gunsight reticle waved in the right place. I shot! Silence! I heard the guide’s voice- Miss! How could I miss it? But the next moment he shouted- No! You got it. I forgot about cold, distance and thirsty. Looked to the animal through the scope sight, it was lying behind the bush. Other animals left the place slowly and disappeared behind the pass. I took the gun and went for the prey. The Ibex was dead. I asked him to forgive me and paid tribute to Bayanay. We pulled the meat down, drank tea and had a short rest. It took us time to cut the meat from the bones. They were too heavy to carry them to the camp. Then packed everything and went the way back. I was dreaming about future hunts and think about next year while coming back. This year is closed and I’d never forget how I did it
09.02.2019
Роман Полисецкий
Russian Mountain Hunting Award

Russian Mountain Hunting Award

Three years ago the Club of Mountain Hunters established Russian Mountain Hunting Award (RMHA). It’s awarded by getting 13 species and subspecies which inhabit in Russia. Eight people, from three countries- Russia, Belarus and USA became the winners. Two years ago we wrote about the prize and its history but the number of our readers and club members increased that’s why we decided to remind about this marvelous prize. This piece of art has the traditional form of Russian Ladle, made from crystal and decorated with silver-plated bronze. The metallic decoration is made in the form of rocks with the ram on the one side and the hunter on the other. The organizing committee decided to create the prize using historical traditions of awarding in the Russian Empire. The choice fell to the Ladle- the traditional Russian form. The ladle, has been the imperial or ambassadorial present, and sends us to the past of the our history. Such form was very popular in the Russian jewelry school in XIX-beginning of XX centuries, especially among the Imperial Court suppliers – Hlebnikov Ivan Petrovich and Ovchinikov Pavel Akimovich and others. We know about the royal insignias which were made in the Ladle form. During the First World War Nicholas II awarded the most distinguished military units by the Ladles with the composition “The hunter with the spear and the bear”. This silver-plated bronze decoration is made by Saint Petersburg Sculptor Vladislav Maslov, one of the most famous animal sculptor in our time. He’s known for his creatures made in the easel sculpture manner and for miniature sculpture. The crystal cup is produced in the Dyatkovo crystal factory in the Bryansk region. The prize is awarded for getting 13 hunting species in Russia. Kolyma Snow Sheep Koryak Snow Sheep (harvested on the Kamchatka Koryak Highland) Okhotsk Snow Sheep Yakutia Snow Sheep Kamchatka Snow Sheep Chukotka Snow Sheep ( harvested on the Koryak Highland in Chukotka) Caucasian Chamois Mid-Caucasian Tur Kuban (Western) Tur Mid-Caucasian Tur  Dagestan (Eastern)  Siberian Ibex (harvested in Sayany)   Altay Ibex (from Russia) The award conferment is taken by the Trophy commission of the CMH and is hand to the winners once in a year on the New Year Party, organized for the Club’s members.. Three people become the first nominee in 2016. Number One: Alexander Egorov- member of the Club’s Board of Trustees and the hunter who is well known among the hunting world. The last trophy in his list was Siberia Ibex. The other nominees are the living legend of the Mountain Hunts Hossein Golabchi and the CMH’s President Edward Bendersky. The 13th Edward’s trophy became Mid-Caucasian Chamois which he got in the Karmadon gorge. You’d read about Hossein Golabchi in our magazine N4/2015 but its’ useful to remind about him one more time. All hunting world knows him under the name Sudi, he is the Iranian- American. Mr. Golabchi is the owner of the most outstanding trophies of Marco Polo. There are about 50 rams and 30 ibexes on his account including 25 species and subspecies of Ibexes and 35 rams. Two more hunters became the nominee of the Russian Mountain Hunting Award in 2017- businessman Sergey Mazurkevich and Victor Kim - the Person 2017, according to our magazine. Sergey Puzankevich from Belarus became the second foreign hunter after Hossein Golabchi who won the Prize and became the owners of “Star of Glory” from the “The Magic of the Real Safari”. We regularly print his hunting reports and articles. The next one is Vladislav Reznik. Our readers know his articles and reports, which you can find in the magazine. Let us, introduce the last nominee in 2018 Alexey Sedov. This enthusiastic hunter is not known to the wide circle of our readers yet. Alexey, as Victor Kim, got involved into mountain hunting in the advanced age. Once, driving home from the traditional pen hunting, he got into the conversation with one of the experienced mountain hunter who suggested him to try. The companion told about all difficulties and excitement which each hunter meet and feel in the mountain. Alexey is from Sochi. His childhood passed in the mountains where they were tracking and training. But he never treated to the mountains like to the hunting area. After that Alexey decided to get comprehend the science of mountain hunting. All vacations were devoted to the mountain expeditions. In three years he conquered all main mountain ranges in Russia. Some of the hunts were successful from the first time, other places he visited several times getting experience from the each trip. Alexey’s caught “the mountain virus” which sends him to the new expeditions. We want to wish him new unforgettable adventures and great trophies. Prizewinners of the Russian Mountain Award Alexader Egorov Edward Bendersky Hossein Golabchi Viktor Kim Sergey Mazurkevich Vladislav Reznik Sergey Puzankevich Alexey Sedov Editorial Board heartily congratulates the successful hunters and wishes them to conquer new peaks!
07.02.2019
Магия настоящего САФАРИ
Crake

Crake

Once early summer I was walking with the dog in the fields when heard the sharp creaky sounds. What was it. I’d never heard such sounds before they were like frog’s croaking. They beckoned me and I started to sneak up through the thick grass toward the bushes between the field and the forest. One careless step could damage everything and my malamute, which followed behind , interfered me. He noticed that I was hiding something and wanted to know and I decided not to scold him, It’d be better. Sounds were close then broke and appeared in the other side. Somebody lead me a pretty dance. It wasn’t me tracking down, somebody was watching me. It was small but very tricky bird. Crex-crex. It looped like a hare. I tried to find it for an hour. Each time when the sound was near I hoped to see it but without any result. I was wet, sweated and bated by mosquitoes. It became darker and I came back. Going home I imagined woodcock or jack-snipe but they didn’t make such sounds. I wanted to know what was it and how to get it tomorrow. I was sure that I’d not calm down. I found all information at home. It was the landrail or sometimes it’s called corncrake or crake. A small hen is 20-25 sm. In Latin it’s called Crex-Crex. It leaves on foot from the pursuit and flies only in very dangerous situations and not far. I dreamed about its feather on the hat. Early morning I came to the place where heard the bird yesterday and went around all thickets and bumps. Nothing! I didn’t talk anybody about it but thought about it all day and was nervous. How to get it? I took the gun and went by regular route. The wild field was covered by blooming herbs. Their smells merged into a medicinal scent similar to cough syrup. Grasshoppers crackled and midges buzzed everywhere. It sounded like a real orchestra, the concert for the crake with the orchestra! He started to solo and louder than yesterday. The air rang from his singing. It’s possible to come close while it’s belling like to the capercaillie. It doesn’t see or hear anything at that moment. I read that that bird is very sly but couldn’t perceive that so. It turns the head to the one side but shouts to another. Why couldn’t It ran away or keep silence? It confused me. It was getting dark and mosquitos became crazy. I was tired but wanted to find him no matter what it cost me. I had to find another way how to get it, sat on the stone and found video with the landrail on youtube. When it was loaded the bird’s voice from the phone rang out to the whole neighborhood. Suddenly my brown One with grey flakes replied to it! I was shocked! The video worked like a decoy. The cheater was trapped. I took the gun and aimed. It looked straight to me and talked with the bird from my phone. I spend two days trapping it, dreamed how I’d get it and now was just sitting and watching him. I was happy! It tried to lead me away from the nest and I thought it teased me. Smart bird. It was the successful hunt though I came home without the trophy. I always follow the creak of the crake from that time and often fell into its trap.
02.02.2019
Горные системы Гиссаро-Алай и Памир в границах Республики Таджикистан

Forms of the Siberian Ibex in the Republik of Tajikistan

Distribution area of the Siberian Ibex in the Republic of Tajikistan includes two mountain systems: Pamir-Alay and Hissar-Alay (Fig. 1). Geographically they are separated by the Alay valley and the river Vakhsh with its upper tributaries – river Surhob and Kyzyl-Suu, flowing on the bottom of this valley. Hissar-Alay mountain system comprises four big ridges. Western and middle part include Turkestan, Hissar and Zeravashan ridges with their spurs; eastern part includes Alay ridge. Pamir includes numerous large and average mountain ridges, most often characterized by longitudinal direction. The ridges of Peter the First and Zaalay mountain ridge are placed in the northern part of the Pamir mountain system, eastern border is spread up to the Kunlun Mountains, southern part is limited by the Hindu Kush ridge; the western part of Pamir is considered to be Panj River. It should be marked, that significant geographic formations (valleys, large rivers), which can limit the movements of Ibex are absent in the area of Pamir highlands. Most rivers flow from the East to the West. Most ridges included in to the mountain system also have the same direction. Hence, from the geographical point of view, there are no prerequisites to divide the distribution range of the Ibex from the Pamir on different forms.   However, mountain Ibex from the Hissar-Alay and from Pamir possess clear morphological differences. The study and comparison of the significant amount of field data taken during the trophy hunts and natural observations allow to conclude that mountain system of Hissar-Alay is inhabited by the Central Asian subspecies of Siberian Ibex (Capra sibirica alaiana); Himalayan subspecies (Capra sibirica sakeen) inhabits Pamir Mountains. Noted subspecies of the Siberian Ibex from the area of Republic of Tajikistan have significant morphological differences, which are better developed in adult males. Adult males of Himalayan Ibex are characterized by the dark-brown, sometimes almost black coloration of the dorsum. The tail coloration is from dark-brown to almost white color with a small spot of light fur around the tail root. The beard is brown with length of about 10-15 cm. Old males (10 and more years) have specific sidewiskers, which connect with the beard. After 4 years of life, the individuals of this subspecies of Ibex have white spot on the back, called “saddle”, which becomes larger with the ageing of the animal and sharp contrast with the general dark coloration of the body (fig. 2). A second small light spot on the neck after eight years of life appears in some individuals of this subspecies About 70% of males of the Himalayan Ibex have falcate shape of the horns, which are curved straight and back with a small breakup. About 20% of males have sable-shaped horns, which have more or less straight shape in the proximal and middle parts and curved to the back only on the tips. Males with spreading of the horns to the back or to the sides can be met in about 10% of cases. Adult males of the Central Asian subspecies of Ibex are lighter, grey coloration prevails. White spot on the dorsum is developed poorly and in some cases it is almost invisible on the generally light back. The horns of the adult males of this subspecies are almost always sable-shaped with a small breakeup (fig. 3). Some individuals with intermediate morphological features of both subspecies sometimes are met on the border of Hissaro-Alay and Pamir. These are transitional forms, as they are called. Such a phenomenon is often registered in nature and common for animals of the other species and subspecies of the hoofed animals such as Caucasian Turs.
09.01.2019
Юрий Морозов
Investment in to the future

