Hey man I’m hunting 444 this November. I’m a summit county local. Did some turkey hunting this fall and liked the area I was in and heard some bull elk so I grabbed a 3rd season cow tag. I was wondering if you’d be willing to pass along any info on 444? I’ve seen you post a bit about being a guide out that way.Why is it always “what elevation” really has nothing to do with temps, season anything like that. Rocky Mountain elk were originally plains animals, forced to the mountains by settlers.
I hear it every year, I gotta be 15 miles into the back country and above 11,000 feet. There’s 40 head of elk hanging out at 6300’ elevation everyday in the junipers, I’ve seen small herds at 11,000 and sept 7 we killed a 345” bull at 9000’ elevation chasing 9 cows.
The common misconceptions of the social media world put unrealistic tendencies on elk. The easiest answer is elk are where you find them. With all the pressure, recreational activity etc they are going to the spots they don’t see people or have super easy escape routes. Find those spots on the maps and go there, elevation won’t matter much they don’t care about elevation it’s safety, food and water
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Meant to say I don’t post at all so I can’t message you. But let me know if you could have a chat on the side and answer some questions.Hey man I’m hunting 444 this November. I’m a summit county local. Did some turkey hunting this fall and liked the area I was in and heard some bull elk so I grabbed a 3rd season cow tag. I was wondering if you’d be willing to pass along any info on 444? I’ve seen you post a bit about being a guide out that way.
I know this is completely separate from the original post but I’ve been a member for almost a year and just don’t post at all…
If not all good but I’ve got some areas I’ve got some questions bout and you may be able to andwer
Why is it always “what elevation” really has nothing to do with temps, season anything like that. Rocky Mountain elk were originally plains animals, forced to the mountains by settlers.
I hear it every year, I gotta be 15 miles into the back country and above 11,000 feet. There’s 40 head of elk hanging out at 6300’ elevation everyday in the junipers, I’ve seen small herds at 11,000 and sept 7 we killed a 345” bull at 9000’ elevation chasing 9 cows.
The common misconceptions of the social media world put unrealistic tendencies on elk. The easiest answer is elk are where you find them. With all the pressure, recreational activity etc they are going to the spots they don’t see people or have super easy escape routes. Find those spots on the maps and go there, elevation won’t matter much they don’t care about elevation it’s safety, food and water
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