I don't think blowdowns were even mentioned in this thread. 1/4 mile of blowdown is worth a mile or two of flat in energy consumption.
I have shot elk 3 miles from trailhead and 0.25 miles from trailhead. Elk can move a long distance in response to a lot of different factors. In general remember elk are big herd animals and will make sign where they are. If you see a lot of fresh sign 1 mile in, hunt it. If not, keep going.I am 52 and a seasoned hunter from the s.e., but i am new to elk hunting. I have been wanting to go elk hunting for decades, but life and other things always got in the way. I decided to make it happen since i'm not getting any younger. I have a strategy question that keeps coming into my head. I have done hours and hours of e-scouting for the wilderness area that i'm going to hunt. I have lots of gps spots marked from a couple miles from the trailhead to many miles deeper into the wilderness area. The terrain is rough and steep in this wilderness area. I am going out in late July to scout for 5 days and check the gps spots to put boots on the ground and see what they look like for real, and to look for other glassing spots, wallows, good areas.
I plan on bow hunting Sept 19 - 25. My question is, should I hunt my way out to my farther waypoints 6+ miles back or spend valuable time hunting the closer spots that have been hit already by ppl and work my way out to my further spots more slowly?
I am thinking of just bypassing my closer 2-4 mile spots and go straight to the furthest ones in hopes that the elk will be pushed out that way, or at least not messed with as much. But I don't really want to pass prospective elk along the way unnecessarily.
PS edit: in response to comments of going deep and camping back there and being able to haul out an elk. 16 year old son will be with me so packing/hauling is shared. Not wanting to have input derailed into whether a first time elk hunter should be going deep or not. Really just looking for input focused specifically as to whether to hunt my way deep over a couple days, or just head straight back deep where I think elk might get pushed to, or at least less messed with.
Thanks for any input.
Thanks for the input. I doubt I would pass one up if I had an opportunity on opening day to kill one 300 yds from the truck, but the idea of that bums me out. I am looking forward to the full immersion experience of solitude, no road noise, star gazing at night, and working hard. Getting one that close to the truck really would piss me off.
Sore muscles that you didn't even know existed after that!Be prepared... I packed a bull out 8.5 miles 2500' of elevation change (up hill), 3 guys in our mid 20s, took 3 days. Needed a day off after we were done. Packing an elk for miles sounds badass until you have to actually do it.
I'm trying to think of something that I've cussed at more than blowdown. Nothing is coming to mind lolI don't think blowdowns were even mentioned in this thread. 1/4 mile of blowdown is worth a mile or two of flat in energy consumption.
I'm trying to think of something that I've cussed at more than blowdown. Nothing is coming to mind lol
I love this hahaMy 16 year son is coming with me. I'll manage.
From a guy in Alabama that’s not as old and am looking to do the same thing, let me know how it works! Baby coming this fall but will be out the next fall.I'm derailing my own thread now. Elk-fluenza, I like that! You are correct, I already have pre-elkfluenza. I googled where is the hardest least accessible place to hunt elk. I was staying up till 2am cyber scouting and placing waypoint pins all over my area on google earth for a couple weeks. I have an addictive personality, in that I dive in hard. I go to bed watching youtube elk videos. I've been a hunting addict all my life. My only regret is waiting until i was 52 to hunt elk. I don't like hunting the easy way. I've been antelope hunting a few times in S.E. Colorado just above new mexico. The guys I go with get their antelope on opening day rolling out of a truck and making a long shot. That's not my idea of hunting, thats shooting. I enjoyed crawling to see how close I could get to them and making my hunt last days. Getting so close to them that when I went to shoot, the buck was blurry because my scope was on 9x. I don't want my elk hunt to be over the day or the day after I get there. I want to savor it, and make it last. I am planning on hunting Colorado and Montana next year. I'm 52, I have to make up for lost time hunting elk. I hunt everything in the south, deer, hogs, bear, ducks, turkey. Time to head west while I can still carry sh*t on my back.
Brad, looks like you need a chainsaw instead of that bow!
ElkNut