So am I. Not really concerned about how big it is as long as it's legal. I'm just trying to look around the area and see what it it looks like.I’m excited to see a 350 Bull on a Mercedes
For you guys that fly one way and then drive back... do you just check your coolers as oversized baggage with the airline?
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I wonder if you could put the skull in the back seat and have the antlers come out each window on the side. I hope he post pictures.So am I. Not really concerned about how big it is as long as it's legal. I'm just trying to look around the area and see what it it looks like.
If I can make it happen I will. But like I said, it's mainly a scouting trip more than anything. But I will post pics of some of the stuff I've seen.I wonder if you could put the skull in the back seat and have the antlers come out each window on the side. I hope he post pictures.
Flatlander is certainly the voice of reason here, I had an unexpected $1700 truck repair and lost a belt on the Polaris 3 miles into the area on snowy muddy roads. But the idea of being in elk country during elk season without a readily available tag is hard for me to fathom. Do young single guys turn down supermodels? Do racing enthusiasts skip a lap around the track at the brickyard? Golfers pass on Augusta?
Always be prudent & careful & as you can tell nobody thinks your vehicle is suitable- but you have months to prepare & recruit a friend with a truck - and every season missed is a potential elk of a lifetime or freezer full of burgers passed up forever.
I will be doing this actually. I may make another post so people can post some examples of what an elk sign looks like both fresh and historical. I just know when starting out in a brand new area it's best to see where there might be other hunters. The tag is in a separate budget the gas money is in my travel budget. Hopefully I can get to a mechanic to see if I'm safe enough to drive that distance. I would be getting a fresh oil change before I head outGo scout, and if he finds elk while he still has time to hunt; go buy a tag. Speaking for myself, and everyone else I know that’s done it; the first trip elk trip for someone that hasn’t ever been hunting in the West is a glorified scouting mission. In the long run, I would have been way better off financially to go scout for a long weekend or two then hunt once I had done so.
That's the general consensus in this thread so far. For the buddy part, I'm a bit of a loner on top of only moving back but I'll see what I can do.You have the right amount budgeted but I’d suggest you find a buddy to join in the trip & cut gas costs in 1/2, one with a 4wheel drive truck or a UTV or 2 ATVs on a trailer.
Fuel in Gunnison was at $3.89 for regular unleaded last week. Shockingly high. It typically is 40 cents more per gallon than what I pay in Dallas, TX. But, this was $1.10 more per gallon. And that was IF you could find it. Three places in town were completely out 2 times that I tried to fill up. The I70 shutdown has apparently brought in more traffic to Delta, Montrose, Gunnison, Salida, etc.Fuel at $4/gallon
$375 to get there and $375 to get back. Another $150 for driving around to hunting spots (probably be a fraction of that) and you are at $900.
In reality fuel will probably be closer to $3 than $4.