Burned area

Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Messages
318
I am looking to hunt an area that burned 2 years ago pretty hot. Last year they didn't have much moisture but it greened up some and they are getting a lot of snow this winter. It takes 3 points to hunt the area with a muzzleloader which is what I have so I am wandering if the elk will be back in there and if they get pressure if they will stay or head out to thicker cover. I have hunted elk for many years but never in a burned area and I scouted this spot 3 times before the burn and seen some good ones. Thanks
 

KAGR

FNG
Joined
Mar 30, 2021
Messages
17
Like anywhere else, if they are pressured they are going to move out. But if you have glassed bulls in there - they likely will return if there is just light pressure.
 
OP
D
Joined
Dec 21, 2019
Messages
318
I am looking to hunt an area that burned 2 years ago pretty hot. Last year they didn't have much moisture but it greened up some and they are getting a lot of snow this winter. It takes 3 points to hunt the area with a muzzleloader which is what I have so I am wandering if the elk will be back in there and if they get pressure if they will stay or head out to thicker cover. I have hunted elk for many years but never in a burned area and I scouted this spot 3 times before the burn and seen some good ones. Thanks
Ttt
 
Joined
Jul 30, 2015
Messages
6,321
Location
Lenexa, KS
I think they could be in there. I hunted a burn one time, it was a year old. To my untrained eye there was no feed in there, at least deep in the burn. But we found elk in there. Upon closer inspection there might be one little flower every 10 feet, or some other little green forb, or something. Like it wasn't 100% dead, just 99.9% dead. But that 0.1% of life was enough to sustain quite a few elk.
 

IdahoElk

WKR
Joined
Oct 30, 2014
Messages
2,592
Location
Hailey,ID
We have had three major fires in our area in the last 10-15yrs and from what I've seen it takes areas that have burned hot about 4-6yrs to become areas that hold elk. Two years after a scorched earth burn is still pretty bleak especially in dry climates.
 
Joined
Sep 29, 2021
Messages
42
The area we deer hunted last year was scorched two years ago. We found some deer in the area but no elk. There were lots of elk hunters too. I asked a elk hunter why there were so many elk hunters in a area that seemed to have no elk. He told me the area was good before the burn but they had not seen a elk since the fire. I think this area had enough feed but it lacked cover. I guess it depends on how hot and how thorough the fire burned.
 

Gapmaster

WKR
Joined
Dec 22, 2019
Messages
388
Location
MERICA!!
The edges may have some good feed where the fire wasn’t as hot. Seen places that burned 10+ years ago that are still like a desert. But man does that stuff suck to hunt in. Nothing like crawling though a maze of logs all day. Your shins will hate you for it.
 

Jimss

WKR
Joined
Mar 6, 2015
Messages
2,122
There are so many variables! The big variables are cover, feed, water, hunting pressure, size of burn, cover, remoteness....the list goes on.

One of the biggest factors with elk is they HATE hunting pressure and human activity. They usually move until they find hidden little areas with 0 human activity. Now that the canopy has opened up by wildfire the elk can be seen for miles, it doesn't take much hunting pressure and they are gone.
 

bummer7580

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 9, 2017
Messages
134
Location
minnesota
I love hunting elk in Limited Entry access areas that have burned. This past fall the area I hunted had burned 4 years ago. You could see elk standing in the burnt pines from a long distance away, much easier to spot than in live canopy. As long as the burn was a bit of a checker board fire(not complete burn) there will be elk until human pressure moves them.
 

11boo

WKR
Joined
Feb 24, 2016
Messages
2,461
Location
Grand Jct, CO
This spot burned and came back very green. No one told the elk. a fraction of the animals are in there post burn.B122F1D6-A95A-473A-9276-697BA94C89D3.jpeg
 
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