During the first few years of Maine’s October moose hunt, before the animals were as wary as they are today, it was common for a hunter to drop his big bull either on a logging road or close by. Not so today. Many of the clearcuts have grown up and the hunter’s visibility has declined markedly. Moose have gotten smarter, too. A hunter who spends his week heater hunting the roads from his pickup may wind up empty handed at the end of his hunt week. The upshot is that more and more successful moose hunters get their animals some distance from traveled roads back in the woods near a bog, or on an old clear cut.

Having been in on a number of Maine moose hunts, including my own, I can attest that there is no perfect answer when it comes to moose retrieval. Some methods are better than others. My best moose hunt and retrieval experience was my own along with moose guide John Richards. We hunted Ross Stream from two canoes, one for me and the guide one for the moose’s one-way trip down the stream to the nearest road crossing. At first light on opening day, I dispatched a small bull that I spotted not far from the stream. As luck would have it, the bull dropped beside a small backwater that fed to the main stem of the stream. The water was shallow but we were able to walk the big transport canoe close to the downed moose. We quartered the moose and rolled the sections into the canoe. We righted the meat-laden canoe, tethered it to our hunting canoe and, from that point, let the downstream current do most of the work. Compared with my other “moose extraction” adventures, during which I have heaved, grunted and groaned with the best of them, this stream hunt truly was the best and easiest way I have experienced in getting the moose out of the woods.

A number of years before that hunt, my wife Diane killed her first moose — a large cow — on opening day. We called it out into a logging yard at sunset. Diane hit the moose with her .35 Marlin at about 100 yards with a double lung shot. The animal still ran about fifty yards into a fir thicket before calling it quits. Believe it or not, all 170 pounds of me, with Diane’s help, moved all 650 pounds of moose from a fir thicket to a truck-accessible clearcut in about 20 minutes.

“Not possible,” you say?

Well, it’s true. I did have a lot of help from the most useful piece of equipment that I have ever owned: a chainsaw winch. Mine is made by Rule, a company well-known for manufacturing all types of power winches for loggers and boaters. The one I have is, put simply, a chain saw with a winch mounted on the front. The winch roller holds about 50 feet of aircraft cable. You strap the chainsaw handle around a stout tree, run out the winch cable to the moose. You then start the engine and finger the throttle. It’s like magic. The winch is slow moving with lots of torque. It took two or three different tree hookups to get Diane’s moose out of the woods to the truck, but it worked slick as a smelt. No hernias, no back strain.

Be advised that these chainsaw winches are not cheap. There are a number of different brands. Most of the good ones are in the $500 range. You might be able to locate a used one, but you’ll have to hunt for it. These chainsaw winches come in handy long after the moose hunt is a memory. Over the years I have used my Rule power chainsaw winch to move rocks, small buildings, big trees, stuck vehicles, bears, and deer.

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If you are a first time moose hunter and a power- winch purchase is out of the question, you can hire an experienced Maine Guide to assist you in moose retrieval. Prices start at about $200 and you can find these “moose retrieval” experts on the Internet. Gary Cameron of Caribou runs a small business called Moose Retrieval Service. He is on call, has a special “bog buggy,” and will extract your moose just about anywhere except behind the gates of North Maine Woods lands. His telephone number is 20- 4984161. His cell is 227-6677, and his email address is: canoefoot@juno.com.

A final thought: though I have never tried it, I have been told that a dispatched moose will float and can be towed across a lake or deadwater as long as it has not been field dressed. However you choose to get your moose out of the woods, get it cooled down as soon as it is practical and possible. For my taste, well-cared for moose meat is about as mouth-watering as wild meat gets.

Good hunting. If you need a sub-permittee for your moose hunt, give me a call. Have winch, will travel.

The author is editor of the Northwoods Sporting Journal. He is also a Maine Guide, co-host of a weekly radio program “Maine Outdoors” heard Sundays at 7 p.m. on The Voice of Maine News-Talk Network (WVOM-FM 103.9, WQVM-FM 101.3) and former information officer for the Maine Dept. of Fish and Wildlife. His e-mail address is paul@sportingjournal.com . He has two books “A Maine Deer Hunter’s Logbook” and his latest, “Backtrack.”

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