Investment in to the future

 On the 12 of November I visited and spoke on the meeting of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment of the Russian Federation, chaired by the Deputy Minister Ivan Valentik. The questions about the trophy hunt in Russia were discussed. The theme about funding of the protection and study of the rare animals at the expense of the limited hunt on these species was raised. We recon this them as relevant, and this hunt – rational. However, I would like to start from the different topic – from the project of the Club of the Mountain Hunters devoted to introduction of Chamois to the Krimea mountains. I was speaking about this topic on the meeting.     In my humble opinion, to the date (my friends-hunters agree with this point of view) a pleasant situation emerged to take care about the future, make the third step in filling of the Russian forests, mountains and plains by the hunting species of animals. But not for the soon hunt on them. I speak about long-termed future investments in to the remote future. Why this is the third step? I might be wrong, but the first step, as I know, has been done by the Glavohota RSFSR, which was spreading the animals of the hunting species at the Soviet period – wild boars, deers, beavers and other species along the suitable areas within USSR. Populations of the spotted deers, which are hunted in Tverskaya, Vladimiskaya, Moscow Districts and other central areas were established by the work of Glavohota in the European part of the country.     The musk ox has been introduced to the Yakutia, Yamal and Taymir. Tofay it is stable populations, which may be taken partly and spread to the other regions. The works on the introduction and reintroduction (it was called acclimatization and reacclimatization at the Soviet period) started as sson as the Second World War ended. However, we may see the fruit of this work even now, which, unfortunately, finished when the USSR fell apart. The second step, in my point of view, were the investments primary of the private and partly social hunting organizations in to the reproduction of the hunting animals. Though this work was held and takes place within the borders of the particular lands, it is impossible not to notice, that these lands are not surrounded by the fences and natural migrations of the animals beyond the borders take place naturally. Beaver expansion is very illustrative. These animals make some problems to the road crews, foresters and agriculture. However, the hunters didn’t stop on the simple feeding and curing of the animals. Enclosures with hoofed animals and safari parks started to appear in the country. In 2015 year (NN10,11) the magazine told in details about one very advanced deer park “Mushkino”, which is placed not far from Kaliningrad. The idea, as the one say, flies in the sky. Recently we reported, that the member of presidency of CMH Igor Dontsov rented the Zavyalov island for 49 years, which is placed not far from Magadan. He introduced here 25 musk oxes from Yakutia. There are mountains on the island, where the Snow Sheep and reindeer are planned to be brought and bred. We observed wales and a herd of sea-lions on the seashore when passed by the helicopter. A spawning river is present on the island, where Igor planes to build ECO hotel for the visitors were able to enjoy the beauty of the local nature, take pictures, catch the fish and have a rest. And now I would like to bring the attention of the readers that no hunt is planned on the island. Only in case if the regulation of the number of reintroduced animals is required. And it may take place not earlier than in 10-15 years. Probably more. Igor makes the investment in to the future, as it has been done by Glavohota in the past. I notice, that the level of consciousness of the hunters  evolves. It can be seen on the example of the Club of the Mountain Hunters, at the heart of which projects, which have nothing with the trophy hunt or maybe even with the hunt in general are developed. Today we can and have to invest these breakthrough projects. We have, because the government is not able to do it due to different reasons. Have to, because the “Red book” doesn’t solve the problems of the reducing of the number of species, which are included in to this book. Have to, because we are the citizens of our country. We have to think about the biodiversity and about the things, we leave to the next generations. That is why in 2019 year the CMH wants to start several programmes on the study and restore of the populations of several species of the mountain species and reintroduction of the one species in to tha suitable area with proper conditions. I am going to start from the last idea, which we were speaking about in the Ministry of Nature of the Russian Federation. The speech is about the creating of Chamois population in the Krimea. According to the opinion of the scientists, who study mountain hoofed-animals, Krimea mountains are ideal for this animal. European Mouflon has been introduced on the southern shore of Krimea at the time. There is no objective knowledge about the number of it’s population, because these kind of works were not held during the Ukrainian possession of the Krimea. Moreover, it is difficult to count the animals within the forest without snow. However, it is known, that Mouflon absorbed, what means that the conditions were suitable enough for this species. A great hope is present, that Chamois will like the conditions as well. By the way, it is not going to compete with Mouflon, because it prefers mountain landscapes with cliffs.  Competition with the cattle for the pastures is not foreseen, because there is no cattle-breeding in the areas of the Krimea mountains, which are suitable for Chamois. No hesitations, that the scientific work and understanding of all questions, including expediency and the practical abilities of the project realizations must be done at first. It is especially important, when the question about the introduction of the new for the area species is raized. For sure, the Chamois would be not dangerous competitor of the animals, which are already inhabit the southern shore of Krimea, but an addition to them. It should be understood, that a strict ban on the hunt of this animal will last for 20 years. At least for the time, when it will be clear that a stable and constantly developing population is established. Though. Only next generations of the hunters will discuss this question. Two more projects of the Club are devoted to reintroduction.  The Bezoar Ibex is placed in to the “Red book” to the date. This species inhabited all the territories of the Caucasus    mountains in the past. Due to different reasons, which are more hypothetical, it disappeared almost everywhere. Nowadays, the stable populations of this animal in our country stayed only in Ingushetiya, Chechnya, and in the part of Dagestan.   We want to try to renew the population of Bezoar Ibex on the territories, where it is absent now, but was before. The stuff of the Kabardino-Balkaria and Ossetia-Alania hunting societies supported this idea enthusiastically. The program suggests catshing of the alive animals with the correct age and sex structure. The speech is not about one or two individuals. An optimal group suitable for the reintroduction should be caught. The number of this group must be defined by the specialists. Obviously, such aprogramm requires serious scientific work – if there are suitable conditions for such an introduction today, aren’t there are any limitations? That is why we plan to invite the experienced scientists and experts. National and foreigners as well. In the case if the preliminary work will support the expediency of the project, we will move it. The work will be quite laborious and costly. I want to specify one more time: we are not going to do it because we are going to ask the permission for the hunt tomorrow. This is very long-lasted project as well. One more interesting odea, which was suggested by the Irkutsk scientists is devoted to Argali. Today, as it is known, this animal inhabits within the limited number in Altai and listed in the “Red book”. The excavations on Baikal peninsula Olkhon demonstrated that Argali lived there. It’s range was relatively large and reached almost Tuva. Today Olkhon  - is a Specially Protected Natural Area, which is naturally separated at the warm part of the year, hence, it is possible to try to resurrect Argali population here. According to the data of the Minostry of Nature And Resources of Russian Federation, the number of these animals in Russia raises and there are about 1200 animals in comparison with 600 in the last year.   Capture of some alive animals shouldn’t make the real impact on the population number. In case if due to some reasons it will be difficult to take the animals in Russia, we are going to discuss this question win colleagues from Mongolia. About the scientific part of the work: we were supported by the Irkutsk school of nature rangers.  It will be important and vivid work of the scientists and students. We should say, that these three projects is only a beginning. There are a lot of plans and ideas in future. For example, why do the Ural Mountains lack of hoofed animals?  Probably, introduction and reintroduction should be done there as well? But before we are going to stop on the listed projects and see how it is going. For us 2019 year in this sense – is a year of breaking through projects. Of course, these are not the projects of the single year. The period of the start of such a programs is about 2-3 years. Scientific data collection and it’s procession and estimation by the experts will be established at first and only then the catching of the animals and release in to the nature with monitoring. The readers might be qurious about the sources of funding for these projects. First of all, it should be said, that we don’t spek about the budget money. Many members of our club are eager to invest in to these projects. I have no doubt, that the umber of willing people, who want to support our ideas will be even more. We are not going to make obstacles for the aside charity. I will promise, that the funding will be fully opened and we will report about the each rouble, invested in to the listed projects. I would like to take the attention of the readers on the fact, that such a project initiate the hunting organizations. We are not a pioneers in this area. The hunters create the funds, make auctions where they sell hunts on the rare species of animals for study and breeding of these animals all over the World. The las auction held in the USA, where the “Green” move is much more powerfull than in Russia, the hunt on one of the rare species of Bighorn Sheeps was sold for 300 000 US Dollars! These money will be spend on the study of rare animals. One of the fresh examples – Tajikistan and Pakistan, where the great results were achieved in preservation and the following increasing of the number of Markhors because of the opened limited hunt on these species. In the past, these animals were under the pressure of uncontrolled hunt by the locals, which had low income. CIC and CITES initiated the program accepted by the Pakistan government. The main point of it was that the local societies were given 12 permits per year for taking of these trophy animals and priority in distribution of the money from the hunt sells between the local societies. Taking in account, that the cost of the Markhor hunt is about 150 000 USA Dollars for today, local population requalified from the illegal hunters to the devoted protectors of these animals from the predators and illegal hunters.        The same has been done in Tajikistan, where  the hunt for Markhors and Bukhar Urial for the long time was prohibited and they were listed in the “Red book” and were protected especially in the Nature reserves. However, there was no real result in the passive work. Finally, the government started to give the lands in to the hunt use and started to sell limited right on the hunt on these rare animals and made an economical tool for stimulation of the investments in to protection and breeding. As a result, the number of the Markhor in Tajikistan is estimated as 1900 animals for now. When CITES analyzed the work of the on the hunting lands, it legalized the export of 6-9 Markhors from the country from the 2014 year. I am going to give another one example. After the many-year limitation on the Argali hunt, the government of Kazakhstan decided this year to give 3 permits, which will be put on the annual auction SCI (International Club Safari, USA). The organizers guarantee the starting price from the 100 000 US Dollars per permission. It may be only suggested, what height will achieve the final cost, but I think, that it will be 200-250 000 US Dollars. The population in Kazakhstan is estimated in 16 000 animals. And, of course, limited hunt can’t make any harm. At the same time, trophy hunt will attract significant investment in to the protection  and study of Argali. According to this, I would like to say several words about the hunt on the rare species of the animals, what has been announced in the first part of the present article.   Such a theme mentioned in the traditional nature protection idea sounds like something blasphemous. However, the thought that, probably, the hunt, even limited, may be legalized leads to the almost hysterics in the minds of the inert thinking people. But when the speech is about the positive experience abroad – it is taken as it is, calm. But it is impossible to make something like that in our country. To tell the truth, this kind of hunt breaks the stereotypes and suggests new and effective mechanism of the fast increasing of the number of rare animals. On the meeting in the Ministry of the Nature Protection, which I was speaking before, were the members of the nature protection organizations, who told that budget funding on the protection, monitoring and study of the rare animals (besides several totem animals like the tiger, Far East leopard and Snow leopard) is obviously not enough. There is some work with animals belonging to the red lists in the Nature reserves, but mostly enthusiastic, because the money are enough et least for the salary of the stuff and the household requires. The question about the pilot project devoted to the Putoran Sheep has been raised. The situation which formed with this project desires better. But not because the project is bad, but due to the society, which didn’t hear us, what I told on the meeting. The society heard those, who published in the more accessible for the people mass media, but doesn’t know the details of the project of, driving by the cooperative interests, interpret them in the perverted form, or brings to the society one-sided information. As a result – the society heard only one side – the side of the opponents of the project. However, we didn’t put the hands down. I plan to organize the public press-conference and tell about the aims of the project and about the things, which stay behind our idea – about the scientific part and about those people, who will make it; about the funding of this work. One of the participants of the meeting suggested, that on some of the endangered species they work with large companies, including oil ones. These companies do not ask anything in return, but the CMH askes 6 Sheeps secretly. I objected that there is nothing hidden there. We say straightly that we would like to receive 6 permits (two per year) because this is the idea, which gave the positive result in the other countries and which, I am sure, will become the main in the business of protection of rare animals and the traditional approaches of the breeding of the rare animals will be changed. First of all, we should say, that the program was born after that, when the Putoran Nature reserve asked us to assist in the estimation of the range of the Putoran Snow Sheep, which spread far beyond the area of the nature reserve. If there is some work is held within the nature reserve, monitoring is totally absent beyond it’s borders. The “Putoran project” suggests taking part of the Taymir Nature reserves, scientific department of the Ministry of Nature Protection of Russian Federation and the Club of the Mountain Hunters. We have to read the petitions of some totally incompetence people, that the study of the animal, including DNA analysis is possible to make by the fur or faeces, without the kill. But here what is proclaimed by the experienced scientific expert: “The taken animal gives to the biological science more material, than the study of the alive immobilized animal. The taken animal gives the opportunity to make the full analysis of the external and internal parazites, including those, which are taken from the different organs, make the full morphological analysis of the tissues, including the skeleton, physiological state, study the microflora and feeding full enough, make the measurements of the body and fur at a good quality, take the material for the all types of physiological, anatomical and genetic studies. About the latter: there is not enough genetic material in the fur and faeces. It is possible to make only analysis of the mitochondrial DNA. The tissues of the animal allow to make mitochondrial and nuclear DNA (full genome sequencing) as well. This means that these methods widen the possibilities of the genetic study, what favors the precise definition of the species  of the particular population. Those, who argue with this, just don’t understand and don’t realize the importance of the scientific aims and tasks in the studies of the wild animals and their habitats”. The hunt on the 6 Sheeps can’t make any harm to the population. Moreover, only the old animals, which do not take part in the reproduction, are to be taken, only beyond the borders of the Nature reserve and only after the first study of the population condition. Besides that, the members of the CMH are eager to sign the document about the refuse of the possession of the trophy and will give it to the scientific organizations for the study. At first we discussed the budget of about 12-15 millions. However, the rate of the required work for reaching the full result is that large, that the sum raised in a short time to 40 millions! Modern drones for the estimation of the Putoran Sheep is supposed. The talk is not about the quadcopters, which can be bought in any shop. We talk about serious pilotless flights, which can be driven only by the certified pilots. The catch of the 12 alive animals is planned and further marking by the modern satellite sensors for the study of the migration processes in the population. This is large scientific work, which has been never done before – during the 30 years, for sure. Even now it is obvious, that the project will require about 60-70 millions of roubles. But this work will give the real result and we, and we, like no one else, are interested in the success. We want to make a scientific film, demonstrate, how this work is organized. Hence, we don’t reject the idea of realization of the “Putoran project” and we continue to consult with the Ministry of the Nature Protection of Russian federation. Numerous opinions were told on the meeting. However, most people proclaimed that it is a good project with obvious content, rights and duties of the sides, obvious and clear funding. Any work and any initiative have supporters and opponents – it is normal. We may be wrong. We can hear the advises. We are for the cooperation with the scientists, ecologists and the “Greens”. Radical points of view and approaches are always bad. Like from the side of the hunters, and from the side of the “Greens” as well. I always stood for the dialogue. In general, “Putoran project” is right, and, if so, let’s search the ways of the contact of the interests, but not the cause to proclaim the final war to each other. This is or country, our land and no one will make anything but we. No foreigners will help, or they will make everything rough in the self-interest. I am insured, that they would prefer if we would do nothing at all, for if it was no scientific, creative and business processes. It is easier to trough the Russia with grants, for the life stopped in it. We lose the experts, technology, competence and willing of work in case if we do nothing. It is obvious, that we are not able to solve all the problems and to release all the questions, but our initiative will become a good start for those, who decides to continue our work. We will feel no shame when look in to the eyes of the future generations and speak with honor about the things we have done for the biodiversity and for the rare and disappearing species of animals became common and abundant.     
16.12.2018
For Kuku Yaman to the land of the Yeti

