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Hunting moose a rare Minnesota challenge

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(MCT) — Colby Smith peered through thick early-morning fog atop a rocky knoll in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness and grunted like a bull moose.

“It was probably the worst moose call I’ve heard in my life,” said Smith, 39, of Corcoran.

But something grunted back.

“I grunted again, and something stood up—it sounded like a car rolling over in a ditch. I thought, ‘Oh my god,’ and my legs started shaking. I couldn’t see anything, but I knew it was a moose,” said Smith, who was on a once-in-a-lifetime moose hunt in northeastern Minnesota on Sept. 29 with his brother and brother-in-law.

Then the woods went silent, so Smith called again.

“He raked the brush, grunting and stumping, and started coming my way,” he said. “Oh, my gosh, you could hear the brush clicking on his antlers.”

Smith shifted 10 feet closer to the ridge where the still unseen moose was approaching, and made more grunting sounds.

“All of a sudden he walked out of the fog, swaying his antlers aggressively. It was an unbelievable scene—just like the movies. He stopped about 110 yards out, broadside. I had to tell myself to calm down or I would miss.”

He didn’t.

The big bull’s antlers measured 493/4 inches, and the animal likely weighed more than a half-ton.

“It was phenomenal,” Smith said of the experience. He had intended to camp and hunt for 10 days. Instead, he had his moose just 37 minutes into the season.

Shooting a moose—or even getting a license to hunt one—can be a long shot in Minnesota. Smith’s was one of 46 out of 76 hunting groups totaling about 300 people who bagged a bull moose in Minnesota’s 16-day season, which ended Oct. 14. That’s a 60 percent success rate among those who received a license, but nearly 3,500 people applied for a license.

Since 1991, the moose hunt has been a once-in-a-lifetime hunt; those who receive permits through a random drawing are ineligible to reapply.

But the state’s moose population has been declining, and it’s uncertain how long moose hunting will continue. The state’s moose population, now estimated at about 4,200, has dropped by half in the past five years, and some say if the trend continues the animal could disappear from here in 20 years.

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