woods89
WKR
A good friend and I have been working on figuring out November elk hunting over the last few years. I'm just back now from hunting 3rd season and, of course, I've been reviewing the lessons learned. We had a good hunt, and both killed decent bulls, and of course now I'm kind of wishing I was back up there hunting.
There are always lessons learned, and this time for us it was the one we've all heard many times, which is "let your glass do the walking for you." The last time I was out there we hiked into quite a few spots looking for both sign and elk. This works, but the chances of blowing them out are much higher, and you can generally only cross one spot per guy off in the morning and one in the evening. This time we focused more on glassing from afar, which let us cover multiple spots at one time, and when we dropped into an area knowing that elk were there that morning or the evening before, we hunted much more efficiently. My hunting partner gets most of the credit for the shift in mindset.
This year he was using a Leupold SX-5 spotter and a pair of mid tier Vortex 10x42s. The spotter not only was used for identifying things found with binos but also for looking into some of the spots further away. He was quite effective with this setup. We were glassing country from about 1.5 miles away to the 3-4 mile mark.
I was using my Nikon Monarch 3 10x42s and his old spotter, which was a Vortex Diamondback 20-60. I had his old tripod with a ball head and an adaptor for my binos, as well. I learned a couple things immediately, #1, I will not buy that particular spotter, and #2, that I will have a good tripod and adaptor for my binos next time, as it made a big difference in my effectiveness. I felt my binos did fairly well on the closer country, but it seemed like I was really pushing them when we got into the 2-3 mile range, which was where most of the good sanctuary habitat was. The spotter was a real disappointment, really only usable at lower power and hard on my eyes.
At this point, most of my gear is dialed to the level that there isn't too much point in throwing money at it for minimal ROI. I feel there is potential though in some optics upgrades for this kind of hunting. Which leads me to my main question.
I have 2 routes I can go. I can buy a compact to midsize spotter and tripod to supplement my current binos, and use them like my hunting partner was doing. Or I can sell my current binos and put as much as possible towards a bino upgrade, decent tripod, and adaptor. I'm in my 30's with a wife and 4 children, so real alpha glass is probably out of reach, but I can probably apply $700-800 toward the optic itself, and if I upgrade my binos I can add whatever I can get out of my current ones. What I do have on my side is time, as it will probably be a couple years at least before I can get back out there. This means I can watch for something used.
I'm also interested in any advice on technique from those who hunt this timeframe. As I said before we were successful, and I think we did some things right, but also got quite lucky. I feel like I have a lot to learn about this style of hunting.
Any help will be appreciated!
There are always lessons learned, and this time for us it was the one we've all heard many times, which is "let your glass do the walking for you." The last time I was out there we hiked into quite a few spots looking for both sign and elk. This works, but the chances of blowing them out are much higher, and you can generally only cross one spot per guy off in the morning and one in the evening. This time we focused more on glassing from afar, which let us cover multiple spots at one time, and when we dropped into an area knowing that elk were there that morning or the evening before, we hunted much more efficiently. My hunting partner gets most of the credit for the shift in mindset.
This year he was using a Leupold SX-5 spotter and a pair of mid tier Vortex 10x42s. The spotter not only was used for identifying things found with binos but also for looking into some of the spots further away. He was quite effective with this setup. We were glassing country from about 1.5 miles away to the 3-4 mile mark.
I was using my Nikon Monarch 3 10x42s and his old spotter, which was a Vortex Diamondback 20-60. I had his old tripod with a ball head and an adaptor for my binos, as well. I learned a couple things immediately, #1, I will not buy that particular spotter, and #2, that I will have a good tripod and adaptor for my binos next time, as it made a big difference in my effectiveness. I felt my binos did fairly well on the closer country, but it seemed like I was really pushing them when we got into the 2-3 mile range, which was where most of the good sanctuary habitat was. The spotter was a real disappointment, really only usable at lower power and hard on my eyes.
At this point, most of my gear is dialed to the level that there isn't too much point in throwing money at it for minimal ROI. I feel there is potential though in some optics upgrades for this kind of hunting. Which leads me to my main question.
I have 2 routes I can go. I can buy a compact to midsize spotter and tripod to supplement my current binos, and use them like my hunting partner was doing. Or I can sell my current binos and put as much as possible towards a bino upgrade, decent tripod, and adaptor. I'm in my 30's with a wife and 4 children, so real alpha glass is probably out of reach, but I can probably apply $700-800 toward the optic itself, and if I upgrade my binos I can add whatever I can get out of my current ones. What I do have on my side is time, as it will probably be a couple years at least before I can get back out there. This means I can watch for something used.
I'm also interested in any advice on technique from those who hunt this timeframe. As I said before we were successful, and I think we did some things right, but also got quite lucky. I feel like I have a lot to learn about this style of hunting.
Any help will be appreciated!