Hunted the early rifle season in the Scapegoat Wilderness Area last September, it's part of the Bob Marshall Wilderness complex. Hunted with my dad, brother, cousin and buddy. Guided week long trip, horseback & wall tents. Me, my dad and buddy didn't see or even hear an elk.
My brother and cousin saw a "nice bull" the first full day of hunting. My cousin luckily got a small rag horn the last day of the hunt.
Gorgeous country.
There were 20 hunters scattered in 4 different camps the week before, 1 elk killed. There were 22 hunters scattered the week we were there and 2 elk killed. Nothing to write home about.
Physically demanding hunt. Every step was up or down. We prepped and bought gear and worked out at home to get in shape. Nothing could ultimately prepare you for the physical exhaustion and lack of oxygen.
Everything was 4x as hard.
My cousin is a semi-pro cyclist in Salt Lake City Utah and he and his guide went crazy up on peaks and having to crawl on hands and knees in some of the most crazy, rocky, jagged peaks. If anyone deserved an elk, it was my cousin. My brother is also a hard core cyclist, works out 5x a week, lots of cardio and the two of them were even gassed every day coming back to camp.
Crazy rugged country.
You kill an elk there it's a TROPHY no matter how big/small it is.
I'd skip it and go elsewhere. I'm probably never going back.
$4,500 + $1,000 non-res tag, $7-10k in gear + time and energy to work out and get in as best of shape as possible all to look at empty mountain sides devoid of elk.
Gotta be honest, I was kinda heart broken to put that much money and energy into the hunt and put so much expectations on a hunt that it felt like a gut punch that knocked the wind out of me. Yeah, yeah, I know it's hunting and all that, but I had saved for 6 yrs for this hunt and was supper bummed it didn't work out the way I wanted.
So much that It'll be 5 yrs before I'm considering another elk hunt elsewhere with a different outfit for sure.