For Kuku Yaman to the land of the Yeti

It was a rainy day, I stood in the traffic jam not interfering with traffic and watched Senkevich video about Nepal. I did it often and worried each time how it would be. Am I ready for this trip? Have I envisaged everything? Would it be the best hunting in my life and all the others can't compare with it? This trip had to be the peak in my hunting career and to increase the level of expectations form the future hunts. I took the decision to take part in this adventure after the Hunting Show in Gostiny Dvor. I'd known that Alexey Podtyazhkin would accompany Nikolay K, who was going to get the Blue Sheep and Tahr. Nikolay agreed to take me with them. Unfortunately I could manage to buy the last license for the sheep. All hunts for Tahr had been booked already. The number of licenses for these animals is in two times less than for bharals. Thus we spent 10 hours in air, made the connection in Katar and arrived to that terra incognita clamped between China and India, by the eight-thousanders from the north and malaria swamps from the South. It was the motherland of Buddhas, Yetis, sadhus and Sherpas, its capital was one of the poorest in the world. We got off the plane and felt as if hit to the invisible wall. Just imagine, what we had felt that place was so far from what I imagined before. Dust swirled on the streets, the endless noise and stench from dirt and incenses circled us. Hello Katmandu! Trying not to breathe too deep we got into the conditioned car of Samsher, the guy who met us at the airport. He was the representative of the local outfitter Global Safari Nepal. He was cheerful, never discouraged and busy guy, who loved his God and family. I discovered that almost all people in Nepal are like him (but not so businesslike) because it’s the only way to survive there. We left guns in the very suspicious room at the airport. The officers told us that next day we would spend signing official papers. Thanks to Alexey’s experience and Samsher’s communicative skills all actions with guns from Moscow to Nepal, including bureaucracy procedures in Katmandu were done without our participation. We just signed lots of papers, left fingerprints and spend a half of the day walking from one room to another, accompanied by the crowd of the local bosses. I advise you to use Qatar airlines if you are going to Nepal because their process of gun’s transportation is the most effective. We appreciate it and even changed tickets just to fly with them on the way back. The rest of the day we spent in the hotel because didn’t enough time for sightseeing. Telling the truth, the hotels in Katmandu looked like oases among the city smoke and dust and we didn’t have desire to leave them without urgent need. I was surprised when knew that the apartment of the richest man in Katmandu was located here in the center of that dump. It was fenced and probably there was paradise behind it. Next morning we were going to the mountains. The chopper would take us to the altitude 3500 masl and then we had to walk. After arriving to the hotel we decided to appease the local gods and tried local dishes without alcohol. Probably it was the mistake because the sky was covered by clouds when we woke up and the rain started. But we drove to the airport and were right. Rain stopped in two hours, the pilots said that we could fly and we did it. We said Goodbye to Katmandu and flew over the foothills which started right behind the suburban of the city. All flight I stared out the porthole and saw the dense building by Nepal’s standards and endless cultivated fields which stretched to the place Pokhare where we stopped for a fuel. Being very poor, all Nepalese are very hard-working and endurance people. Probably they don't have choice if want to survive. We landed at the final place at 2pm, unloaded the luggage and the chopper immediately flew back. The team which consisted of several Sherpas, two guides, two cooks and the hunting inspector from Dorpatan waited for us. I saw mountains, blooming, rhododendrons, felt fresh air and watched smiling Sherpas. The eagle was floating in the air above us and I experienced the feeling of absolute happiness and freedom. That was Nepal I dreamed to see! We got acquaintance with the team and moved to the first camp. I have to say a couple words about the team. They all walked to that meeting place for several days from 7 to 10 and delivered a lot of equipment. We also brought some kg with us. The average weight of Sherpa is about 60-70 kg and 160 sm tall and he carries from 30 to 35 kg. I know that they all adapted to such heights but from where do they get energy? They're used to wear flip-flops and use sneakers only when crossing deep snow. Their unique abilities are still the secret for me which I tried solve during the expedition. I felt myself like the hothouse sprout against them, which can’t survive in the wildlife. The first camp was located near the authentic village which consisted of six houses. The houses were built from the local limestone, daubed with clay and covered with metal profile. There was lots of cattle around but the village was clean enough, especially if we compare it with other places which we “were lucky” to visit later. But they didn’t have water and had to go down to the spring about one km. It was their everyday exercises. The camp consisted of the canteen-tent with chairs and table, the shared tent for Sherpas, individual tents for “ Mr. Hunters”, Samsher and guides. We had lots of food and another equipment. I found the Sherpa who spoke English and gave him the teen with coffee which brought from Moscow. After giving him gratuity, I taught how to make coffee and asked to make it for me each day. I want to say some words about my preparation to that hunt. I gave up to drink alcohol in 3 month before the trip and visited gym two times a week. In two week before the departure I started to take vitamins and Mildronate for the brain. In two days before climbing I added enzymes for digestion and the liver because wasn’t’ sure in the local food and began to take glycine to avoid the altitude sickness. If I felt poor on the height I took the half or even the whole pill of Diacarbum. Don’t use it at night because it’s the effective diuretic. So I felt just light headache on the altitude more than 4500 masl and then if, I didn’t move. Donormyl helped me to sleep well. If you want to know about clothes and night temperature you have to remember about high humidity in Nepal, about 70-80%. The temperature -5C is felt like -10C or even -15C. Follow the principal that it’s much easier to take off extra clothes then to find smth if you are cold. I took sleeping bag with the comfort temperature-5C but used it with extra fleece liner and was dressed in the down jacket and pants. The temperature was -10C outside and -5C inside. Next day we had to hike 7 hours to the hunting area. But it happened that it was the harvest time of some expensive grass. All locals, dressed up and not, with shoes and barefoot, with mules and without went to the mountains to get crops. Mountains were covered by scarlet rhododendrons, the snowy peaks shined in the sky and air was filled with sounds of mule’s bells. It was divine. The organizers decided to make one more march because of those grass’s collectors. They prevented us from hunting and we agreed. The Sherpas are professionals in setting and collection the camp. We could hardly see how they did it. The only thing which we were responsible was to pack our own bags. I had the heavy 32 kg bag with wheels. They took it, binded with another one and one of the Sherpas carried it singing songs. Several Sherpas moved faster than the rest of the group and cooked dinner before our arrival. I was shocked. Next day we moved to storm the pass and detected the group of sheep on the half way. The animals pastured in 4-5 km from us. We spread out, pulled the scopes and binoculars and monitored them. In a half of an hour we took the decision that Mann (the Chief guide), his son Bikez and I would try to approach to the herd because there was the trophy size male, as we thought. Nikolay and the rest of the group would move on, looking for the bigger one male. It wasn’t the difficult approach and I had the opportunity to watch the behavior of the youth , 16 years old Bikez, who was the son of Mann. Mand has four children and two official wives. Polygamy isn’t the rare thing in Nepal’s villages in comparison with big cities. Bikez is the eldest one that’s why Mann took him for the hunt. So all the way we walked, he played very strange games, got on all fours, drank from the spring or climbed up the stones and began to gesture with the stick. His dad pacified him at last because he could scare away all animals. This kind of behavior didn’t fit with his thought about religion, family and life, I talked with him before. He spoke English, not fluently but good enough. When we approached one km to the herd and Mann said that the male wasn’t big and we went back to the path. We climbed to the pass, paced there for a while and detected the herd with several trophy size males which grazed not far from our camp. It was evening when we came back, sat near the tents and discussed the plan for the next day. The camp was set on the height 3800 masl and it was the first night when I didn’t sleep though had taken Donormyl. It was dark yet when I heard a wake-up signal “ Good morning sir”. The guy gave me wet hot towel to wash and a cup of coffee. Stars shined in the black sky and was light frost. I remembered about the yesterday’s sheep, made just one gulp of coffee and went to the canteen where was full of life. The plan was so, I and Mann would go to the yesterday’s sheep while Nikolay and Alexey moved to the far cordon. Nobody could imagine how it would end. I crawled vertically up while the pointer- Mann, scanned the territory from all sides. We had the company: Bikez and another Sherpa who would carry the trophy back. We'd almost reached the saddle of the mountain but didn’t find the yesterday’s sheep yet. Mann left me and went to the left. I laid on the belly and creeps to the edge to check the surroundings. There was a dozen of sheep females. I checked everything once again, no male, got out the camera and began to make video. Suddenly Mann appeared. He gestured to blend with the slope and clicked his tongue discontentedly. When we spotted males in 600 meters from the left. The sheep noticed females and the whole herd began to move from us up to the mountains. The altitude was 4200 meters asl and we had to follow them because Mann noticed a good trophy. We crossed the valley, descended to 300 meters and climbed 600 meters. The crust folded up well and we easily moved falling between stones from time to time. We looked around, ascended for several meters but suddenly fog covered everything. It was so thick that we could see in more than 30 meters. It’s the end. We couldn’t do anything and sat on the place for a hour and a half just waiting for the miracle. I began to get cold and felt headache . Mann couldn’t wait and left for a reconnaissance to the unknown direction. I wanted back home and took a bath but I had to compress the rest of will in a fist Mann came back in a half of an hour and told that saw sheep in the fog. But he didn’t’ sound sure for me. According his plan we needed to ascend 100 meters and to go about one km. I decided that moving was better than seating and jumped up first. Mann was surprised and leaded us. We walked for an hour, tried to stop few times and to have snack. I couldn’t eat a bite of Snickers and wash it down with isotonic but forced myself because needed energy. It's foggy all around. Mann showed us the direction but still didn’t look sure. We tried to see something through the fog but it was pointless. How he managed to find them two hours ago. Did they existed at all? We could scary them because didn’t see. It was all in vain and clear that we hadn’t to wait for good. But it was day, we had time and we sat there. Then happened the thing which is nothing but Nepal’s gods joke. They looked at crazy Russian and decided to have fun. The fog lifted for a minute and we saw them! Not gods but sheep. The biggest one laid and blended with the ground. Probably it wasn’t the biggest one but had trophy size and the conditions didn’t allow me to be cranky. The gods showed me the trophy and hide it in the fog once again. I spent next 30 minutes siting on the tender-hooks. When the voltage had reached boiling point they lifted fog for a minute once again. I imagined how they smiled when I was looking for the aim through the sight. But I found it, exhaled and pushed the trigger, sending the bullet 180gr 300 Win Mag to the fog. The distance was about 300 meters. Mann saw how the male laid still near the stone when the slope hid under the fog. He clicked his tongue approvingly though the sound was same as when he was dissatisfied. I felt storm of emotions inside. Everything was left behind- years of reflections, trainings. Everything! But the happiness was still inside and I still felt it when we came back to the camp in the evening. I felt better and better when we were going down to the camp. P.S. The snowstorm was over and we could see stars but Alexey and Nikolay didn’t return. We waited them till midnight when they contacted us and told that got the trophy and stayed for a night in the local village. I went to bed and remembered that day again and again. To be continued…
16.12.2018
For the sheep, or There and Back Again

For the sheep, or There and Back Again

It was the end of the third day when my namesake and I began to doubt that we’d reach the hunting area! Moreover we would have to repeat that trip again on the way back. The dream was going on. I slept and saw the dream where I was flying from Moscow to Petropavlovsk –Kamchatksy (PK), then changed the flight and flew to Palana before the storm came, then I was sitting in the ATV and changed it to the horse… Everything was real. We saw Kamchatka’s sightseeing, swan in the hot springs, tried local delicatessens and talked to new people. It was real but I didn't believe that it happened with me. The local outfitter Viktor Stepanov has informed us about all risks in our way to the hunt because lots of things on Kamchatka depends on weather. But we were lucky. I realized it when knew that the airport in PK was closed for several days after we had left it. The reason was the hurricane which came from Japan. Telling the truth we had some unpleasant moments when flew by Yak-40 to Palana. It was shaking like a feather. I’m getting ahead but will make some conclusions based on our experience from the trip to the peninsula. 1. You have to be ready that the local flight from PK could be delay several times and then to cancel. It can last several days. The most comfortable and stable month in terms of weather is August. I don’t tell about such reason of delay when the plane just broke down. I got into such situation on the way back. There was something wrong with the plane in Palana and we waited when the new one would fly to take us. There are no domestic flights on weekend. It means that if your flight has been delayed on Friday, it’d automatically transfer to Monday. You’ll spend two day swimming in the hot springs. 2. If you use ATV to drive to the base, Don’t allow it to leave. If you decide to leave the camp earlier ( in the best variant), It’ll be very difficult to find it in the village. It can drive somewhere for mushrooms or berries or will visit the marriage of the best friend and so.. 3. Get acquaintance with somebody who can help you with tickets, hotels and so. We used such help in Palana and PK. 4. Use EMS if want to deliver bags to/from home. We used that service on the way back and the bag have arrived to Moscow in four days after us. It’s more comfortable and cheaper if you account the cost for extra luggage in the plane. 5. Warning the family that you could come back home in one or even two weeks later! All this things won’t be extra even if you are accompanied by the outfitter. So, let’s come back to the sheep. They were the main reason why we visited Kamchatka once again. As Viktor said, the sheep felt good and was pasturing waiting for us, and not only sheep, bears were on guard too! Viktor’s wife Nataly met us in Palana and we all drove by ATV to the base. It was late evening when we arrived. I saw lots of bears while we were driving but we didnt' met the big ones.Thus at the end of the third day, after six hours horse riding we reached the foot of the mountain and set the camp there. We camped tents near the alderwood and cedar woods with the nice view to the mountains and the river’s valley. Our team consisted of two guides Gena and Anton, the cook Anna, the horse driver Viktor and my fellow and I. In the first day we didn’t plan to hunt and left the camp just to walk and to monitor the surroundings while our cook Anna stayed to banish bears. We slowly went up. The first climb is like the first cup of fresh water after the long road. You make a gulp and savor it. All next ascends are like routine though they are full of emotions and adventures. First hour we were going through cedar woods and succeed in it. In one hour more we reached the altitude 1000 masl, found the hollow, and began to look around. It was windy and it didn’t stop all next days. If we were on the neighbor hill we could admire of the water surfaces. There were the Okhotsk Sea from the one side and the Pacific Ocean from another. Incredible feelings! We were delighted by the beauty of nature, freedom and the beginning of the hunt. But we didn’t suspect that were being watched all that time. Anton and Gena took the mobile gas stove and we decided to drink tea. The view from our hollow was beautiful, we could see the mountain range and the big circus. The guides told us that had seen sheep there a few days ago. We had rest and started to binocular the surrounding once again. Somebody detected the herd of sheep which consisted of females with lambs grazed in four km from us. But then we noticed the lonely ram which was watching us all time while we drank tea. We couldn’t estimate its size from such distance. It was nervous, stood up each 10-15 minutes and moved to 200-300 meters from us. It was a half of km between the ram and females and four km more between the herd and us. We had to decide what to do because time wasn’t on our side. We casted lots and I won jack-pot, that's why I had to try and to approach it. The only way to do it was to go around the circus and climbed between the male and females because they could start to move to its’ side and to hinder. The Kamchatka mountains are not very high and relatively gentle but they consist of rolling stones like the Caucasus mountains. Therefore It is difficult to move there. You need to know about Kamchatka exclusive- huge volcanic stones. It was a rare pleasure to run on them. Anton and I were on the half way to the trophy when had to run. At the beginning we went in a plane sight of the male, which was shocked by our behavior and moved up. Then we hid behind the hill, went down to the river and moved up along it. We ascended between the male and the females. The ram hid behind the range. The guys, who stayed in the hollow, informed us by radio about the animal movements and it helped a lot. We ascended 300 vertical meters and approached it 250 meters. The ram laid on the rocky slope and had rest. It wasn’t the biggest one but had normal size. I realized that Kamchatka was unpredictable and wasn’t sure when would have chance to shoot once again. I made the decision to fire and to get that trophy! The wind was strong and blew across the shot’s trajectory and I made the correction. I was lucky that didn’t fire immediately and found two stones which could bother the shot. The caliber 300WM did not fail. We all heard the distinct slap. The male stood up and dint’ move. I shot once again and missed but it didn’t push. I had to shoot the third time to put it out of the misery. The hunt was done! I couldn’t express my feelings at that moment. I went forward that goal for a year and a half and now it was done! I had to calm and to go on hunting. We went back to the camp in the late night being wet and tired. It was the end of the first day. Next morning we got up later because walked a lot before. Viktor (outfitter) had driven from the Base and was very surprised that we got the trophy in the first day. I did the deal with him to take one more trophy if it was possible. Our priority was to get the trophy for my fellow. We all went to the mountains by the yesterdays route but Anton left the camp earlier to make scouting. The second day didn’t leave the bright impression. We hiked about 15-20 km and found new ways how to reach the best places. On the third day we decided to transfer the camp closer to the place, where I got the trophy, and to monitor two large circuses. It took us a half of the day to collect everything, load all bags to horses and moved to the new place. The new camp was located on the shore of the mountain spring covered by thickets of bushes of Golden root. This plant helps to increase the mood and physical activity. Gena and Anton went in exploration till evening. Misha an I went to the nearest hill and spent the day monitoring the surroundings. We wanted to find the bear. All kinds of rodents entertained us the whole day. They whistled from all sides and did it in unison. I decided to shoot one of tarbagans (marmot) when the hunt would be over. Anna had cooked sheep meat and made Russian salad because was happy that we didn’t leave her alone in the camp. The next (forth) day we all decided to make our best and to reach the result. We got up when it was dark, had breakfast and moved to the mountain. We had very simple plan. Gena and I would stay on the top and watch the territory using the scope while Misha and Anton went around all hollows on the middle level. At 10 am we were ready to realize it. We were not alone laying on the top. Our neighbor was the fox which was catching lemmings in ten meters from us and didn’t pay any attention to two hunters. We drank tea and managed to sleep in turns while one of us was on duty with the scope. Then the action started! Anton talked us by radio that the group of four males was moving to our destination and two of them had trophy size. They didn’t move to our destination they went directly to us over the ridge. That group was in 800 meters from our fellows but Misha refused to shoot because wasn’t’ sure. Anton’s plan was not to allow sheep to cross the ridge. Gena and I began to move along the range looking for the sheep. Misha and Anton began to go up fast to us . Anton saw us and controlled our actions. Suddenly, I stopped on the top of the lonely rock. My action camera attached to the head worked. The first ram from that chain ascended to the top. The distance between us was 20 meters. I shouted “Wow”, the sheep turned around …. The plan was implemented partially. The sheep ran along the ridge but to the opposite side from Misha and Anton. I ran up and down and chased the sheep to the neighbor slope. The only thing which we could do next, was to lay down, to aim and to follow them with sad eyes. I could get bigger trophy if I shot but the chances of my fellow would became lower. So I just watched them while the animals went separate ways. Unfortunately we couldn’t overtake them that day and didn’t find on the next one. Viktor was shocked when we described him the situation. He said that had never heard about corral hunting for the snow sheep. Next day we moved the camp once again but left Viktor and Anna on the last place. Anton and Misha went to the far circus while Gena and I stayed to oversee the nearest one. The main hero of that day was the wolverine which went slowly while Misha aimed but didn’t shoot. He was afraid to scare off the hunting luck. Then it was running in 50 meters from me and I couldn’t catch it. The heavens opened that night and the temperature dropped to 0ºC. Everything was covered by fog when we got up. My fellow talked to somebody by satellite and made the decision to finish the hunt. I didn’t mind. But I did what was going on. I got the marmot. The shooting distance was 100 meters. I shot with hands. We had eaten its meat and I gave its skin for the taxidermy. We were going down to the intermediate camp. I carried the marmot and the rifle. We discussed what happened with us during those days. But we would never forget what happened next. When we were riding horses to the base first time , we noticed the river which flowed to the Base direction. The idea was to float by boat on the way back and enjoyed the beauty of nature. We suggested it to Viktor. He had never floated there beweore but had the adventurous character and he agreed. The outfitter found two rubber boats for us and for him. I can't describe what has happened next. We overcame the first rapid and were full wet just in five minutes after we sailed. It was the mountain river and the outdoor temperature was +5ºC. In five minutes more I contrived to dip in the water the gun and the camera. There were two unproted vents which leaked air. It meant that each half of an hour we had to get to shore and to inflate the boat by mouth. It was very tough floating and soon we felt ourselves as the experienced aqua men who had to use all body parts not to drоwn or to freeze. But it was worth it. We saw fantastic views! It became dark in four hours after we had started. At last we went ashore and hiked 2 more hours though cedar woods scaring the bears. The guys who rode by horses waited for us on the base. They pulled two stored bottles of vodka and send us to the hot bath. Next day we managed to fish for about three hours while waiting for ATV. Viktor’s wife Nataly was the avid angler. Can you imagine Kamchatka fishing? It was crazy! We caught lots of silver salmons, chars and went back to the base, the rest of the day we spent eating and talking with our new friends. In the morning I I left the house and my breath caught when I saw mountains covered by fresh snow. Now we had to go back.
12.11.2018
Nothing good ever comes out of that opening.

