WildmanDan
FNG
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2023
- Messages
- 10
I've been lurking the forum for years now and am psyched to join the conversation.
I've been archery elk hunting Colorado OTC in an area with relatively low elk density. That being said, I'm in elk basically everyday.
The area is thick timber with big meadows at the bottoms all the way to alpine parks. There are also a ton of smaller wet meadows dispersed throughout the timber. I tend to bump a lone cow or two during the day between 10am-3pm-ish and will hear bulls bugling before/just after sunrise and right at dark.
Calling has generally been successful to locate and even to get bulls sub-30 yards. Typically I'll hike in slowly in the dark and listen. I'll get up 500-1,000 feet above the bottom and locate as well. I believe these are satellites and are coming in more-so to size me up vs. fight.
The challenge is that they aren't really herded up - it's like groups of 1-4 elk. This is in the thick timber.
However, I do see a herd of 25-30 elk in the alpine park. I've been glassing up on a ridge and have watched them on 4-5 different occasions basically take the exact same path through a system of meadows into the timber to bed.
One thing I have noticed is that where I see/hear in the morning/evening is where I will find them the following morning/evening.
Again, the challenge in the thick timber is if I'm not setup exactly where they are for an ambush I'm out of luck.
Some ideas:
-Try and guess where they are bedded and still hunt the area.
-Try some midday cold calling setups near bedding areas.
-If elk located in the morning, let them be and go chill somewhere or get up high and glass. Return to the area for an evening hunt.
-Find those little wet meadows on benches where they might bed and sit the meadow/water midday hoping they come to feed/water.
-Go to a new area that is more conducive to spot&stalk.
In summary - I'm into elk often, but I wouldn't say I have a ton of "killable" encounters. I'm struggling to connect all the dots and seal the deal.
Any thoughts/advice is greatly appreciated!
I've been archery elk hunting Colorado OTC in an area with relatively low elk density. That being said, I'm in elk basically everyday.
The area is thick timber with big meadows at the bottoms all the way to alpine parks. There are also a ton of smaller wet meadows dispersed throughout the timber. I tend to bump a lone cow or two during the day between 10am-3pm-ish and will hear bulls bugling before/just after sunrise and right at dark.
Calling has generally been successful to locate and even to get bulls sub-30 yards. Typically I'll hike in slowly in the dark and listen. I'll get up 500-1,000 feet above the bottom and locate as well. I believe these are satellites and are coming in more-so to size me up vs. fight.
The challenge is that they aren't really herded up - it's like groups of 1-4 elk. This is in the thick timber.
However, I do see a herd of 25-30 elk in the alpine park. I've been glassing up on a ridge and have watched them on 4-5 different occasions basically take the exact same path through a system of meadows into the timber to bed.
One thing I have noticed is that where I see/hear in the morning/evening is where I will find them the following morning/evening.
Again, the challenge in the thick timber is if I'm not setup exactly where they are for an ambush I'm out of luck.
Some ideas:
-Try and guess where they are bedded and still hunt the area.
-Try some midday cold calling setups near bedding areas.
-If elk located in the morning, let them be and go chill somewhere or get up high and glass. Return to the area for an evening hunt.
-Find those little wet meadows on benches where they might bed and sit the meadow/water midday hoping they come to feed/water.
-Go to a new area that is more conducive to spot&stalk.
In summary - I'm into elk often, but I wouldn't say I have a ton of "killable" encounters. I'm struggling to connect all the dots and seal the deal.
Any thoughts/advice is greatly appreciated!