Talk about a hunting trip turning into a literal wash. In this vintage survival tale by Jerry Valentine (as told to Ben East via Outdoor Life in 1972), a dream Alaskan moose hunt quickly morphs into a soggy nightmare. After hitting the jackpot and bagging four massive bulls right out of the gate on a remote gravel bar, a brutal Pacific storm rolls in. For days, the four-man crew is trapped in a relentless downpour with 70-mph winds, leaky tents, and unexpected nightly visits from local wolves checking out their fresh meat pile.
Things go from miserable to life-threatening when their peaceful 30-foot-wide river swells into a raging, half-mile-wide flood. With their tents underwater and the deluge threatening to sweep away their bush plane, they resort to using half a ton of moose meat as makeshift anchor weights just to keep the aircraft grounded. Stranded, out of food, and unable to swim out without being swept away, they brace for the worst until the weather finally breaks just in the nick of time, allowing a search plane to spot their emergency signal.
It takes a series of sketchy, makeshift takeoffs to ferry the men and what salvaged meat hadn’t spoiled back to safety. While the group safely makes it home to their incredibly relieved families, Valentine wraps up the account with a heartbreaking postscript: just four weeks later, their skilled friend and co-pilot, Larry Haddock—whose quick thinking helped save them from the flood—tragically vanished in a separate aviation accident during a routine Alaskan research flight.
You can read the full story via Outdoor Life here.