Nothing good ever comes out of that opening.

The task, to visit Sayan and to get the Siberian Ibex, didn’t look difficult. But I had to take into account the unpredictable local weather and the long and complex way from Minsk to Khakassia. It could make my mission impossible. I’ve heard that some scientists want to add the Siberian Ibex to the local Red Book tat's why it I’d be unreasanobly to postpne this hunt further. I had very busy business schedule and it was one of the reason why the coordination of hunting terms between the outfitter and me took so much time. At last we negotiated on going there at the beginning of November. It was the rut time and we could get the big trophy. I was confused by the only thingn the part of the way we had to boat but nobody guaranteed that we could do it because of weather at that time. The river could be covered by ice and we had to look for another way in that case. It wasn’t the only variant how to reach the hunting area but all other ways looked less attractive. I add this trip to the schedule and started to train. I didn’t have bad feelings or had fatal forebodings or pessimism before the departure but the circumstances were so that I thought about bad luck streak from the very begining. It started not well and became worse an worse. I thought it’d never end. At first our flight to Moscow was delayed because the plane had arrived yet. I’d checked it the luggage and the rifle already and had to change the tickets to the nearest flight. Only masochists could like it. The flight could be comfortable and calm if not the company of five young moms with suckling who cried all the way to Moscow. When the neighbor spilt a cup of tea on my legs I was almost calm and treated it like the God’s sign. I could take good trophy if was patience and bearded it all without a murmur. That’s why I didn’t complain when had to run with all ammunitions, the heavy backpack and the gun form one terminal to another. I kept silence when saw the line to the security department and wasted time staying there. I managed to board the plane to Abakan in five minutes before they closed the gate. The only thought followed me all the way. Was that all or were the trials just beginning? Valera whom I knew in absentia met me in Khakassia. My bad luck ended when I saw him but the way to the hunt was going on. We would have to drive about three hours and to float by boat about 200 km. Valera said that we would arrive to the place before the darkness and there was no time to have rest. Telling the truth I had rest while we were driving because the car was very comfortable and the road was flat. We took our future cook Vasily in Sayangorsk. Vasily and I became friends forever when he suggest to have breakfast before the long road. We had time limits but It would be unforgivable not to make picture on the background of Sayano-Shushenskaya HPP. Then we circumnavigated it and arrived to the base located on the reservoir’s shore. We quickly loaded our luggage to the boat and pushed off. It took us four hours to float and all the way to the base I sat on the stern and couldn’t tear myself from watching the beauty of rocks, Yenisei and nature. Those views could captivate everyones's heart and even the hearts of people who can’t live without cities. What I could say about hunters who fell happiness only in unity with wild nature! One more Vasily met us in the hunting camp. The pathfinder and the guide who spent all his life hunting in those area. He suggested to wake up early, to climb the mountain and to check all splits behind the mountain range. If we didn’t find animals there It’d be better to go up the river about 20km and to try to look there. The day ended with the hot bath and fancy dinner (my low bow to our cook). I slept as if dead. it happens very rare with me on the new place. Usually I suffer from insomnia and think a lot about future. It was chilly in the morning. The outside temperature was -3ºC. It was sunny, a faint wind blew. I was surprised when saw Russian jeep Niva and aske guys why we floated if it was possible to drive there. They replied that the car drove to the base in the last winter, when the river was frozen and they could drive. It was the only way to get there. We got in the car and drove up along the north slope, then left it on the mid of the mountain and began to climb. Hiking was difficult. The thickness of the snow cover was about 15-20 sm and it was fresh. It could be much easier to go if there didn’t snow at all. It took us two hours to reach the top. Vasily went last meters, peered over the rock and sat down quickly. The heart beated with anticipation   -Ibexes! – he whispered. I crawled to him very carefully and saw the group of young males and females. In a moment I detected the trophy size male which was moving from the herd. The rangefinder showed 260 m distance. But the goal was moving and it made the task more difficult. But then the hunting luck smiled to me. It stopped and turned to the group. I could aimed to its side and pushed the trigger. The struck male fell and rolled down the slope. The herd disappeared and I felt how my blood surged with adrenaline. Was it all? Was the hunt over? I took the trophy! We discussed it and not once later. What was the reason of such short hunt? Was I lucky or lucky coincidence of weather, outfitter’s and guide’s professionalism or Artemida and St. Guber decided to help me? May be it was simply our day. Then Vasyli’s time came! Valera was absolutely right when told me about professional skills of our cook. He didn’t repeat any of the dish which we tried while hunted together. It was time to leave Friends. I had to go home. Now I know that unlucky beginning doesn’t mean anything.
12.11.2018
That’s the story

That’s the story

Thera are about three dozens of hunting area in Almaty region where you can met several species of ungulates in one area but it was the first time when I decided to get a maral and an ibex during the one hunting trip. I asked my friends from the ProHunt company to organize such expedition. At last when the trophy hunting season was over, the snow covered the mountains my friend Maxim Levin and I moved to the hunt. We took the huntsman, who also took part in our trip, and started to storm the pass. On the half way to the hunting base we met guides with horses and with the assistant. Talking ahead I would say that they the next day they didn't come to the base because met the beekeeper who celebrated his birthday and stayed with him for a day. In the whole the way to the base was normal but several times we used chains. Thus we reached the old wooden cabin and accommodated there. I was sick during the rut season and didn’t expect that deer would be active but took the decoy just in case. Just imagine how surprised I was when heard the deer’s roar in fifty meters from our stay. It stood behind the fir tree and nearly the salt lick. In two minutes the majestic animal appeared and moved to the nearest forest. It was awesome and had nice horns but not such ones which I was looking for! That’s why I decided to talk to him. We began the roll-call: I was the first- then he was and vice versa. Than I decided to leave the shelter and began to swung from one side to another, making as much noise as it was possible. I broke dry sticks and stamped by feet. The bull wasn’t afraid, it looks confused. Maxim made video of that meeting. Than the male decided that that strange bull (me) was stronger and made the decision to leave the territory. He left us, deafening with a roar all surroundings. We had no choice but look for the new ways. The circus, before us, was huge, we could watch just a dozen gorges from our place. Soon we detected two more Marales. One of them was good enough (lets’ call it #1), it was closer and lower to us then the others. I watched all animals through the scope because could estimate their size and horns more effectively. Few words about trophies. If you checked my reports written four or five years ago you could find that I declared that I wasn’t the trophy hunter because preferred the process to the result. And it is still so. But I’ve add the correction to that position and I’ll explain why. I always try to rise the complexity level of my hunts and once I realized that extra class trophies is very rare in our nature I focused on getting trophies not smaller than I had already had in my collection. It’d be the most complication. It was twilight when we made the video of one more bull but the visibility was so low that we couldn’t reviews all details. The only thing which I understood was that the horns were very thick and had lots of processes. Let’s call it bull #2. We had dinner and discussed what we saw during the day, everybody agreed that we were lucky to see so many marals and to make video. You need to realize that we were in the very remote area and the rut season was already over. The old guides told us that huge bulls come the that area after October 10th, when the hunters had already gone. One more reason was in the seasonal migration. Marales used to move to more comfortable regions for a winter time. We had to wait for horses and to decide what to do with the transport and luggage. That area was really remote. But as I’d told you before the horses didn’t come that night. Next morning we stayed in the camp, observed the surroundings and waited for the horses. We noticed the migration of deer which moved to the southern-east. Several groups left that area but most of them consisted of females. We came to the conclusion that nobody could predict where were the trophy males. That was the reason why we decided not to wait for the horses and left the base after the lunch time. We were not ready for hiking but didn’t want to waste time. Max and I took fully filled stormy backpacks, the huntsman took the backpack which we made from the hydrobag and the girth from my saddle which I took for the hunt. We met young roe with babies, a lonely female maral and the boar’s family while hiking, thouse meetings made us feel cheerful and motivated. It was evening when we reached the southern slopes, the guide told us that that place was the final point for the local marales. Probable we arrived too early or the males changed plans but we didn’t’ notice any sing of their presence. We spotted just a couple of males during the evening. It disappointed us because we used to see much more and didn’t want to believe that we were mistaken. Then we crossed the river and did it without boots. I realized that it wasn’t May we were very cold but it was the shortest way to go to the camp. That water obstacle made us stronger and we felt ourselves like the real team. We remembered not once about our guides with horses. The Moon shined on the sky! It was a real pleasure to seat near the fire, to dry clothes and to drink hot tea. We all meditated gazing to the billions of stars and dreamed about the next day. In the morning we decided to try again and went back to the place where monitored the animals before. We even didn’t reach it when met the herd of females marals. The male had to be close and soon we detected it on the slope. But the most important this was that we found one more group of six females which were leaded by the real alfa male, It was the real monster #3! Its head had the crown or better say it had the tree on the top of its head! That picture would always stay in my memory. We decided to get it. The approach would take several hours that’s why we had to leave somebody with the scope to correct and to direct the movement of the others. But it happened that I was the only person who took the radio set and we couldn’t control the movements of animals for about an hour while were out of sight. The only hope was that the herd would have rest and didn't leave that area. We found several big antlers which males dropped in the spring. Everything looked like the real place of wintering for the marals. One more very curious bull came to us when we were on the half way to the top and followed us with the eyes while we were moving up. We almost reached the final point when the female deer, who guarded the group, detected us and loudly barked. That sound is the danger signal among the marals. Soon all surroundings knew about our arrival. It was the first time when I heard the maral danger signal. We tried to hide but it didn’t help. The female stood in 120 meters from us and continued to bark. We decided to go further because it wasn’t clear if the other animals heard her or not. We reached the ridge and found that they’d received the signal. The group sprang to the feet and several females had already left the place and was moving to the left side of the slope. I could shoot from such distance that’s why I fell down in the snow and began to wait for the male. It didn’t show up. I was afraid to lose the comfortable position that’s why asked the guide to look for it behind the ridge. He looked out and showed me that the monster wasn’t there. There were two variants what had happened. The first one was that the male left the place before our arrival and went to the left, the second variant was that it joined another group and moved to the right. The second variant was more preferable because we ‘d seen the most part of the left slope while climbing. That’s why we agreed to go to watershed and followed the right side. The views from the main ridge were marvelous: we could see how the dark green fir trees underlayed the bright blue sky, feel warm spring son and watch the soft carpet of the withered grass… So we decided to take the break, had snacks and to think over what to do next.. We had to admit that had lost the bull. The huntsman suggested to look for the Ibexes which prefers to graze on the southern slope. But I desired to find the bull #3! We decided to move further along the right slope. We still hoped the marals stopped to have rest in the shadow somewhere close. We'd overcame the long distance when the guide noticed something! “ We found them”- the fleeting thought came to my mind. The guy spoke something but so quietly that I couldn’t understand a word. I looked out from behind of his shoulder and detected the group of Ibexes. There was the huge herd. I accounted about five males with the horns not less than 120 sm. And two of them had even longer horns. The old males with long dark beards and cool horns attracted my attention. I forgot about marals. The Ibex was my goal #1! The guide looked at me and I nodded. Adrenalin and Endorphins rose my mood to the highest level. We should have to come back using our own tracks and then to climb once again. The path led through the rocks. The wind blew up and we were approached to the herd not worring that the animals would spot us. I wanted to make video but the dry grass was too high and lens couldn’t focus. I almost decided not to try when detected an old male which grazed in 300 meters down from the main group. I took me just a minute to estimate the landscape then I laid down and crawled about 50 meters. A dozen of mites used that opportunity to jump on me and to provide me with entertainment for the evening. The distance was about 300 meters. I should fire at the angle down and I did it. The used cartridge was Federal AccuBond( the crosshairs to 400 meters worked well with that type). The Ibex were laying and I should wait when It’d stand up but it had different plans. At last I felt that couldn’t wait any more, shot and saw how it rolled down. The mountains woke up. Ibexes ran to different sides, the guide smiled and congratulated me. I lost the super bull but found the super goat! Suddenly my radio set worked. One of the horseman arrived to the camp. We decided that I’d carry the trophy down while the guide went back to the camp and leaded the horses from another side. I wasn’t in a hurry and decided to went around the mountain. I still hoped that the luck was on my side and I’d meet the bull. It took me a couple of hours but I didn’t find it. I found one more big goat which was in the first group, made some video and we went to different directions. I had almost come to the trophy when decided to sit for a moment and heard the noise above me. It was a big bear which had felt the blood and was rushing to my goat. I took several pictures and chased it away. That accident assured me that such luck in our mountains was the rare guest. I went to the trophy and tried to put it for the photo op. It was heavy to fix it in the right position. I used the technics of the Indians from the Easter Island and could do it and make selfie. The next part of this adventure wasn't so pleasent. I was thirsty, felt headache and the thorns bit into my poor body. I dragged the goat to the place where the horse could come, threw it down and went to look for water. Isotonic which I prepared was over and I sweated a lot during the day and felt dehydrated. There was a small spring filled with marals turds, I dug a hole but couldn’t wait and drunk. After quenching the thirst I went down to the river. I had to walk around the gorge by the unknown path, then to go near the car and to rise to the camp, located on the boars river. It sounded like to make around the world trip. I descended to 500 meters when met two horsemen on two horses but they didn’t have the extra one for me. Those guys were riding up to the mountain, where I took the Ibex, and should butcher the carcass. I had about two hours of head start and I continued my way down. It was the second year when I used the hydrator and it was very comfortable. I didn’t need to stop and to take off the backpack each time when I was thirsty and wanted to drink. Two liters was usually enough for a day. The body heat kept water warm, and it was important in the cold time. The only complexity in that time was that I didn’t know the way, I used animals tracks like the landmarks but lost it few times when the pass led through the rocks. The bright moon helped a lot, because added some extra light to my head lamp. I moved in the night forest along the raging river and remembered about the bull which we met today. Thinking about it I came to the river. Fortunately the horsemen overtook me and brought to Maxim who was waited for us! Few words about our accommodation. We camped in the old “fox” tent. The average temperature at night was -6ºC but we weren’t cold. I slept in the down jacket “Marmont”. The manufacturer had written that the outer layer was waterproof. It was true, I’d checked it. Later in the evening, when we discussed the events of the past day, I learned that the Bull went to the left direction, there was one more winter place of those animals on the southern side. We looked in details all pictures of the bulls and found that the horns of #1 were damaged by the antler fly. #2 had really nice horns which were heavier and more thick than the horns of #3 but the last Bull had the outstanding antlers and they were longer. Long antlers are better than the heavy one according to the SCI rating. I didn’t wait for the dinner and felt asleep. Next morning We ate meat for the breakfast and went to look for the Bull #3. We unanimously decided to use horses and rode about half of the way because were tired yesterday. Unfortunately none of us spotted good marals from the place which we had chosen like the overview point. All the males were small or young. The big ones preferred to rest in other places but no to lay on the sunny places. We defined a new overview point on the opposite slope and went there. It was about 3 o’clock when we came to the place. That new point allowed us to see the surrounding from another side and soon we noticed that marals began to appear. Time went on but none of the huge males came. Next day we had to drive back to the town and to fly home. It was hot on the slope and flies and bugs began to pester us. It gave me the idea that animals suffered from flies too and would prefer to rise to the heigh 3000 masl. It was colder there and wind would relieve them from the insects. I was right because soon we detected a big bull which slept under the fir tree near the top. I fixed the phone on the scope and made a couple of pictures, just to consider it carefully. The sun shined so brightly that I had to get in with the head into the backpack trying to consider the photo. My God! It was #2. It was about 10km from the place where we saw it in the first time. It was the sign. -I’ll take it,- I told to the guide. -We don’t have time,- replied he with the hope in the voice. -No. We have enough,- my answer killed his hope to finish early. The direct distance to the bull was about one km and a half but taking into account all hills and holes to our way to the trophy, it was about 3km, plus we had to ascend about 700 m up. The bull could see us whene we were approaching but we hoped that it slept the big sleep or didn’t hear well. The dry grass rustled our feet though we tried to do our best and to move as quetly as possible. The only advantages we had were the wind which blew from the mountains to our faces and the sun which shined on our backs. It was the end of the rut season and we heard the bulls’ voices all around, Soon I noticed two of them which began the knights tournament. The coveted trophy woke up and began to reply to the opponents. We speeded up, then ran and overcame the first part of the distance in the high tempo. Adrenaline is the dangerous thing! Where did the power come from?! We had to cross two more open parts but fortunately the #2 could not see us because of the huge fir tree which grew between us. The last part of the way we crossed on all fours. The last time when I observed the male, it stood up and moved somewhere to the left direction out of sight. It was about 50 meters to the top, when the guide pulled me down. I obeyed and detected the young male which laid in a few meters from us. It slept but woke up because of the noise. “Please, don’t bark”,- I prayed to myself, then got the pipe and blew. The maral stared at us but didn’t make any sound. The guide and I stood up without speaking and went to attack. It decided that the best variant would be to dissapear. We took the breathe and ran up the top. The strong smell of musk hit my nose, my eyes peeled along the slope but I couldn’t find #2. -  It left! It left! Give me the pipe! I blew into the pipe hoping for the reply. Nothing… There was a small male which we noticed on the shadow side of the slope but couldn’t find any tracks of our bull. - There it is!The bull stood in front of us but below us. It went down to 200 meters moving to us! I didn’t remember well what had happened next. Everything was like in a blur. I took camera, focused it on the bull and asked the guide to make video. Then I tried to talk with the bull but it understood that we were not the ones for whom it was and ran away up to the mountain. The hunter which slept inside of me woke up and send away the cameraman. I began to hunt. The bull was running and I didn’t want to fire to the moving aim.   -Give me the pipe! The guide did his best and stopped the male. It took me just a moment to aim and shoot.. The maral stooped and ran stumped on the right leg. According my experience it meant that I hit to the heart but the strong bull could ran about 100 meters with such wound and fall from the rocks and damage the antlers. I ran ahead, shot once again and stop it. It fell like a dead man. Hurrah! That was the Hunt! Everything finished in the best way! I used Blaser carbon R93, cal. 300 Win Mag,   Federal Accubond 180 gr, sight Zeiss terra-3 (4-12 x46), сетка rz8. We went down to the trophy! The trophy was great! It had thick thorny antlers in the upper part. Then we made pictures, cut meat and moved back to the camp. At last we were late to the airport because the avalanche came down to the road and closed it but all other things were excellent. The very interesting moment is that the bull’s liver was white and sweet. It happens because of glycogen's. Such liver’s condition is normal for the rut season but it was almost over. It proves the idea that old males loose the reproduction function and trophy hunting helpe to regulate the reproductiv population. That's the story!
25.10.2018
Али Алиев
Urtabuz- the first meeting

