Well, we learned a lot and had a great hunt. We ended up spotting a herd of cows a mile away on morning one and got my dad on those night one. He got his first ever elk after basically crawling up the mountain
. Crazy how mental toughness overcomes lack of physical condition. It was a special moment for us. My brother and I ended up traveling in on four wheeler through blm to national forest each of the following days and hiking from there. If I were to do it again, I would have set up our tipi with a stove up there so we didn’t have to drive the fouwheeler 45 minutes and could have used that time to walk. Temps were mild enough this year. Lots of hunters driving quads on blm, but didn’t see many off the roads. Glassed two different groups of legal bulls two different mornings, but did not get on them before they got in the dark timber. One group we made a big loop to get cross canyon to try and glass them bedded because it was a smaller chunk of dark timber, but it was thick and could not turn them up. We sat all day and they did not come back out to the grass area they were feeding in the morning. We still hunted the bedding the following morning after sitting on the feeding area at first lite and found a lot of tracks and beds. Used a similar approach with the other group of bulls we saw with sitting on them in the evening hoping they would come back out. Learned a lot about thermals and was really happy with the elk we located, but wondering if we should have just pushed in right away and tried to stalk them in the timber? Thermals were not super stable at that point so I was hesitant to just get on their track and go. Any advice for next time? Thanks!