Got back a few day ago from an unsuccessful first elk trip in CO and wanted to get some insight on what we should have done differently.
It was been 3 years since we made the trip west, and we camped and hunted in the same exact spot as last time. We arrived 2 days before the opener and drove through snow, around 6-8 on the ground by the time we arrived. Way less people. I am guessing there was 1/4 the amount of people on the stretch of road we were off of.
We set up camp and hiked around 6 miles the first day just to stretch our legs and cut 5 elk tracks that ran up across the mountain we planned to hunt. The day before the season we cut a path to the top of the mountain to establish a good route to follow in the dark (load of blow down).
Opening day me and my partner hiked in the dark to the meadow where he killed his bull opening day 3 years before. We had multiple spots where the elk had stepped in out tracks from the evening before. Multiple sets of fresh sign that had not been there 15 hours before. We had one encounter during our all day sit with a lone cow that busted us as we were both rummaging for our sporks.
Over the following days we had no sightings but clearly visible fresh sign at all elevations where we were hunting at elevations from 8900-10100 feet (the entire height of the mountain). The animals were going up and down and side to side. No clear pattern was evident by their tracks. We only ever cut one set of hunter tracks the entire week and it was about 1/2-1 mile from where we concentrated our efforts.
On the last day we tried to still hunt the thick timber benches where we assumed they were laid up for the day. We got strong whiffs of elk but never turned anything other than fresh poop (confirmed by the taste).
All in all it was a fun hunt because we had solid proof that the animals we were after were actually in the vicinity but it would have been nice to see some. What would a more seasoned hunter have done to increase his chances? We were hunting some pretty difficult to access areas that might have been better served by harder pressure in the surrounding valleys.
Is it likely the elk went nocturnal? I don't think we overhunted the area based on the continuation of the elk tracks passing through the area every night.
It was been 3 years since we made the trip west, and we camped and hunted in the same exact spot as last time. We arrived 2 days before the opener and drove through snow, around 6-8 on the ground by the time we arrived. Way less people. I am guessing there was 1/4 the amount of people on the stretch of road we were off of.
We set up camp and hiked around 6 miles the first day just to stretch our legs and cut 5 elk tracks that ran up across the mountain we planned to hunt. The day before the season we cut a path to the top of the mountain to establish a good route to follow in the dark (load of blow down).
Opening day me and my partner hiked in the dark to the meadow where he killed his bull opening day 3 years before. We had multiple spots where the elk had stepped in out tracks from the evening before. Multiple sets of fresh sign that had not been there 15 hours before. We had one encounter during our all day sit with a lone cow that busted us as we were both rummaging for our sporks.
Over the following days we had no sightings but clearly visible fresh sign at all elevations where we were hunting at elevations from 8900-10100 feet (the entire height of the mountain). The animals were going up and down and side to side. No clear pattern was evident by their tracks. We only ever cut one set of hunter tracks the entire week and it was about 1/2-1 mile from where we concentrated our efforts.
On the last day we tried to still hunt the thick timber benches where we assumed they were laid up for the day. We got strong whiffs of elk but never turned anything other than fresh poop (confirmed by the taste).
All in all it was a fun hunt because we had solid proof that the animals we were after were actually in the vicinity but it would have been nice to see some. What would a more seasoned hunter have done to increase his chances? We were hunting some pretty difficult to access areas that might have been better served by harder pressure in the surrounding valleys.
Is it likely the elk went nocturnal? I don't think we overhunted the area based on the continuation of the elk tracks passing through the area every night.