Urtabuz- the first meeting

5K m above the sea level! Is it a lot or not? Probably it’s so, but it’s personal to each other. The experienced climbers can call this altitude to be childish in comparison with the eight- thousand booms. I respect these people but I think they all are a little bit crazy. They differ from hunters because they ascend mountains, driven by dream to reach the place where the usual human being will never reach because of different reasons including health. But hunters always have the definite goal - the trophy, which makes them to climb the heights.   Normal, abnormal. Your friends who have never been on such height, won’t understand what you feel there. It's much easier for the mountain hunters. We always go to the place where our chances to get the worthy trophy are the highest. Marco Polo is one of them. If the local guides tell you that the worthy trophy is in a definite place you will agree to follow them without hesitations. You go there without thinking what will happen next. But the humans from the plains have to be ready for the difficulties, including health problems, which wait for them there.          I realized a long time ago that hunters are not quite "ordinary" people, not like all other people on the street, in particular, from my circle of friends.  There are not many people who can understand the hunters who are always ready to go a dozen of kilometers, to spent nights in the tents or without, in plains and forests all over the world. Not many people, spoiled by the civilization’s benefits, are ready to climb the steep mountains and carry a heavy, about 20kg, backpack. The ascend can take 6 or 9 hours. It often happens at night when you rise and have to do each step by touch.       Most of people twist at the temple, when I tell them about my expeditions to Pamir or to the mountains in Kyrgyzstan.  Last time when I described my adventures on the Roof of the World, what I felt and what I tested on myself when the altitude was 4000masl and more, they treated me as inadequate” person. And they had reasons. I’ll tell you why. The meeting.       That time we had to drive through the town Osh where I arrived first. My hunter fellow from Kazakhstan Zhaisan Syzdykov arrived later. I flew directly from Moscow while he drove to Bishkek first and then flew to Osh. There weren't direct flights from Kazakhstan to Osh at that time.         The local representative of the company Said met me at the airport and we went to try tasty local cuisine while Zhaisan would arrive. Kyrgyzstan. I want to say some words about the Kyrgyz food service. First time I visited Bishkek was at 90s and I was pleasantly surprised by the variety of the local cozy cafe. All dishes were cooked without refinement but tasted really good and cooks used only high-quality products without any GMOs and food additives. The Kyrgyz cuisine is known by its tasty dishes from fresh beef and lamb. Prices were not high. Once we ate in one of the local restaurants and paid just 140 euro for eight men. I could hardly imagine such prices in Russia.         I ate one portion of kebab with gusto and drank a cup of local beer. It gave me strength after a long way from Vladimir to Domodedovo and then 4 hours flight to Osh. Said didn’t drink alcohol and took a cup of tea.      We ate, talked and soon the time to go and to meet Zhaisan became. It was just gone 6 pm when we saw our friend coming to us. We loaded our luggage and drove to the town. The road to the “Roof of the World’.        After a short discussion we all agreed to stay at night in the hotel. It was more safe and much interesting to drive during day that at night. At 8 am our team, which was consisted of three man was ready and moved.  Said was the driver while Zhaisan and I enjoyed the sightseeing through the car window.         The way to the Pamir mountains wasn’t light though it was flat enough. The first thing, which made us feel not well, was gaining altitude to 4000 masl. The altitude 2500 masl doesn't suit for people who are used to live on the plains, they feel not well there. But the height from 3000 meters and more are the serious stress for them. I know, that lots of things depend on the individual physiological features of each person. Some people feel better than others because their bodies can absorb oxygen from the thin air more effectively. But some people can lay a week and can't adapt to the altitude even being in a good physical form.       I read lots of book to understand more how our bodies function in the highland’s conditions, studied several methods to adapt to the heights more than 4000 masl and interviewed the experienced climbers. I also used my own experience of overcoming altitude sickness which I got when climb the first times. My friend and the partner Jury Matison helped me a lot in it. He told me about the situations when hunters didn’t follow the doctor’s advice, climb the mountains and got serious health problems. They saved some of them with a pressure chamber only. There were several fatal cases too. A short retrograde. When I was studying this question, I learned that 70% of the climbers who died on Everest died not from the mountain sickness, but because of the inadequacy of their own actions. In other words, they died, due to general hypoxia and lack of oxygen coming to the brain.  They just "went crazy.” That was the reason of the inadequate actions that led to death. Most of them thought that they were ok and didn’t need to go anywhere. The journalists from the Explorer channel made a show about the American climber and it was showed on TV.       I have learned a lot about the mountain sickness, about its progress and what consequences it has on each stage. How and when you can save a victim. Once I even helped the Polish hunter who had reckoned too much upon his strength during the hunting trip in Kyrgyzstan though the altitude was just 3500m above sea level. We delivered him to the hospital in Bishkek with the first signs of the disease. I was surprised but the doctors who examined him didn’t know how to treat the mountain sickness. Thus, I shared my experience with them and told how to treat the patient.       Over the years, I have accumulated some experience in preparing for hunting at an altitude of more than 3,500 meters, compiled a list of medications and vitamins recommended by specialists for better adaptation at such heights. I confirm, it works. I sent that list to Jaizan same time when started to get ready for the trip.         So, we were on our way to the mountains. We crossed the first mountain pass on the height 4000 masl on the boundary between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Then the road became flat. After we left the last Kyrgyz village Sari-Tash it passes over a flat area. If the weather is fine you can see the Lenin Peak (7134 m). The view is amazing. The panorama is fascinating! It impresses all people who visit that area for the first time. The peaks, covered by snow, stand in a row as if somebody took the icebergs from the ocean and carried them there. They all glitter by blue and white caps with emerald tones. Hello, Gorny Badakhshan.         Soon the ascent to the roof of the world began. First of all we had to pass the border post on the Kyrgyz side - passport control, customs, drug control point. Then did the same in Tajikistan. It was on the height 4 000метров! It wasn't well to stay there long but it didn’t depend on us.         At last it was all over and we enter the harsh Gorno-Badakhshan district of Tajikistan. I called it harsh because of its climate. When I abruptly moved, I felt slight nausea and pain in the temples, it reminded us about the altitude. All the factors of the highlands are already acting on your body there. The first symptoms are the loss of liquid. You often go to the restroom. The main thing is to avoid dehydrations, you need to drink a lot. especially in the first two or three days. Being in the camp we usually drink a lot of green or black tea with sugar. Sugar is an obligatory nutrition component in the mountains.      The last settlement we left, was the village Karakul, located not far from the same called mountain lake.   We drove about an hour around the lake and arrived to the place- our camp. The mountain camp consisted of several cabins. There was a garage, a storage and a service cabin. The main building was a lodge for hunters. It was like a five-star hotel, located on the highland. It was really comfortable. There were several bedrooms and a restroom on the first floor. A kitchen and a canteen were downstairs. But all hunters were always surprised by hot shower and a small swimming pool, located in the building. You can seat in the sauna and then jump to the pool filled with the cold water with ice. But you can enjoy all those things only after your body will adapt to the altitude 4000 masl, where the camp is located. Usually it takes from two to four days. The guides won't allow you to carry bags to the first floor if you have just arrived.         The most important thing in the first days is to be patient and don't be active. It’s hard to go up several steps, you will feel breathe shortness, and your temples break with a frantic pulse. But it may not happen. In the first day! If you move actively in a day before, hypoxia will catch you next day. The first day your body will use all oxygen that it can take from the internal organs to compensate the lack of oxygen in the brain and for the heart muscles. So, you can think that you are well. But it's not so and soon you’ll feel it.  Later you’ll feel really bad. I saw and not once how hunters ignored our advices and behaved themselves in the usual way, as they are used to do on the plain.  Next day they were very sick. Their skin had green color and they looked haggard. They suffered from nausea, dizziness, and vomiting. None of them was ready for hunting. Such people have to come to their senses first, and only then try to hunt. How do you think, Is it a lot or not to visit the Pamir mountains at the altitude 4000 masl, 4 times during the six month? Once I did it and felt what could happen if you did too often. It was worse than to stay on the height for 6 months after the only adaptation.        According my experience I could say that the most important thing for the right adaption is your behavior in the first days. At the same time, you can't just lie on the bed. The best variant is to walk slowly not far from the camp. Thus you give your body to be reloaded and to launch reserves for adaptation to high-altitude conditions. The doctors who work with the climbers say to spend 2- 3 days on a place after climbing each 500 meters. But we ascend 4000 m in one day. It's a outright and sophisticated mockery of our bodies. I came to the conclusion that 2-3 days are enough for me personally to adapt. All that time I have to rest and to walk without strenuous physical activity. It helps me to move actively in other days on the heights more than 4000 masl. I don't like active start in such conditions but sometimes I have to pull myself together and begin active hunting with the clients from the first days. Meeting in the camp. Yuri Mathison.          All staff came out to greet us. I introduced Zaisan to Yuri, he heard a lot about him. He was a man of medium height, with an impenetrable expression on his face at first glance, but with an open, friendly smile. Yuri is my old friend and partner in organizing hunting in the Pamirs. A man with ancestors from Baltic was accidentally occurred in Dushanbe, where he graduated from a medical institute. He fell in love with the mountains already being a practicing doctor in the highland village of Murghaband and then became interested in mountain hunting. That hobby became his main activity later.       I want to say some words about Yuri, whom I know many years but still don’t know well. He is still a mystery man for me. He doesn’t hurry to undress his soul even for the people whom he knows for a long time.      His main feature is his love to hunting and Nature.  I noticed it and not once when we talked. Yuri is a person who always surprises me at every time I come to the Pamirs. I’m not sure that there are people who are in love with mountain and mountain ungulates more than Matison. Now he is more interested in making pictures of mountains animals than hunting and sometimes it’s more difficult than to shoot for a long distance. You need to come close to make a good photo. Moreover, the photo-hunters have to carry the heavy equipment which is heavier than a gun. Yuri showed me his backpack. It weights 18kg with the camera, lens and a tripod. And the photographer has to hike dozens of km by the mountain relief, on the heights more than 4000 masl and haul it with him.  But the shots, made by Yuri, can win the Grands Prix of any international show. I mean the series of pictures devoted to the snow leopard when it hunts for Marco Polo. He managed to approach the predator, hidden behind the rock, within two meters. None of the camera trap can do it. Yuri made several photos. The most interesting thing was that the sheep could slip away.       Yuri went about 50 km per day, crossing the snow passes, from the one camp to another. You needed to see his eyes when he described it. He gave me a quick glance and told: - Just imagine the White Silence!”.        He is also very professional and can manage and control all aspects of that business. We all heard his famous phrase: “The East is a delicate matter!». It characterizes fully the complexity of local interaction in all spheres. Moreover, he pays attention to charitable activities. I can confirm with all responsibility how hard it is to work for the European on the East. It does him much credit that he hasn’t gave up before the eastern bureaucracy. I’m proud to work with him. There are legends about him. His endurance amazes the imagination of seasoned mountain hunters. Some people called a "Yeti for his ability to hike in the snowy mountains for several days. But his most famous nickname given to him by the Americans is Doctor Poli, which was given to him for his dedication to hunting Marco Polo sheep Ovis Ammon Poli - Latin name. More recently, American scientists named one of the subspecies of the Pamir sheep after him – Matison Argali (Ovis Ammon Matisoni).         The road took us about seven hours. We were tired and wanted to rest, what we did just right after a modest meal. Later in the evening we discussed our plans for the next day. It was always hard to sleep first night on the height. The time spent in bed throughout the night was like fighting hypoxia and its consequences in the form of mild nausea, dizziness, thirst and replenishing water reserves. The regular visits to the toilet and replenishment of the water supply in the body after that didn't give me the opportunity to relax. The whole night passed in a tiresome half-doze. Hunting.       We all got up at 5 am. Then we had light breakfast and drove to the mountains using the old but robust UAZ. The altitude was a test not only for people but for the cars too. The engine power reduced on 30% because of thin air. It could barely drive on the steep ascents though we used the first speed instead of the third one as on the plain.         The weather was fine. The sun was rising. The only unpleasant moment in that paradise picture was a strong wind but it was normal for that area. The large temperature difference was a common thing for those mountains. It was cold at nights at the beginning of October, water in small springs had frozen already. But it became warm during day hours and we could even take off some clothes.      Zaisan admired the Pamir nature in spite of light hypoxia. I had noticed that positive attitude in the hunting team helped to hunt more effectively.       The guides monitored the surroundings before our arrival and we were going to the definite place where the sheep had been recently detected. The animals were still there but grazed too high as our guides and we thought at that moment.  But we all were mistaken. Later you’ll understand what I mean. We talked and decided to go and check another group, spotted a day before. We found them. There were several trophy size males.       The group, consisted of 12- 13 sheep males, was going to have rest and we resolved to rise and approach them the shooting distance. Zaisan was keen in long distance shooting and was ready to fire from any distance to 800 meters. Fortunately, he had a 300 Rem caliber carbine Ultra Mag allowed to hit such targets.        