a3dhunter
WKR
Usually anything under 3 and I am camping at the truck, anything more than 4 and I am looking to pack in camp. I don't consider anything "far" unless it's over 5 miles. I think 8-9 miles is the furthest back I have went.
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This year I went in with another guy and we ended very similar to Fulldraw's We had been scouting 4-5 miles but once season started found the elk deeper. Shot my elk 7 miles in. We packed it all to a staging point and got most out that night and walked back in the next morning and got the rest and camp. I think that is pretty close to what I would consider the limit. But of course this was my first real back country hunt and had way too much gear. Damn GIF.
Later in the year taking my wife hunting... slept at home, drove an hour and walked in about 2.5 miles. She shot a nice elk. This was realistically a solo hunt for me.... meaning... all the packing was on me. I will definitely say that packing an elk out 2.5 miles when you are packing the cape and everything is it... One thing it taught me is that I need to learn to cape out the skull....packing out a cape, skull, with hide attached is the most stupid thing I have ever done...
The problem with the rapid urban expansion here in Colorado is that "15-20 miles" on one trail equates to 4 or 5 on another trail. Nothing worse than humping into an area you think is good only to be greeted by a Lycra clad REI shopper walking her ugly ass poodle
The problem with the rapid urban expansion here in Colorado is that "15-20 miles" on one trail equates to 4 or 5 on another trail. Nothing worse than humping into an area you think is good only to be greeted by a Lycra clad REI shopper walking her ugly ass poodle
I read an article a few years ago trying to identify the most remote area in the lower 48. It said the most remote area was in the Beartooths around the Montana / Wyoming boarder where the maximum distance you could get from any road was something like 21 miles.
The problem with the rapid urban expansion here in Colorado is that "15-20 miles" on one trail equates to 4 or 5 on another trail. Nothing worse than humping into an area you think is good only to be greeted by a Lycra clad REI shopper walking her ugly ass poodle
For me, "far" never really is quantified until the packout. Packing in is easy, and there really is no limit to that.......go until one is down. But there is definitely a "too far" when you're packing out. That cow I shot 6 miles from the trailhead........that was "TOO FAR" for a cow. The bull I shot last year was almost 5 miles and I would have gladly hauled him twice that far. So it's all relative for me.