Congrats on the tag! You are in for a great hunt.
I am not going to give out specific locations, but here are a couple of things to keep in mind....
- The elk will be found throughout the unit. Lots of them. (Like anywhere else, the elk are where you find them!)
- Hunters will be found throughout the unit. Lots of them.
- Hunter-helper/posse's will be found throughout the unit. Lots of them. (For most people that draw this tag, it is either multiple years of points burned or getting lucky in the drawing. There are a lot of people tromping around the woods without tags, acting as lookouts for other tag holders. Don't get discouraged by this!)
- The Anderson Mesa runs along 5BN/5BS. The winds here can be tricky. On the top/western side of the mesa, the thermals tend to follow the prevailing wind direction, which generally comes from the SW in September. The thermals in the various canyons from the mesa ridge out towards the NE follow the typical rising/thermal patterns you'd expect in the mountains. (Not too many canyons in this particular unit you can hunt, more are found in the surrounding units.)
- The water holes are going to be crowded. Hopefully the trail camera ban keeps situations like having 8 trail cameras all pointing at one water hole from happening.
- Some of the roads shown as 'roads' on the FS map aren't really roads at all, they are FS roads, with varying quality; allow 2-3-4x what you think it should take to get from one place to another. An ATV or high clearance vehicle will situate you like almost everyone else out there - they provide no real advantage, other than getting you to a location where everyone else is parked. If you don't have a high clearance vehicle of some sort, you are going to be limited by access points/locations and at a disadvantage.
- There is a road use map. People will violate the road closure areas. (No, you don't have to like it, and not everyone is a violator, just sharing to set realistic expectations. "I'm going to be 2 miles away from the nearest open road" flies out the window when some jackhole goes flying by on an ATV. It does happen.)
- If it rains, the roads can change into a clay-like mud-slop. Think Montana Gumbo. Just stay put and wait for the roads to dry out, no sense in making ruts deeper or getting stuck.
- You can get a Coconino map/app for your iphone, which will show you your exact location. Very helpful when driving or in the field hunting.
- If you shoot something, off road retrieval is not allowed. This is different than other, nearby units. Reference this map.
- Don't overlook the open terrain. When pressured, the elk will gather together, with herds up to 200+ moving through the pines and open terrain.
- Little to no water throughout the unit, other than the well-known water tanks. Bring gallons of water with you, don't rely on the thought that you'll be able to use a water filter or pump.
- Without a water source, one can go for a swim in Lake Mary, or so I've heard. Not so in Mormon Lake.
- You can bring gear with to go on an overnight tent/tarp camping adventure, but you are going to not really find that to be much of an advantage, since there are roads pretty close to one another throughout the unit. (That, and you'd have to haul water along with you if doing so for more than an evening/morning. YMMV, obviously. ) Most hunters setup a basecamp or move the vehicle from day to day
- With the relatively flat terrain, it is somewhat easy hiking in spots. If you locate a herd, there is definitely a possibility of putting on a lot of miles in one day. Your feet will become hot and fatigued. The lava rock on top of the mesa can also really tear the crap out of your boots. Bring several pairs of boots. Prior to the hunt, it would be a great idea to hike frequently over rocky, flat terrain to build up arch/ankle strength and stability.
- With the relatively flat, open terrain, it is easy to bump into other hunters or hunter posse members regularly. Keep hunting, the elk are out there.