Soon our romantic mood had faded, though I knew it’d be so, when we followed our guides Ruslan and Mansur. The first one wasn’t tall about 170cm height but had a substantial physique. His for-fathers were ancient alans. He was about 50 years old and had the education of electronics specialist. The second guide was above average height, somewhere about 182 cm, of a dry build, over the sixth decade, a descendant of the warriors of the Golden Horde. They both were different but both could walk in the mountains and did it easily. I hunted with them several times and had a high opinion about their abilities to go in the mountains on such heights. The ability to hike long is the base of successes in the hunting expeditions on the Pamir. I’m sure that most of sportsmen or special forces soldiers won't be able to keep up with those guys in the mountains. The first ascend.      So, these two started to climb. Jason and I tried to follow them. I'd tell you when then happened. We walked about 100 meters on almost flat terrain, even before the first ridge on our first day of hunting at altitude, and we felt like a fish thrown out of the water on the shore I could compare those feelings with my 1,000-meter race in my youth.  I ran well and even had 1st category on the run but each time after finishing I almost voided my stomach because of tension. I experienced the same feeling at the beginning of that climb. Feelings were same when I had started climbing but I had to go further more and more. My throat was dry, my chest was tight with breath’s shortness, my heart was pounding like a motor, and my eyes were watering. I opened my mouth and try to find some oxygen for myself. But the body had not yet learned how to do it at that altitude in such conditions on the first day. I tried to give it a rest and try to regain the breath. At first it turned out with great difficulty. Shortness of breath pressed and squeezed the throat. At first Zaisan tried to walk with the same tempo like Mansur and Ruslan but understood soon that couldn’t breath. I had to repeat one of my tips to him again. “We won't be able to move so fast as they go but can spoil hunting because we won't have strength when it’d be necessary. Most importantly, always go at your own pace to give the body a uniform load!” Or the lack of oxygen will effect not only lungs but the muscles too. On the way, we were rescued by a bottle with a nutritious drink prepared by me in the camp. I foresaw what could happen to us, and the vitamin drink in that case helped a lot. I took a flask out of my backpack regularly , and we drank to it, taking two or three sips.        Thus, Zhaisan and I followed our leaders. Fortunately, the guys always looked at us. They even tried to urge us on, which was useless, since the driven horses, which we were on that first ascent on the first day of hunting, it was difficult to spur even with a whip. I couldn’t even say that the ascend was steep or difficult. Those mountains were gentler in the comparison with the mountains in the Northern Ossetia where Zhaisan and I hunted a month and a half ago, but... The conditions were different.          We were moving in the middle of the slope and came to shooting distance. But then the wind changed our plans. It often blows to the one side when you are on the plain but changes the direction in the ravine. As soon as we went into the gorge, where the sheep were lying, the wind began to blow right at our backs, carrying obviously our smell to the animals. Yuri, who remained at the car, corrected our rise. Yuri, who stayed near the car, said the sheep stood up and went up to the mountains. We didn’t have time to go 450 meters to shoot. But I knew that we couldn’t move faster than we went.        I experienced that feeling many times when had walked many kilometers in a day, even in the mountains, even on the plain or in the taiga, and approaching an animal at the end of the path something, or maybe someone unknown to you, takes your coveted trophy behind a rock or into the forest. It happens once again. Our trophies went away. And we were absolutely exhausted by "chasing" luck, but were left without it.        We took a little break and wanted to turn around and go down, but Yuri reported that a small group of sheep stopped just 500 meters from us above on one of the ledges They didn't discover us yet but we needed to be in a hurry and to go up as soon as possible. Jason and I obviously couldn't do that. The reality was such that we had to give up the chase. And the sheep moved further into the sky-high heights. We were on the altitude 4500 masl at that time. Our condition was far from good. I felt as if was beaten and kicked. My arms and legs were just wadded up. It was a very strange feeling.  I didn't know about Zhaysan, but it seemed to me that my legs were just inflated with air, and there were no muscles there. Such sensation was a usual thing because of the lack of oxygen in the muscles.          We had to have rest, and sat down on the rocks, then got up and started on the way back, it took about five minutes for the leg muscles to start working again somehow. It was a mistake to think that the way back was lighter. Everything was hard for us in the first day in the mountains. At last we came to the car where another guide waited for us. Alick was a Kirghiz and I hunted with him already but in another camp. Empty-handed!       So, the hunting of the first day in the Pamir mountains was over after such an ascent. I preferred to think that hunting luck would come to us later. None of us could even think about food at the first moment of arrival. We drank a little tea and went to bed to recover and try to gain strength for the next day.        It should be noted another feature of staying at altitude. Personally, I always experience it for myself. I'm talking about hyperventilation. The fact is that we constantly lose moisture when exhaling air. In winter, this can be seen by the steam. It's just not noticeable in the summer, but it's there. As we gain altitude, the more moisture we lose through breathing, given that the air at altitude is much drier.  I’ve noticed one thing which happens with me in the mountains. Being on the highlands I get the awful congestion in my chest but it’s not a cold. The remedies prescribed for a cold cough didn’t save from this cough. I felt dryness not only in the throat though I drank a lot, but in the bronchi and in the nose. It turned out to be simple to the banal.  It was the effect of hyperventilation of the respiratory tract. It's not dangerous but not a pleasant thing. It was that effect that did not allow me to rest normally at night, I had to clear my throat constantly. It also bothered me when I was climbing.      That time I decided to "outsmart" this test sent by nature. I followed Yuri's advice and took with me means for moistening the respiratory tract and nasal mucosa. Nose drops based on apricot oil and an inhaler with eucalyptus oil for the throat helped me a lot to overcome unpleasant sensations. I could subsequently sleep relatively peacefully at night thanks to those means. Rest is the main component of recuperation. Zhaisan also used the inhaler from time to time.      Then in the evening we discussed the day. Yuri and the guides told us that there were a few more groups of sheep at that area. But we should need to rise the highest plateau at that area- Urtabuz.  Telling the truth we arrived there to hike the mountains. But we were somehow very cautiously informed that the plateau was at an altitude of 5,000 meters! At the same time, they asked us if the hunter was ready to take the risk and go on such an expedition. They didn't ask me anymore, because all the guys knew about my physical abilities. But that time it was not so simple.      Zhaysan confirmed his readiness immediately, but I wasn't sure that he realized fully what five thousand Pamirs above sea level were and what the price might be for climbing to that height on the second day of his stay in the mountains.  I knew because I was able to experience the invisible, but very hard touch of such dangerous heights on one of the passes. It was the Ak-Baytal Pass (or White Horse). Its height was 4 655 masl. I was making video there then realized that I couldn't not only talk but think there. Hypoxia influenced not only my speech system but my mind too. Everything turned out to be very simple with Yuri's explanations already in the camp.  "You wouldn't be able to hunt for at least two or three days after 5000m!" he said in the camp laconically, but very succinctly. Nobody knew the consequences after such fast climbing without adaptation and better not to allow them.  He said that the hunter could walk to heights of 4,600 m above sea level more or less successfully, but heights beyond that limit could hit the body hard, which Zhaysan and I had personally experienced that time.  The second day of hunting everything happened as follows. The next morning, everyone got up before dark. It was interesting that nobody woke us up but we all got up and goatherd in the canteen to drink tea in time. It reminded me the preparation for a serious special operation. When everybody knew what to do and what to be ready for.         Zhaisan and I were fully prepared. I had a very rich experience in the mountain hunting but none of us did such climbing before and didn't know what would be there. But we tried to look cheerful. How would our body of a plain dweller respond to the challenge of the mountain element? Nevertheless, we looked cheerful. We sat in the car looking military fit and ready for great things and drove. Alik was a driver, Zhaisan sat near him while Mansur, Ruslan and I sat on the back seat. The flocks of migratory ducks were flying up from small lakes, where they stood for a short rest in the way to the south.         We crossed several rivers covered by fresh ice. Finally, the road went steeply up, and our iron horse still stubbornly climbed forward and up the stone, stumbling due to failures in the work of the distributor. That's it! Then we had to walk.         I got out of the car and threw a backpack on myself, and felt short of breath, and what would await us there, I thought to myself and raised my gaze to the top of the Urtobus. Its lifeless, more Martian than terrestrial landscape, did not promise Jason and me anything good on the second day of our stay in the mountains. Rather the opposite. By that time, the sun had already risen over the ridges and was eating us with its caustic rays and harsh radiation. The wind was even stronger there than near the camp. It pelted us with prickly snowflakes. But we had no choice. That’s why we went on to move.          It was hardly believe that such physical trained people, as we were, who hunted and hiked a lot in the Caucasian mountains, could go just fifty meters and then asked to stop for the rest. Then we moved a few meters more and stopped once again. We tried to catch greedy breaths of very thin air to somehow feed your body with oxygen. But the higher we went, the more difficult it was the latter. We fully realized where we were and what was the main problem in such situation. That was hypoxia.  The longer we went, the stronger it became. The most difficult thing at that stage was to breathe. Fortunately, all muscles, the heart and the brain still worked more or less well. Probably they still had oxygen. But I felt dryness in the lungs, larynx and bronchi. As the result I was always coughing and had constricted chest. The air pressure on the altitude 5000 masl was 400 mm Hg. Just 400 mm! It’s 760 mm on the plain. But it didn’t make us lighter we felt ourselves very heavy and clumsy. The ascend became even steeper. We had to jump on huge rocks, which took extra strength. Our group was divided. Alik had reached the top already and tried to spot the sheep. We heard the radio and knew that he couldn’t find any.       We were close. I didn't feel the euphorias, provoked by hypoxia and the realization that I had reached such height. I had mixed feelings. On the one hand, it's always nice to be at the top and admire the beautiful views below, on the other hand, the same height constantly reminds you of your physical condition.       We could only use the language of gestures and looks. It was hard to talk. My head was buzzing, and there were circles in front of my eyes. When we stopped for a rest I took out video camera and began to movie. And then something happened, what I had never felt before. I tried to say something about the beauties of nature and feel that my jaw barely moved. It turned out that it had become difficult not only to move, but to speak too.  Thoughts got confused and it was difficult to direct them into some kind of information flow. Familiar feelings!  I turned to Jason, and we looked at each other, trying to put on a strained smile, laughing at ourselves. He felt the same symptoms, I guessed. He was blinking but very slowly. It looked unnatural. Half an hour later we were already at the top of 5,000 meters above sea level. To get the trophy!       Most people will twist the finger at the temple. Do we need trophy at such a price? The landscape around us looked as if we were on the Mars not on the Earth. All we could see was the clay-sandy soil with a mass of stones scattered everywhere.        One example, told to me by Yuri, was indicative. Once they had a French hunter with an companion on a hunt. They also went to Urtobus.  The hunter could move somehow around, but his escort was so bad that they had to leave him in one place to pick up on the way back.  They did not find him in the place where they left him when they came for him on the way to the camp. They found it by chance and it was already far from the place where he was supposed to be. The reason was the physiological state, so called lapse in sanity. He was in desperation, and forgot that he was just left for a while, and thought that he had been abandoned, and he did not know where to go. And he did something that should never be done in such situations. He left the place. It could have ended very tragically if he had not been found.  He was in tears like a child when he was discovered, and began to kiss all those who found him. So, you understand what I mean when talk about these 5000 masl. And that man was a cyclist of a very high level. He was one of those who rode the multi-day cycling Tour de France. The athletes know that moral balance is also necessary there in conditions of huge physical overloads in addition to a colossal reserve of physical strength.      This story can only confirm my thought that hunting at such heights requires not only a good physical shape, but also a high level of psychological stability and self-control.       There was a very strong wind on the top which penetrated easily inside the clothes. We closed everything. But it was still cold. Probably the poor blood supply was the reason why we felt cold. Our blood clotted and flowed very slow that's why it was harder to warm up.        Ruslan, Mansur, Zhaisan and I hidden behind the rocks while Alik coordinated our actions with Yuri, who staid down. We didn't seat for a long. Soon we heard Yuri’s voice. He noticed the group of sheep. We stood up though it was hard to do for Zhaisan and me and moved to the Urtabuz plateau. Walking on the plateau was a difficult task for us though it was flat. It sounded strange but it was even harder to start hiking after the rest on such heights than if we moved without stops. I felt weakness and all muscles seemed to be made from cotton. I made myself to move, to make them active. But we were already THERE, at a height and the sheep have been found, we had to move.        Few times we went the wrong directions and did several We made several empty and unnecessary maneuvers, because the guides misunderstood Yuri.  Do you know that the landscape can be different when you stand at the bottom because you can’t see all gorges. The sheep left the place while we were looking for the right way. You could hardly imagine how upset we were. We rose the top and lost such opportunity to get the trophy!      It was painful to look at Zhaisan. I was afraid that we couldn’t hunt next days if failed now. He could feel not well on the second day at 5,000 meters. Nobody could predict how we’d feel ourselves after that climbing.      When it became obvious that the beast was not there, the hunter and I decided to make pictures ourselves at such a height. We prepared the cameras. I slid the camera and made the panoramic picture.       The Karakul lake casted blue sky color far beneath us. It was surrounded by the mountains peaks which I knew well from my previous hunting trips. The landscape was really amazing. The mountain peaks, covered by snow, inflected the full color spectrum. It happened because of the sunny rays which touched them by different angles. We did several shots and were ready to go back. Mansur offered to take my backpack to make me feel better. I refused. Nobody carried my backpack yet, It was me who always helped the clients with the heavy bags. I told him that the problem was not the weight behind my back, but the lack of oxygen I needed in that air. The long-awaited moment.       