Archery Elk Hunting Terrain preference?

OkiechasingElk

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 11, 2023
Messages
116
Location
Oklahoma
Question to ponder on this random Wednesday: Experts, average dudes, rookies and even the cynics are all invited to participate!

You are a Solo Archery hunter. 3 archery seasons under your belt, limited legitimate Elk Interactions. You think you are an average caller, but with limited elk interactions you probably aren't. Colorado High Pressure Unit. Hunting Mid-September.


What is your terrain preference, and why?

Option 1 - High Elevation near the tree line. 11-12k feet. Steep elevation changes, thick forests, once you get away from the road it only opens up enough to glass above tree line.

Option 2 - 11k feet, less elevation change, but still frequent 600'-800' ridges, thick forests, small meadows somewhat sporadic, rolling ridges. Some glassing opportunities but still very limited.

Option 3 - 10k feet. Elevated rolling plateau with larger open areas and numerous pockets of trees throughout the rolling ridges. Tons of opportunity to glass opposite ridges and basins in the area.
 
My experience is in heavy dense vegetation areas, learned to call in the 80s, many bulls shot under 10 yds, above avg fitness and calling ability. Only an avg archery shot. I’m going option 1. Reason being you can be very aggressive in dense country, I don’t carry binos in archery and competition will be more limited due to the steepness factor. That being said, option 3 is likely better for great shots, guys who use glass, like the ambush style and easier on the body to hunt day after day after day.
 
7-9k Flat, close to the road, leave calls at home.
Any chance I can get a pin to a spot with an Elk tied to a tree also? LOL

I've spent spent about 60% of my time in option 1, with the rest in an area similar to option 2. Curious if getting out of the jungle and being able to see the terrain around is worth an approach change.
 
Below average caller here. I'm either spending time at the top of Option 1. Or at Option 3. And I'm taking a glassing heavy approach because of the "high pressure" comment. It's so hard to get elk to play the calling game, especially as a poor caller, that I'd rather see them, get close, then whip out the calls.

To be fair *letterkenny voice* I do love spending time behind the glass.

Edit: after writing this, I realize if I'm not hunting mule deer, I like hunting as if I were hunting mule deer so take the elk advice for whatever that's worth. Haha
 
Elk are where you find them, not where you want them to be. All of those places sound like they could have plenty of elk, a few elk, or no elk. I like hunting where’s there’s plenty of elk. I couldn’t care less where that actually is from a terrain perspective. If there’s lots of elk, you’re going to get lots of reps.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
At a certain point, you have to become convinced that elk are in that area, and eventually know exactly where they are before they know your there. Hearing them, seeing them, smelling them have all led to kills for me. As others have mentioned, I would likely hunt all of those areas, if not in the same day then in a couple of days. Hunting the same area year after year can be a tremendous advantage if you keep track of your elk interactions and what the other hunters are doing.
 
diddo on where the elk are. I would add go with whatever area you have had success finding elk in the past and know the area best.

I prefer to hunt option 1 type, but if the elk aren’t there I adjust
 
They can be from the top to the bottom during season, if I’m checking in a zone and not finding them or hearing them where they should be I leave and go elsewhere
 
Option 1… to me, it seems the best way to get away from people. I like thick and nasty. Elk may go there, also. If they aren’t there, I’m going Option 2. Be mobile and adaptable.
 
Back
Top