When we finally cleared the last peak where we should have been able to see the rams, they were nowhere to be seen. We crossed through the saddle and up on to the other side where they had been, and then slowly worked around to the other side. Nada. The terrain was pretty rocky, so there were no tracks for us to follow. They just disappeared like ghosts. So we picked a spot that pretty close to where they were when we last saw them and sat down and started glassing. Where did they go?
Finally after about an hour, my guide said “there’s a sheep.” “Where?” “Way down below us in the bottom of the drainage, feeding up the other side. And there’s another.” Then another, and another. They were at least a mile away. Got the spotting scope on them, and sure enough, they were the same nine rams. From our vantage point, we could see a very well worn trail that led into the cliffs across the way. All nine single filed up that trail and into those cliffs. Their trail led under some overhanging cliffs, and all nine stopped at a waterfall to drink and lick the minerals. They were so well shaded and camouflaged in those cliffs, that if we hadn’t actually seen them walk in there, we would have never been able to spot them. They eventually passed through the waterfall and all bedded on a point that was right in the middle of the cliffs.