So, we went back to the car. At some moment, Zhaysan and I found ourselves only in the company of Alik. Ruslan and Mansur moved to the right. Suddenly Alik turned to us and pointed somewhere down and to the left. We saw the red-gray side of the ram, which stood between two huge stones. It was definitely a ram, since there was no such shade of color at the height anymore.  We ducked immediately. The male and other ones were very close, just in 100- 120 meters from us. On the one hand, it was good for shooting, but on the other it was too close, because any careless movement can give us away, and suddenly beast ... began to move.        Zhaysan pulled the shutter quickly and, followed Alik, down. They were bending down to the ground as low as possible, as far as possible. I followed them like shadow. On the way, I took out the camera and turned it on. I wanted to make video how we were approaching the trophy.          The herd, consisted of 35- 38 individuals, stood beneath us in 100 m. They all were males and most of them had good trophy qualities. We had not to miss the chance. Zhaysan began to choose a position for the shot. Alik found a worthy trophy. It was the very last of that group. Then he gave orientation to the hunter. But the herd began to run. They discovered us. Alik shouted to Zhaisan: “The last one! The last one! We heard the shot but the sheep kept running. I tried to follow animals through the camera sight though it was difficult. The sun was setting and shined right to the screen from my back. But I still watched them. Zhaisan missed because he didn’t understand what male was the last one and aimed not the right one. The ram that we needed was the last to run, it strayed from the main group. Zhaysan tried to catch the last of the group, which was very difficult to do. Obviously, that was the reason for the blunder.          We understood what had happened and both (Alik and I) shouted before he fired the second time: “The latest!” A shot rang out.  He shot once again and I noted a fountain of dust from the other side of the sheep. But the ram kept running. It clearly stood out among all its fellows with some special strength and proudly raised head with gorgeous horns that could be identified even from such a distance.       I noticed that the ram jerked slightly and slowed down slightly after the second shot, but then it straightened out and continued running after the group.      The hunter fired the third and the fourth times. But those shots seemed were outright misses, judging by the dust raised by the bullets away from the ram.       I need to remember that the hunter has spent more than 7 hours walking on the exorbitant heights till that moment. I thought it was difficult for him to see the rams in the sight.  He couldn't calm the breath before shooting and had to fire by the running aim. The second obstacle was that he needed to choose the right male among the running ones but the sheep ran very fast.        The sheep left, or rather, disappeared behind the ridge.  To our great regret, we did not find the coveted trophy either at the place or on the way they ran. But Mansur and Alik found blood, after walking a little on the trail of the herd. I was right, he hit it by the second shot. That gave at least some hope that the gorgeous trophy would be in the hands of the hunter. We watched the video once again.  It confirmed our thoughts. The second bullet hit the sheep, we pointed to.        It's a well-known fact that argali is very strong on the wound. So, we decided not to pursue, which means not to drive the animal, despite the fact that the hit, according to our assumptions, was correct and on the body, and the cartridge was powerful. I could have gone very far on adrenaline. Moreover it was getting dark. The sun was setting and soon we wouldn’t see anything. We decided to get it tomorrow. If the ram was sure that it was not pursued, it wouldn't go far, but lie down somewhere in a secluded place. And then it was unlikely to be able to get up with a serious injury.        The way back to the car was not so easy as we wanted. We all were tired but Zhaisan and I could hardly go.  The most important thing was that we passed the height test and the hunter could even engage the goal. Telling the truth, we wanted to have the trophy when coming back to the camp but hunting had always its own scenario.  Feeling of uncertainty began to hurt our hunter. He was worried about whether we would find the trophy or not. But, one way or another, the hunt took place. There was something to remember and discuss in the evening in the camp.        We fell like logs to the beds when arrived to the camp. An hour later, we went down to the dining room to discuss the situation with Yuri and the guides and outline a plan for tomorrow. I even managed to persuade my body to take some food to restore strength.  We were not sick or throwing up in spite of the distance we went at that day on such heights. The only unusual thing we all did, we drank 1 L of tea each.  The effect of five thousand meters should have to appear later. We were under a certain euphoria from physical overload and emotional impressions.          That night didn’t bring us calm. Zhaisan said me later that didn't sleep a wink that night. I could understand him.  The Nature made him a gift - a good trophy. But we hadn’t it yet. The real hunters can imagine what Zhaisan has been going through his mind. The same thing was happening inside me. I also worried because we did everything we could but still didn’t get the trophy. The trophy didn’t lie at our feet. How we got it.           Next day we all got up before the sunrise. At 5 am everybody was ready to go to look for a wounded ram. Yuri and other guides assured Zhaisan to stay in the camp by many reasons. But he wanted to come. The first one was that it was really dangerous to go back to such altitude. The second reason was that Zhaisan and I were the encumbrance for the guides who are used to work and to hike on the heights. We both agreed and went to see off our guides. They were the angels who could bring good tidings. We returned to the room, and began to assume and weigh the chances of finding a wounded ram. It was the usual behavior of people who could not influence the situation but hoped for the best. Zhaisan could not find a place. I had to calm him from time to time and assured that everything would be good.         I thought about it all night and came to the conclusion after the analysis of various situations with wounds of the beast, I could assume that the ram had already passed off at night. It was seriously damaged. I thought it had the internal bleeding and it had not chance to go far.        There was another problem. Would it possible to find the dead animal. But the hunters never forget about their natural helpers. I talk about birds - from crows to vultures and other predators. These nature representatives don't give any chance to waste of high-calorie food. They begin to circle over the wounded animal and to wait when it’ll pass away and then landed to feast. And then they have a feast.  Thus, we could determine the location of the beast we shot. It’ obligatory to be in time and not to allow them to damage the trophy. Taking into account that we shot in the evening and the guides left the camp before the sunrise, the chances to find the trophy in a right condition was very high.         The sun shone the tops of the mountains and then the valley with the lake. It also looked into our kitchen with a dining room. It was necessary to keep our strength with a light breakfast. Zhaisan and I went downstairs. I dreamed to drink a cup of hot green tea.  Each of us drank about a Liter of water during the night but I prefer tea to water. Tea always makes me more active and warm me up. Everything on the East starts and ends with tea.  We did not violate local traditions. The water supply in the body needed to be replenished by constantly being in the mountains, which we did. We didn’t notice how we ate bacon and eggs while drinking tea.       The first news from our guides arrived. One of the radio stood in the kitchen and we could hear what was going on. We listened to Yuri who coordinated Mansur, Ruslan and Alik. Finally, he discovered the group of sheep that we saw.   The night before I told Yuri that our male was different from others in the gray skin color and huge horns.   The guides replied that there was not the yesterday’s sheep among the group. We were glad but where was it? If the ram was not in the herd, then it was behind. Where was it? The guys lost the bloody track because the animal crossed the wide part of stone cree and it was problematic to find blood there.  Yuri made a circle, and closed the area where the beast could lie down, then it remained only to find it. Just find it! It was easy to say to find it in such mountains with many large and small gorges.        But birds helped them, as the guides told us later. The radio battery had been dead and we knew all details later.        The sheep crossed that part with the loose stones and found the place to lay. It couldn't get up and passed away there, then it rolled down to the small gorge where they found it. But they could hardly to find it if the birds didn’t help them.  They had already begun to circle above the food and the guides noticed the sign. The trophy meeting.        You could hardly imagine the hunter's face when he saw his trophy.  Zhaisan was shining and his jubilation transfered to all of us.  The length of the horns was 148 and 149 cm. It was a great trophy especially for the debutant in those mountains.  Some hunters arrived back several times to get such trophy but he got from the first time on the second hunting day. I guess that guy lives in the harmony with nature and doesn't make harm that's why our Mother Nature decided to award him. We couldn’t but make the photo session? Thus, we put the trophy on the hill, not far from the lake and did several shots. I tried to make video but it was windy and it hindered a lot. So that moment complicated the situation, but did not detract from the essence of what was happening and did not spoil the impression that the hunter became the rightful owner of the trophy he deserved.        Everybody in the camp congratulated Zhaisan with the trophy. The Final! It was time to relax. All evening Zhaisan's eyes were burning, he praised the guys who brought him to this trophy, and especially for being able to find the ram. It's a real disgrace to lose the wounded animal. It disappears both for him and for nature. My hunting principal is to get the animal only if you are going to use it as the trophy, for food or for a medicine. Nobody will make me eat meat of the Kamchatka brown bear because 90% of all animals are infected with Trichinella. But the hunter can take its skin and skull or to use its gallbladder or fat for medical purpose.       Our cook Shot prepared super gala dinner to celebrate the successful end of the hunting. He started to do it after getting news by radio. Our team.      It’s time to tell you about Yuri’s team. I can’t say that they work there. They just live by the atmosphere, which they create during the hunting expeditions. There are not identical people on the Earth. We all are different but it’s great because we become stronger when gathered together. It took him many years to create such cohesive team, - said me Yuri. Lots of people left the company. Only men of spirit and real professionals, who loved their jobs, stayed with him. They are far from the families for the most part of the year. How strong do they love their work to sacrifice the proximity of the most loved people - the wife and kids?  It's very difficult to explain the families why do they need to work so long and on such heights. A human being doesn’t adapt to live on such altitudes. The best example is the small mountain town Murgab, located further down the road towards Afghanistan. The most widespread diseases among the locals are problems with hearts and lungs. It is difficult for women to give birth there. Murghab is located at an altitude of 3,600 meters above sea level, i.e. even below our base camp at 4,000 meters above sea level. Can you imagine what kind of load carry the bodies of the guys who grew up on the plain during such a long stay on the hunts.        Thus, we spent that evening with great pleasure. Though we were afraid of consequences of taking alcohol on the altitude but drank a few shots to celebrate the successful hunt. And said several speeches, devoted to our friends. Zhaisan and I are still alive, as you can see!  These meetings help to understand each other better and to build new contacts. You can analyze what has happen when the tension is gone.  Our guides and Yuri told us about interesting cases from their past. They were very experienced hunters and had lots of stories. The way back.           All good things come to an end. The last evening was over and we went to sleep. We all needed to have rest before going home.        Our old friend Said arrived to the base at night. He said that if we wanted to fly home in time it’d be better to drive to Osh as soon as possible.       I woke up at night because somebody knocked to my door. It was strange. I just barely opened my eyes and went to open the door. It was dark and I could hardly recognize Said. He said it was time to leave. Telling the truth, that was the hardest thing which we had to do at that moment. The altitude and alcohol made us felt not well. It was hard to say what influenced more. But we should collect our huge bags and dive. The generator didn’t work and we did all manipulations, using the headlamps only. But hunters, as the military men, are used to act quickly. It took us just thirty minutes to pack and to load everything.      All camp staff went to see us off. A very warm farewell and wishes for a successful journey for a long time reminded us of the attentive meeting in Karakul. Such moments are remembered for a lifetime. It was unexpected, but Mother Nature also said goodbye to us and gave us the opportunity to take another look at the beautiful animals. Three young kok-mok, as the locals called them, crossed the road in front of the car. They were young males about 2- 3 years old. The animals almost flew up the slope and stopped that we could admire them. I managed to make video, which Zhaisan was very pleased with. It is worth a lot to have such a gift in memory of staying in this harsh, but very beautiful place.        On the way back we crossed all border points and drove down to the valley. It was filled by OXYGEN and we could take a deep breath! This sweet feeling, when you can inhale all the aromas of mountain vegetation and the moisture of water sources, brings you back to the real life and environment that you are used to on the plain. It always reminds me paradise after the dry and thin air on the height.       But this medal has a second side. Your body starts to rebuild again. You can feel weakness, headache and even nausea. And if you remember where we have been on what? The effects of exposure to such a height affected me for about a week after returning home.  Even at home in Vladimir,I tried to understand what was the reason of my discomfort. I was sure that had caught the infection while flew to home. But it didn’t look like virus. I felt sick. I felt weak. But when I noticed that was still drinking lots of liquid and understood what was the reason. That weakness was the result of my being on the 5000 meters above the sea level.  I used the veloergometer to train the body and to start the processes which would help me to recover. After a couple of days, I was already in my usual state.         Summing up the results of our mountain expedition, we can draw the following conclusions. 1. It's better to start training to climb such heights in 2- 3 weeks before the trip. 2. The best variant is to adapt 2- 3 days in the camp and not to go hunting. Zhaisan and I were generally prepared both mentally and physically. That's the reason why, we didn't have any big problems at altitude. 3. The hunter in the mountains has to be ready to shoot in any moment. The chance to get the worthy trophy can be just once. If you miss it the luck would leave you. I know it from my practice. The highest level of mobilization is the obligatory thing during the trip. I have to note that Zhaisan overcame all difficulties, endured the trials with dignity and managed to gather and to make the accurate shot. It gives him the right to be called the real mountain hunter. Only a few people will be able to pass the test at this height.         Thank you very much to Yuri Matison and his team for their support and professional organization of that hunting adventure.
25.10.2018
Chechen Monster

