- Thread Starter
- #21
Many variables are part of the equation when it comes to the rut. If it is totally predicated off of the angle of the sun to their eye, I can debunk that every single year with dozens of cows. Weather. pressure, moon phase, all affect it to some degree. Having healthy herds with some herd bulls around who know what to do helps. We had a bull on camera for 4 summers straight, and every year around mid August he would disappear. We scoured a good 6 mile square area trying to find him. What this boy was doing is totally dropping from 8500 ft to semi desert 5000 ft, and not a cow one with him. My son came across him during my granddaughters first rifle season, in a herd of around 40 head, with several other smaller bulls. My son scoped them for a while and he said they were rutting up a storm., on October 15th. Colorado elk, probably more than any other state's elk, are hammered hard from September to mid November and the rifle Otc tags puts literally towns of hunters in the woods. If it snows early and the elk herd up and migrate....I counted 8 gut piles in one large meadow several years ago.
And guess what? When about 20 of us local guys started raising hell with CPW about 5 years ago that their resident herds are losing numbers at a drastic rate, we had several meetings with the local regional headquarters and got the ball rolling up to the Wildlife Commission to get some changes implemented to reduce hunting pressure. What did they do? They cut archery tags by about 60 percent, put them on a draw, which was definitely needed. But, the only other thing they did was to cut the rifle season lengths down a bit, leave at Otc, and cut the rifle cow tags a little bit. The archery hunters bore the brunt of the change, and as the CPW guys told us, you will not do away with the OTC tags because of the $$ they bring in. The state legislature controls the purse of the CPW, and those rifle seasons have the most out of state hunters spending big bucks in the state. Less archery hunters means less bulls killed, But herd health isn't helped because those bulls probably will be harvested now in the rifle seasons. There are even less local archery hunters applying now and just rifle hunting instead.
And guess what? When about 20 of us local guys started raising hell with CPW about 5 years ago that their resident herds are losing numbers at a drastic rate, we had several meetings with the local regional headquarters and got the ball rolling up to the Wildlife Commission to get some changes implemented to reduce hunting pressure. What did they do? They cut archery tags by about 60 percent, put them on a draw, which was definitely needed. But, the only other thing they did was to cut the rifle season lengths down a bit, leave at Otc, and cut the rifle cow tags a little bit. The archery hunters bore the brunt of the change, and as the CPW guys told us, you will not do away with the OTC tags because of the $$ they bring in. The state legislature controls the purse of the CPW, and those rifle seasons have the most out of state hunters spending big bucks in the state. Less archery hunters means less bulls killed, But herd health isn't helped because those bulls probably will be harvested now in the rifle seasons. There are even less local archery hunters applying now and just rifle hunting instead.