Good Lord I'm doing something wrong.To put it into perspective, since 2009, we've killed 19 elk less than 3/4 mi from a vehicle.
Hoping to make that over 20+ this year
Thanks, as a newbie I appreciate the tips. I don’t know if I can get all the way to 400yds on day one, but I’m really motivated. I’ll probably have to turn my new flat bill around backwards to be more aerodynamic for a hike that long, but I’ve been watching a lot of exercise YouTube videos, so I should be in pretty good shape by Sept 1.I love it when I see lots of guys saying they ‘Going Deep’.
This ol boy is hanging around about 400yds from a road.
Colorado OTC unit.
I was bear hunting across a drainage from a popular TH last sept. Glassing at last light, I happened to be looking in the vicinity of the parking area, full of truck (aka “rigs), presumably archery hunters. At last light, an entire herd of elk stood up not 200 yards from the parking area. I imagine all those dudes drove 20 hours from wherever, 2 hours up a crappy FS RD, hiked in eight….teen miles in to kill an elk and all the elk were bedded next to their trucks (aka “rigs”) at the Trailhead.
It's not any more difficult than deciding what type of hunt you want. If you like backpacking, do that. If you don't, or think being more mobile is good, do that. Key point here is there is no right answer.It’s threads like this that really confuse me. Having never hunted CO otc units, all I hear is horror stories packed trail heads, guys bugling to other guys, etc.
Then this thread pops up and it’s Sitka road camo jokes( v funny), people who stay within 400 yards if their car, and a few who go hiking, but with a rifle just incase.
trying to get an idea if CO otc is harder than planning a trip and hunting it. Guess I’ll have to bite the bullet and find out one of these years
Send me coordinates! I'll take my chances on slow crawling 1000 yards.There is a avalanche chute off the highway around here that has a herd of elk out in it every evening between Sept and Nov. like clock work, the elk bed near the treeline with a 1,000 feet of open country above them and thermals rising from the timber. Once the thermals shift, they move 500-600 years out into the alpine and stay there overnight. I can only imagine how many stalks are attempted and hearts are broken by this arrangement. Unless someone has 600-800 yard shooting skills, you just don’t stand a chance, yet they are clearly visible on a daily basis from at least 3 alpine trails, the highway below and multiple other high points in the area. I’ve even seen IG posts where people post a spotting scope pic with “I found the elk!” and I just laugh. This herd probably saves 100s of other elk and has likely caused a few wrecks, too.
Nowadays almost everyone claims to have those skills.Unless someone has 600-800 yard shooting skills, you just don’t stand a chance,
So true, and yet, you never read success stories from folks pulling that stuff off.Nowadays almost everyone claims to have those skills.