Chechen Monster

It was a very tough and powerful hunt, rich and tart, like a twenty-five-year-old "Chivas". There have never been such hunts in my practice.  Last December, I and a group of Chechen hunters took part in an expedition along the Argun Gorge and Veduchi of the Itum-Kalinsky district of Chechnya. The goal of that expedition was to estimate the population of the tur. I was interested in the possibility of trophy hunting, and therefore I focused on studying the options for hiking rock passes, conditions for climbing mountains in those areas, as well as the location of koshar – places of possible rest stop during hunting. That December experience helped me to plan a hunting expedition for the next year. It was a useful experience. The flight to the Chechen Republic was scheduled for mid-January 2018. When I had received approval from the host party to conduct the hunt, Vladimir Smelov and I flew to Grozny. For Dagestan Tur...  My colleagues in the Club of Mountain Hunters know better than others that hunting for the Dagestan tur in Chechnya has been closed since the two Chechen wars, that hunting for mountain animals in the republic has not been carried out at all for many years, and when they learn about this trip, they will say the sacramental "I didn't understand..." in bewilderment. In fact, we were just lucky to be on the cusp of a breakthrough – we managed to get officially license to hunt one male tur in Chechnya for the first time! I think that I won't have to tell you how carefully I and my team has to prepare for this hunt. We had to think over the list of equipment, to train our shooting skills (first of all), pay attention to psychological terms. It was not easy to overcome the barrier that arose in the souls of both Russians and Chechens after the war.  There has not been a single hunt for mountain hollow-horned for 20 years in the Chechen Republic, though it's the habitat of a bezoar goat, a Dagestan tur and a Caucasian chamois. The locals hunted the wolf and the jackal only. But now, the organization of trophy hunting is considered an important activity within the framework of the state program for the development of culture and tourism in the Chechen Republic. First of all, because it is necessary to organize state control over the population of mountain animals. It will give new jobs in hard-to-reach areas. It is necessary to develop a program for the development of hunting tourism with the involvement of hunting organizing companies from all over the world.  It is necessary to organize comprehensive measures for the shooting (culling) of old males of the bezoar goat and the Caucasian tur, who are no longer able to fertilize all the females of their "harems", but do not allow young males to approach them, so that there is no "explosive" growth in the number of animals. A number of other biotechnical measures are needed for the reproduction of wild ungulates. Experts say that the latter have been held for more than one year – animals are fed during difficult periods of the year, the hunters reduce the number of predators regularly, and fight poaching. It should be noted that there is such a significant composition of the jaeger service (123 people!)as in no other regions as in the Chechen Republic.  According to the latest data, the population of the Dagestan tur in Chechnya may be about 4,000 animals(!), and the populations of the red-book bezoar goat and the Caucasian chamois are also very high. The Caucasian bear population is also very numerous. This is guaranteed to arouse great interest in hunting and extreme travel in Chechnya among trophy hunters from all over the world and will attract both Russian and foreign outfitters to the republic. This is undoubtedly a great merit of the President of the Chechen Republic – Ramzan Kadyrov, who pays special attention to the development of tourism in the republic, the preservation and multiplication of wildlife in the mountains. The properly organized work of the Republican Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Protection plays a significant role, as well as the Hunting Management of the Republic and the relevant departments.  Hello, Grozny! The plane landed at the airport of the capital of the republic in the afternoon. Ruslan met us at the airport.  We have a long-term friendship with Ruslan, who invited me to this hunt. And it's not just hunting interests. It is always easy to find a common language with him on any topic: from the cultural heritage of the Chechen people, to the economic prospects of the republic. He is a business like and respected man in the city, a bright representative of real mountaineers. I'm sure that he is one of the most advanced Chechens in the hunting business. Perhaps, we will see him in the role of a professional outfitter of mountain hunts in Chechnya in the case of the imminent legitimization of the hunt for the Dagestan tur. Ruslan is professionally versed in any weapon and is one of the few people in Chechnya who shoots confidently at long distances in the mountains.  We managed to get the luggage within half an hour, and we went out slowly to the square in front of the airport terminal. The first thing that made an impression was the evening prayer. It would be hard not to hear it – the sound came from the large speakers on the minaret, which stood right in the center of the square. There is a main prayer in Islam – Namaz. It helps a person to keep a spiritual connection with Allah. Every Muslim believer should recite prayer at least 5 times a day according to the precepts of the Prophet. Another type of prayer is Dua, which means "supplication" in translation. And this is the second of the two types of worship of Allah. The Quran says: "Contact Me with dua – and I will answer you.”  Most Chechens are deeply religious people. This centuries-old faith, instilled in every child from birth, makes them reasonable, responsive and ... extremely hospitable! I felt sincere kindness, modesty and responsiveness in the eyes of all the "mountaineers" I met. It is impossible not to feel that they are ready, without hesitation, to give their lives for a friend, for a brother, for their Homeland. We stood for a minute on the square, then followed the whole group to Ruslan's car. We loaded our belongings and weapons into the car and went through the whole of Grozny to the mountains under the evening prayer.  The mountain ranges and intermountain valleys occupy more than a third of the area of Chechnya. The oldest villages are located in the mountain: most of the architectural heritage of the republic can be found there, on inaccessible slopes and in lost gorges. The main pages of Chechen history, and its most resounding victories, are connected with the mountains. The mountains of the Chechen Republic still keep many secrets of this ancient people.  The mountains in Itum-Kalinsky, Sharoysky, Veduchi and other border regions of Chechnya are among the most beautiful mountains of the Caucasus. The mountains are high and, most importantly, pointed mountain formations, extremely steep and rocky, it is difficult and very dangerous to go up there, without having the appropriate climbing equipment. The Argun Gorge in the border zone, through which the Argun River flows, is a mountain decay stretching for many kilometers all the way to Georgia. The towering rocks that are unaffordable for a hunter on foot, rise on both sides. There are few mountain trails or passages where you can "break through" to the top, to where the herds of ungulates live. The approach to the beast is very difficult thanks to such a complex mountainous terrain. Hunting on the top can go according to the usual scenario: searching for the beast, hiding it, then aiming and shooting. The initial "working" firing distances will be from 400 meters to 800 meters with small angular magnitudes, wind loads on external ballistics have little effect. You always need to be ready to shoot through the gorge. But the hunter should to shoot up at very large angles from the lower platforms - from 30 to 40 degrees. Our way lay through Ruslan's native village – Goity, where he was born and grew up, and then - to Itum-Kalinsky district, to the village of Guchum-Kale, where the lodge was located. It was a large two-story house built right on the edge of a cliff near a mountain river. There were outbuildings attached to the house. The house was equipped with wireless Internet and all the necessary amenities for a decent reception. I had been there more than once. Up and forward! After arrival we unloaded our bags, had a hasty dinner with meat Chechen delicacies and went to bed after a short conversation. The first ascent to the mountains was planned for tomorrow morning.  We got up at 6 am. We all quickly packed what we needed and "saddled" Ruslan's hunting Land Cruiser. That car was the perfect solution for the mountains. I like the FJ version, which is squat, with a wide frontal view. It climbed any slide without straining like a bear.  On that trip I took a proven carbine for high-precision shooting - HS Precision chambered for 338 LapuaMag, equipped with a heavy bullet Scenar (16 g). That carbine showed itself in the best way on the previous hunt when performing rapid ascents and fleeting forays into the mountains. The carbine was equipped with a NightForce 5.5-22 sight, with a 56-inch lens, what gave more chances when shooting at long distances together with the MOAR mesh. MOAR or MIL-DOT sighting nets are very convenient both when shooting offhand and when you shoot from a standing position, as well as when follow a trophy in motion, when correct sighting is necessary without entering corrections on tactical reels during rapid changes in the range to the target.  The huntsman of the Itum-Kalinsky hunting farm, Danilbek, was with us. He accompanied us constantly, followed the process of hunting and participated in it. Danilbek was a man of athletic build, not particularly talkative, but clearly understands what to do on the hunt. The weather was excellent, the temperature at 0 ° C invigorated us, the wind was practically not felt.  The road from the base led to the village of Veduchi, where the first ski cluster in the republic was recently opened. Then we should drive up by car by the mountain gravel road to the border post of the Sharoysky district.  After a couple of hours, the road ran into a barrier. The duty officer in the booth checked our passports. Checking the car and things at the entrance was very thorough, especially weapons, photo and video equipment. Only an hour later, the duty officers raised the second barrier.  We drove away from the border post for 10-15 kilometers, taking higher and higher along the serpentine. I noticed the village of Veduchi far below. There were border posts every 3-5 kilometers of the road. One "border guard" always stood on the side of the road and reported on our movement by radio, the second one sat higher in the rocks with a machine gun and controlled the road.  Soon, the wheels of our Toyota began to slip on the rise in an attempt to get through the ice and gravel to the ground. We stopped several times and tried to find groups of turs with the help of binoculars. We detected several single males, which stood motionless on the tops of rocks, at great distances from us, with their breasts facing us and considering "uninvited guests” calmly. The number of animals was in unusually high in those places!  I regularly noticed with binoculars to groups of Dagestan turs numbering 50 or even 70 heads while exploring gorge after gorge! Herds of such numbers allowed us to hope to get a "special" trophy.  In the end, we climbed almost to the top. A picturesque panorama of peaked mountains, covered with snow and in some places scorched by the rays of the rising sun, stretched out before the admiring eyes of our team. Ruslan lowered the car a little from the ridge in low gear, and turned off the engine.  We got out of the car carefully. Danilbek got out of the UAZ, which stopped a little further away. I took out my backpack, and checked my equipment once again: spare clothes, navigation devices, phone, binoculars with a rangefinder. Vladimir Smelov had a scope to search and evaluate the trophy qualities of animals. So, we went to the mountains light. We put on quick-release crampons on the shoes. Danilbek had a coil of strong rope slung over his shoulder, and took poles for climbing and descending.  Kestrel showed the temperature and pressure, which made it possible to enter several examples of shooting at different distances on a loaded cartridge into the ballistic calculator and navigate the calculated corrections when shooting at long distances. The angular values were paramount at that moment, and the correction tables prepared in advance came in handy. The Fenix altimeter showed 1890 m. I uncovered the carbine and threw it up a couple of times, catching a mountain peak in the crosshair. Then I sent the cartridge into the chamber and threw the carbine behind my back. Ruslan said that we wouldn't go up far, and didn't need to take a lot of things with us. He himself was armed with a Blaser carbine in 308 caliber (just for safety).  So, we exchanged glances with Ruslan, nodded to each other, and the whole group moved forward along the mountain path, which climbed steeply up.  We were maneuvering among huge boulders and clinging to whatever we had to, and moved forward and upward almost without stopping. The main ascend turned out to be difficult – three hundred vertical meters and about to a kilometer up in total. It took us more than two and a half hours. At last, we went to the top of the ridge and began to monitor the nearest gorges and ravines stealthily with binoculars. But without any result. Then, we went further along the tops to the ledge, descended carefully a little lower and lay down. There was a sunlit mountain ridge shone in front of us, it turned abruptly into a plateau further, which was densely covered with snow along the lower edge. A gigantic abyss separated it from us.  To get a trophy We detected the herd of turs by almost at once. And hide behind the rocks. There were about fifteen animals in the group. There were five decent males among the females. I took off the carbine from my back, set out the bipods and determined the distance immediately. The rangefinder showed 460 meters. The pressure was in the mountain norm, and there was practically no wind.  The females moved among small bushes and small bare trees a little higher up the slope, where there was not so much snow. The males were all in the palm of your hand and but each and every one of 'em were trophy size! The animals were not frightened there. It was obvious, the twenty-year ban on hunting in the republic clearly affected. The trophy-quality males were moving among the young, and grazed on a plateau well warmed by the sun. Smelov figured out a large male immediately. But... my gut told me that there had to be a real trophy there.  I was looking at the herd through the scope all the time, and felt that it was there. There had to be a "master" who managed that household. Twenty minutes had passed, the animals were still grazing. Suddenly, the master appeared! It turned its back to us, and raised its head high. The beast looked unrealistically powerful against the background of the females and young standing next to it. I clung to the sight instantly , turned it to the maximum magnification - 22x. What horns it had! It was something! They were spiral-shaped, up to the neck! I hadn't seen such a miracle either in Ossetia or in Karachay-Cherkessia. Nature mocked that wonderful beast. Two ring-shaped horns converged on the back of its neck, and formed an closed oval! The tips of the horns ran parallel to each other and turned out to be unusually upturned. There was an impression that they fused at the base of the neck.  It was incredibly, but none of our team paid attention to that male among the others. All their attention was focused on the other beast, and they were discussing it violently.  - Ruslan, do you see it? - I whispered.  - Which one? - he asked just in case.  - Look to the left on the slope, almost at the cliff, in a group of four females.  Ruslan began to examine "my" male!  - What do you think?  Ruslan muttered in his usual manner that it seemed to be a good one, and added that the tur was unusual, that he had not met such animals before.  Vladimir refocused his scope on my "vis-a-vis", thought about it and repeated several times: "There's something wrong with it”.  Exactly- “there was something wrong with it”.  It was an extraordinary trophy male of the Dagestan tur, it was in the shooting zone, and I decided to "get" it. I began to prepare for shooting. The distance had slightly increased – from 460 to 520 meters. The male was worried constantly about something, it was constantly spinning, changing its position all the time. A group of females was dragging it under the cliff. They were shifting from one foot to the other, jumped from stone to stone, then opening, then closing the coveted prey from me. Whatever it was, the position of its body was uncomfortable for the shot. He stood in a half-turn with his back to us for an hour already, it revealed only part of its shoulder blade and a thick neck with weighty horns. As I understood it, I did not have to hope for a change in the situation in the near future. I had to shoot!  The tur moved away from us, slowly eating dead wood and decreasing in size. I knew from the experience of numerous hunts what would happen next – it would go over the ridge, and we would never see it again. I should act immediately in that place and at that time. So, I made corrections to the sight, sent a cartridge into the chamber. leaned on the carbine and, put the cheek into the stock. The bipods went hard forward and caught on the frozen ground with rubber bands. I should shoot in the "rear hemisphere", as they said in aviation. It was standing half-turned from left to right. Three-quarters of the building was blocked by grass. The shooting distance was 530 meters.  I brought out the horizon, adjusted the parallax and aimed the aiming grid with a crosshair at the tur. I was sure that the bullet would come out somewhere through the chest, to the left. Then I held my breath and fired without thinking any more. The shot echoed loudly in the mountains. The recoil of the three hundred and thirty-eighth caliber pushed me back, but a good muzzle brake allowed the sight to remain on the trophy, and I even saw where the bullet hit! Hard Scenar hit like a hammer, clearly in place! The vertical and the horizon were correct in the calculations. A wave passed through the tur's body, its legs flew awkwardly apart, and it fell heavily to the ground. It threw the head forward, rolled down and disappeared from sight. I rose to my full height, confident that I had hit it. Ruslan got up too, we hugged, and he congratulated me on my luck. Vladimir and Danilbek showered me with congratulations, they were ceasing to be amazed at the accuracy and distance of the shot.  And the mountains suddenly came to life. Everything was in motion! The females flowed down as an avalanche, jumping from rock to rock. They fell into deep snow at the trees below, just right in front of our ambush. Then, they began to climb in a zigzag, lingering for a long time under trees and among boulders. On the contrary, four large males raced briskly across the horizon in front of us and began to take sharply up. They stopped only at a distance of 800 meters from our position. It looked like they were waiting for the leader, who was in no hurry to join them "for some reason".  I was exhilarated. If I would know what that jubilation turn into soon… To be continued… Quotes: The years of the Mongol-Tatar invasion. That period and events. occurred that time, will help us understand how courageous, steadfast and freedom-loving the Chechen people are.  The kingdom of Alania was almost completely destroyed by the nomadic hordes of two generals of Genghis Khan - Jebe and Subedei during the invasion. The Mongol-Tatars did not spare anyone. Civilians were either killed or taken into slavery. Hundreds of villages and settlements were turned into ashes by nomads, cattle and property were looted. A brutal blow to the foothills of the Caucasus was also inflicted by Batu 's hordes in 1238-1240. The population managed to escape only by fleeing to the mountains. But people were not only hiding in the mountains, the Nokhchi (the self-name of the Chechens), provided truly heroic resistance to the enemy. Chechens passed on legends and legends about how their ancestors preserved freedom, language, customs, and culture in an unequal struggle from generation to generation. Mount Tebulosmta is located in the southeast of the territory where Chechnya and Ingushetia are located now. Its height is 4512 meters above sea level. Climbing to the top of Tebulosmta is the subject of many ancient beliefs. One of them tells how, people decided to go to places inaccessible to the enemy after learning about the invasion of "countless hordes of enemies on horseback, who covered the earth like black clouds in bad weather cover the sun". The old people chose Mount Tebulosmta. The most experienced and brave hunters - 12 young Chechens led by 50-year-old hunter Idig went to look for a way to the top. Their first ascent along the eastern slope ended tragically – the brave men overcame many obstacles, but were caught in an avalanche almost at the very top. Only three survived. The new squad immediately began climbing despite the setback. They started from where there was a warm wind blowing, from the south, where there was less snow on the slopes. It took two days for Chechen soldiers to reach the top of Tebulosmta and loudly shout the battle cry. They found convenient places to accommodate people there. They let down an arrow from a bow, then a spear, and saw them flying almost to the ground. Those who stayed on the plain were storing sheep feed and fuel. When the work was finished, the women, children and livestock were sheltered in secret places in the mountains. The rest of the women and all the men, armed with spears and arrows, went up to Tebulosmta, where they prepared a lot of stones that were supposed to stop the enemy horsemen.  Countless hordes of enemies approached the mountain and settled down for the night at the foot of Tebulosmta. A stone avalanche hit them at night. The survivors fled in panic. In the afternoon, the commanders gathered the survivors into a punitive detachment and led them up the mountain – they were eager to chop the nokhchey into pieces! But they only lost even more people – they ran into a stone avalanche again. The bloody battle of the Chechens with the invaders lasted more than a month. Then the fall came. Snow fell in the mountains, and the nomads had to go to the south for the winter – there was no food for horses in the gorges. But the desire to destroy the highlanders, to punish for resistance, had not gone away. The following year, with the onset of summer, the army came again and made many unsuccessful attempts to seize the mountain on which the brave Chechens settled. Do you think the Mongol-Tatars gave up? It lasted 12 years! The Horde turned the rich foothills of the Caucasus into lifeless, stone deserts like locusts destroying crops,. But the Chechens, who had settled on Tebulosmta, courageously continued to fight.  This legend has different endings. Some say that the treacherous nomads deceived the Chechens with promises, persuaded them to come down from the mountain, and then killed every single one. Others say that the invaders, tired to besiege the impregnable mountain, and left. And the Chechens had created a free settlement there for many centuries. Their system of military discipline has entered into folk legends. Periodically, the council of elders – "mekhk Khel" - checked the readiness of the male population for combat operations. Unexpectedly, most often at night, They called a general gathering. The one who arrived late was thrown off the cliff.
08.10.2018