Keep moving, archery season is coming to an end soon, if your in old sign go to a different mountain, different side of the valley, anything to find the elk, they arent where your at currently so see if you can find them.It was nice reading the tips on this thread. I'm currently hunting and not finding the sign either. It's all old. I've seen plenty of muleys, a couple of bears, but no elk.
I'll employ these tactics. I have until archery season ends.
Keep moving, archery season is coming to an end soon, if your in old sign go to a different mountain, different side of the valley, anything to find the elk, they arent where your at currently so see if you can find them.
I get hung up on that maybe the elk are just being quiet and I'll eventually stumble into them/fresh sign. I'm hunting one side of a mountain today but how does one know that they aren't on the other side and being quiet? I haven't heard a single bugle and I've hunted three different areas so far during my time here.
I did get to hear a mountain lion screaming and making other sounds this morning. Pretty cool.
Bugles are awesome. And that’s what we all want to hear. But the truth is you have to be where they are. I take a “run and gun” approach to finding them. Don’t worry about being quiet...just cover a lot of ground and move to another spot. If I don’t know an area well I’ll have maybe 5 spots picked out to walk. Take some time looking for tracks, droppings, smell. Move in quickly if nothing looks fresh.
It’s a tough season so far so don’t be discouraged. But there’s no point “hunting” a spot until you have some evidence elk are there or use that area regularly.
Aaron pretty much nailed my thoughts on it.... i would keep going until you find fresh sign, and THEN i'd set up a calling sequence. A bugle here and there as your moving, or cow calls, never hurts and the inevitable noise you make while your moving may be taken as another elk moving through the woods. The elk COULD be on the otherside of the mountain like you said, and being quiet, but the bugles they make, and you make, only carry so far in the deep timber.I get hung up on that maybe the elk are just being quiet and I'll eventually stumble into them/fresh sign. I'm hunting one side of a mountain today but how does one know that they aren't on the other side and being quiet? I haven't heard a single bugle and I've hunted three different areas so far during my time here.
I did get to hear a mountain lion screaming and making other sounds this morning. Pretty cool.
Aaron pretty much nailed my thoughts on it.... i would keep going until you find fresh sign, and THEN i'd set up a calling sequence. A bugle here and there as your moving, or cow calls, never hurts and the inevitable noise you make while your moving may be taken as another elk moving through the woods. The elk COULD be on the otherside of the mountain like you said, and being quiet, but the bugles they make, and you make, only carry so far in the deep timber.
It was nice reading the tips on this thread. I'm currently hunting and not finding the sign either. It's all old. I've seen plenty of muleys, a couple of bears, but no elk.
I'll employ these tactics. I have until archery season ends.
I think my biggest takeaway from this trip is that an area can look great and be the kind of set up you fantasize about, but if the elk aren’t there they aren’t there. I took my first trip to SD last April and was hunting areas that looked fantastic for turkeys and should’ve been loaded, but just didn’t have the birds in them. I ended up bouncing around a lot and once we found the birds we were in them each day and I was able to take a beautiful Tom. It was the most “non-turkey” looking habitat we had hunted but was loaded with birds. I guess the biggest thing I could say is hunt the animal and not just what looks best or where an animal should be if that makes sense.
Be patient and enjoy being in nature. If you aren’t finding fresh sign move within your unit or to a different unit until you find sign......
You know what the Mennonites do? They go where the elk are hahaha, not to be tongue in cheek at all, they're not afraid to walk into that steep n nasty deadfall area riddled with cliff faces and oak brush thorns, just some good ole tough hunting. See where the wives said the men leave camp around 3 am? They probably don't get back to camp until 10 pm or later either. Those guys just hunt hard every single day to fill their tags.I'm still at it but still not finding fresh sign. I drove an hour and some change to a different spot but the same story applies.
I went to a trailhead that we stayed at some last year. Last year we met a Mennonite family from WI. Three men (father, son, and son in law), their wives, and kids. Last year when we left, they had killed two bulls. I pulled into that trailhead the other day and hunted half the day. No elk but I did get to hear a mountain lion scream and make other noises. Anyway, I walked over to the Mennonite camp and they all three had killed branch antlered bulls, found two dead heads that looked to be 5x5s or better, a pile of sheds, and they had killed a bear. The men were hunting but I did talk to the wives. They normally stay a few weeks and the men leave camp around 3am. I don't think they ever drive to hunt.
I just can't believe how successful they are! Hell, ask me if I'd shoot a calf.
Agree with last post. You hear it a lot, it can all change in an instant. That’s exactly what happened to us.
I just wrote up the entire story if you care to read it. Maybe it gives some inspiration.
2020 CO archery Elk recap
2020 CO archery Elk recap
I’ve seen this type of write up done a few times but I’ve never taken the time to do it myself before now. I feel like I want to document all this for my own future benefit as much as anything else, but some of you might enjoy the read. It’s a story that has just about everything IMO... First...r.tapatalk.com
You can’t cheat the mountain