CO (archery) elk hunting buddy!

va_to_co

FNG
Joined
Sep 5, 2025
Messages
5
Hey all,

Long time listener first time caller.

I’ve been hunting since I was ~10 (almost 20 years now), bow hunting for the last ~11 of those.

But, it’s been on the east coast, in a tree saddle, for white-tailed deer. I love all of it. The scouting, the sitting, the sucking up the sweaty parts, the cutting up and carrying out, butchering, curing meat, smoking it.

I’m new to western hunting, killed a muley doe with my bow last year. Have an elk tag this year, classic story, someone bailed on me.

I went out for the first few days of the season here in CO, and realized I was sort of just bumbling around the mountains (quiet elk, but that’s part of the learning curve). Not a bad thing, but I think I’d like to have someone to embrace the suck with, provide some mutual motivation, etc.

Prefer hunting out of a backpack, questioning the steepness of the terrain and number of miles being covered on foot. I want to be tired at the end, even if there’s no meat being packed out.

So, hoping to find someone who wants to run around in the woods for a few days at the end of this month, or any September in the future. Also have a late rifle doe tag this year.

Thanks for reading my novel and happy hunting.

I’m based in Longmont.
 
You wouldn’t know it by watching about every YouTube elk hunt…but hunting solo for elk is way more effective. Being able to go with your gut and not have to bounce every move off some one else outweighs the benefits of having some one there.

Granted, I do a ton of elk hunting with my dad. We basically know what the other person is going to do before we do it. I enjoy spending time with him and have called in quite a few bulls for each other. But when it comes to killing elk and be efficient in the mountains, hunting solo is far more effective.
 
Elk hunting is so different than whitetails. Cutting your teeth solo can be very beneficial, sure there’s a ton of information available online to get some education with. Applying it and learning afield to fit your style is only going to benefit you and your growth. When solo you aren’t answering to anyone or babysitting. I’ll be out there in 9 days. Hopefully packing one out before season ends.
 
Elk hunting is so different than whitetails. Cutting your teeth solo can be very beneficial, sure there’s a ton of information available online to get some education with. Applying it and learning afield to fit your style is only going to benefit you and your growth. When solo you aren’t answering to anyone or babysitting. I’ll be out there in 9 days. Hopefully packing one out before season ends.
Yeah, I think what you and @I90west said is true. After a few days of pre-season summer scouting, I felt like I had an idea of where elk were. But after being in the woods, I realized I just don’t have much of an idea of what I’m doing in terms of actual hunting strategy. So much space, topography, wandering around (it feels like).

So my thought was that maybe someone else with similar goals and maybe similar or slightly more experience would be a decent sounding board. Help to cut the learning curve a little bit. But then again, I don’t know what I don’t know.
 
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