Hey Guys,
I wanted to ask some questions about efficiently hunting/finding elk and what some of your tactics are. Especially when you are in an all new area or state.
Like many guys out there I am a Midwest whitetail hunter who primarily hunts public land and I have learned the hard way that its not always about going to the steepest, nastiest, or furthest off the road places to find success. In fact, I often find myself having more encounters and being more efficient with my time hunting areas that might be closer to road or just overlooked. The reason being is I can go through a ton of these areas in one day vs taking my entire day hiking into one spot only to find there are no deer there.
If you are willing to share how would you apply this same concept to elk hunting in a new area? I feel like some of the same things apply here but because the scale of country is so much bigger I am curious how you efficiently check out multiple areas in one day or maybe a couple days when you are on limited time. I know the time commitment to check areas is going to be larger than whitetails, but I am the type of guy that does not want to go on an elk camping trip and spend my entire time getting in and out of areas. I like to be efficient and it doesn't matter to me if I hunt them steep and deep or 100 yards from the road.
For example do you plan out different calling/glassing knobs ahead of time that you can get to in a reasonable amount of effort and try to hit them all? Are you just burning through areas that should have elk looking for sign (I do this for deer a ton)?
Let me know your thoughts and would love any other resources you are willing to share. I didn't find another thread that talks about this.
Thanks!
I wanted to ask some questions about efficiently hunting/finding elk and what some of your tactics are. Especially when you are in an all new area or state.
Like many guys out there I am a Midwest whitetail hunter who primarily hunts public land and I have learned the hard way that its not always about going to the steepest, nastiest, or furthest off the road places to find success. In fact, I often find myself having more encounters and being more efficient with my time hunting areas that might be closer to road or just overlooked. The reason being is I can go through a ton of these areas in one day vs taking my entire day hiking into one spot only to find there are no deer there.
If you are willing to share how would you apply this same concept to elk hunting in a new area? I feel like some of the same things apply here but because the scale of country is so much bigger I am curious how you efficiently check out multiple areas in one day or maybe a couple days when you are on limited time. I know the time commitment to check areas is going to be larger than whitetails, but I am the type of guy that does not want to go on an elk camping trip and spend my entire time getting in and out of areas. I like to be efficient and it doesn't matter to me if I hunt them steep and deep or 100 yards from the road.
For example do you plan out different calling/glassing knobs ahead of time that you can get to in a reasonable amount of effort and try to hit them all? Are you just burning through areas that should have elk looking for sign (I do this for deer a ton)?
Let me know your thoughts and would love any other resources you are willing to share. I didn't find another thread that talks about this.
Thanks!