![]() |
![]() |
The Sitka Black-tailed Deer is native to the wet, coastal rain-forests of Southeast Alaska and North-coastal British Columbia. The original distribution has been expanded by transplants and now established populations also occur near Yakutat, in Prince William Sound, and on Kodiak and Afognak islands.
Part of the purpose of hunting for me is to get away from it all.
By going to Kodiak this is accomplished. I refer to Kodiak as my
"Exotic Island". In 1963 when I was in the Navy they
had what was referred to as a "Dream Sheet". A form you
filled out at the completion of schooling that told the Navy
where you desired to go. I simply put down, "any exotic
Island," on my form and they sent me to Kodiak.
Once in Kodiak, we hop a small bush plane out to Afognak. We like
to use UYAK Air because they have the seafare rate for hunters.
If you don't go over 90lbs going in, you can bring all you want
out. With the possibility of an Elk or bear plus 4 Deer each,
that is a good deal. They have always been friendly and
accommodating to our needs. Charley and I prefer hunting out
there because we have been lost on Afognak and now know our way
around a little better. Plus, Afognak is a lot smaller than
Kodiak and if you do have a tendency to lose yourself easily, it
is better to do it on a smaller island. I have hunted other
Islands around the Prince William Sound area for Deer and have to
say I favor Kodiak and Afognak . The deer population is healthier
and you get better bucks. You can harvest four deer on Kodiak or
Afognak during one hunt. Usually, this is limited to 3 bucks and
one doe. But this will vary depending on hunting pressure and how
healthy the population is. Some years the snow fall can
drastically reduce the deer population, causing the number to be
harvested to drop also. Getting bucks means climbing to the tops
of the mountains. We have never been lucky enough to have the
snow drive them down to us, as some hunters claim. Both Kodiak
and Afognak also have a healthy population of Brown Bears. Many
hunters have had their deer claimed by bears. It seems a rifle
shot becomes a dinner bell to bears in some cases. I had a Brown
Bear permit this past season and even though we harvested 10 deer
between three of us, we never saw a bear.
Of course, I had a permit. Charley is shown with his first buck, we were lost at the
time, and other deer harvested this past
season. The fun of deer hunting is that it is not over after you
pull the trigger. You pull the trigger on a moose and the work
really begins. With deer, you can pull the trigger three more
times. Each time is a challenge and you can bring your deer back
to camp in one trip, all alone. Can't do that with most of
Alaska's' game. Deer hunting is fun.
(907) 895-4157 - silverfx@wildak.net
Copyright 2008 Silver Fox Roadhouse