Hello Everyone,
Planning my first archery Elk hunt out in SE Idaho this September and looking for some advice on hunting tactics. In the past year I have literally spent every available moment thinking, reading, and analyzing everything and anything about backcountry Elk hunting. I have a pretty good idea what my plan A,B,C, and D areas are and have marked numerous waypoints on various terrain and arial features I feel will potentially hold Elk, hopefully not to many hunters. I recently watched a seminar that Cory Jacobson did on YouTube where he goes into the general daily habits of Elk. In the morning, they head down into the bottom of drainages to feed and water with the thermals into there face, in the morning they head back up back into there bedding areas (North facing/Dark Timber)with the thermals in there face. This scenario poses quite a paradox for me, for the most part everything that I've read is to get back up into the elevation, away from roads/trails and other hunters. If that is the case, then does that mean you drop down early in the morning to get behind the Elk and work your way up hoping to either lure then back down the mountain into your calls or are you staying off to the sides hoping that they do not come up directly up through your wind in the hopes of cutting them off? In the afternoons/Evenings are you trying to stay on top of ridges and work down into bedded Elk in hopes of sneaking into them our near by to try and cut them off on the way down to feed?
I guess my big concern is do I need to reevaluate my camp sites to lower elevations, work up in the morning, work down in the evening back to camp and follow the thermals. For the guys/gals that hunt out of a spike camp where do you position yourself and how does your day look like? Are you hunting in the afternoons or just mornings/evenings? It seems if you camp high you would dropping and climbing up canyons/draws 2x vs up and down 1 time?
Thanks in advance.
Please PM if you like, would love to chat.
Thanks,
Tom
Planning my first archery Elk hunt out in SE Idaho this September and looking for some advice on hunting tactics. In the past year I have literally spent every available moment thinking, reading, and analyzing everything and anything about backcountry Elk hunting. I have a pretty good idea what my plan A,B,C, and D areas are and have marked numerous waypoints on various terrain and arial features I feel will potentially hold Elk, hopefully not to many hunters. I recently watched a seminar that Cory Jacobson did on YouTube where he goes into the general daily habits of Elk. In the morning, they head down into the bottom of drainages to feed and water with the thermals into there face, in the morning they head back up back into there bedding areas (North facing/Dark Timber)with the thermals in there face. This scenario poses quite a paradox for me, for the most part everything that I've read is to get back up into the elevation, away from roads/trails and other hunters. If that is the case, then does that mean you drop down early in the morning to get behind the Elk and work your way up hoping to either lure then back down the mountain into your calls or are you staying off to the sides hoping that they do not come up directly up through your wind in the hopes of cutting them off? In the afternoons/Evenings are you trying to stay on top of ridges and work down into bedded Elk in hopes of sneaking into them our near by to try and cut them off on the way down to feed?
I guess my big concern is do I need to reevaluate my camp sites to lower elevations, work up in the morning, work down in the evening back to camp and follow the thermals. For the guys/gals that hunt out of a spike camp where do you position yourself and how does your day look like? Are you hunting in the afternoons or just mornings/evenings? It seems if you camp high you would dropping and climbing up canyons/draws 2x vs up and down 1 time?
Thanks in advance.
Please PM if you like, would love to chat.
Thanks,
Tom