First timer advice

qmalone64

FNG
Joined
Feb 18, 2024
Messages
43
looking for thoughts/ advice on first elk hunt. Plan is colorado. For first time elk would you suggest 1rst rifle or 4th rifle? Just looking for info to help with the pro/con list in my mind. First and 4th line up with my calendars best is why Im leaning to these two options.

Thanks!
 
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
Messages
853
Location
N. CO
For your first trip up to the mountains if you're thinking DIY, I'd suggest 1st rifle. 4th rifle go guided, late season ain't no joke even for seasoned elk hunters. What's your skillset with camping, backpacking, knowledge of elk behavior and habitat. Enjoy the challenge and learn alot.
 
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qmalone64

FNG
Joined
Feb 18, 2024
Messages
43
Definitely a novice still and thats kind of what I was thinking would be better bet going first rifle. Thanks for chiming in
 
Joined
Feb 17, 2013
Messages
2,368
This is probably the best advice I've seen posted on RS. lmao
This might seem like a smart ass comment, but really it isn’t. There are times when hunters walk out and are blessed with a quick easy kill. The first time I hunted Wyoming for elk I killed a six point bull 30 minutes after the sun came up. Unguided on my own. He was bugling in the dark, and I closed the gap before the sun even came up. That’s the only time that happened 40 years of elk hunting. For the most part elk hunting is a grind. An expensive and time-consuming one.

Every year people see pictures of elk on the Internet and watch elk hunting shows on television and our immediately drawn to the beauty of them and the size of the antlers. Who wouldn’t look at that and think to themselves “I wanna kill one of those!“?

But don’t ask yourself if you want to kill an elk. Instead. you should be asking yourself is do I want to get started on something that’s going to take many many years to figure out. Am I ready to spend thousands of dollars and potentially wait several years before I even kill an elk? Because that is the typical learning curve for someone is starting at ground zero.

You’ll be selling gear that you bought and replacing it with different stuff. Trying new areas because the first one didn’t pan out. Going through partners because it’s not for everyone. If you just wanna kill an elk, you should book a guided hunt. But if you want to be an elk hunter, you need to think about those things. To be honest, though I prefer it much much more than than golf.
 
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Joined
Nov 20, 2021
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1,776
Like, I think Fred Nosler or Fred Bear said grizzly hunting is be 95% boredom and 5% sheer terror. Getting good at elk hunting for the long haul is 95% work, 5% taking the shot.

It's not just the cost and the time away from work for one year, but unless you hook in with a person or group to short cut the process based on their experience, it's going to be multiple years of the same thing, with the potential to hit it good early on, but dry spells aren't talked about like they exist in reality, Imo
 
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