Mdfowlman2
WKR
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2020
- Messages
- 531
Anyone use an e bike for elk? Looking to maybe extend the range a bit, also fighting a foot issue so saving a few miles a day could be a huge help.
I am curious as well; I started researching Forest Service, and States rules/regs and they appear to have the same restrictions as ATV's or any other motorized vehicle. What advantages do you gain with an Ebike?Folks that use ebikes, I'm curious what kind of roads and trails are you taking them on? Do you think most ebike users are strictly keeping them on motorized trails on Forest Service/BLM land?
I was looking at E bikes a year or two ago, and should mention i live in CO. The rules / laws may have changed on them but those E bikes are allowed back on mountain biking trails as a good example of where you normally couldnt just take an ATV or something along those line.
I have been looking at e-bikes a bit and this is true. I am leaning more towards a trek or specialized ebike for this reason, though they have less power and lack the ability to just go without peddling. Reasoning is I would probably ride it more on mtb trails year round then I would use it actually hunting. I would be on private land for hunting mostly, so the state regs don't matter as much.you get what you pay for. Most of the ebikes that you see hunters get are very, very cheap bikes with a motor on them. People are thinking a $2500 -3000 ebike are expensive. But in the bike world that is a wally world bike with a motor. A decent ebike with good brakes and shifting and suspension will be over $4,000 very easy. But this is coming from a guy that likes high end peddle bikes. Just remeber the USFS treats them like a motorcycle.