I’ve been hunting Colorado as a resident for 17 years now and the crowding just seems to get worse every year. And it is hunters, not other user groups. One spot that I‘be been blessed to have been successful and learn well, is about 4 miles into a wilderness area. When I first started hunting that basin maybe 7 years ago, there would be a handful of trucks at the trailhead when I went in the day or so before opener. I’d come out after that opening weekend and there would be a handful of trucks, but usually 10 or less. This is not that long ago mind you. The spot was money for an opening weekend hunt because the elk would in that high alpine feeding pattern, and this basin was perfect terrain to hunt it.
That spot has sense been blown out, as the day or two before season, 5 or 6 different groups all come into the upwind side of the basin, and as soon as that human sent starts flowing before season, the elk bail out.
I rode through that parking lot last year middle of the week after the opener just to gauge pressure in that spot, and I stopped counting at 35 or so. All out of state pickup trucks, most with Kifaru, Sitka, Kuiu, First Lite, and/or Mountain Ops stickers in the back windows, all piled into this trailhead at a Wilderness area. And mind you, this trailhead does not come in Internet forums, people aren’t offering g this spot up as a where to start kind of thing. I couldn’t even imagine what it would be like to pull into a trailhead that actually gets a lot of press on forums LOL.
Point being, sure, you can still figure out ways to adapt, and find areas that are not being hammered by a lot of hunters, but that gets harder and harder every year. There has got to be comprehensive reform to access. Perhaps make those wilderness trailhead parking lots smaller and institute large fines for parking outside a designated parking area? I’m also for limiting or capping the OTC tags, with preference to residents.
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