Hey guys,
I'm making a trip to Colorado in September with 4 guys. One of them has a cabin really close to the ground we'll be hunting. We are all first timers heading out west. I'm in pretty good shape and hunt hard, but my crew appears to be a bit more on the low and slow side. I'm not new to hunting public ground, and typically cover 3-5 miles a day when doing so. But none of it has been at elevation. We will be hunting from September 12-18.
Elk tags are archery OTC in this unit, and one of us drew a muley buck tag.
I also drew a cow muzzleloader tag.
I had originally planned to get an either sex OTC tag, but now I'm wondering if I should forego that, just use the first day or two to scout, and then hunt ML for cows only. Killing a cow is not the goal of this trip - I just want to learn the lay of the land, not die, and figure out all the things NOT to do on an elk trip. Shooting one would be a bonus for sure.
Are the odds of a new person with no real understanding of elk country good enough to limit range from 150 yards on cows only, to 60-70 yards with the bow for either sex?
I'm the ultimate pragmatist, so it's difficult for me to imagine a scenario where 5 greenhorns walk into OTC public ground during the ML season and have elk in our laps.
Any thoughts are appreciated.
I'm making a trip to Colorado in September with 4 guys. One of them has a cabin really close to the ground we'll be hunting. We are all first timers heading out west. I'm in pretty good shape and hunt hard, but my crew appears to be a bit more on the low and slow side. I'm not new to hunting public ground, and typically cover 3-5 miles a day when doing so. But none of it has been at elevation. We will be hunting from September 12-18.
Elk tags are archery OTC in this unit, and one of us drew a muley buck tag.
I also drew a cow muzzleloader tag.
I had originally planned to get an either sex OTC tag, but now I'm wondering if I should forego that, just use the first day or two to scout, and then hunt ML for cows only. Killing a cow is not the goal of this trip - I just want to learn the lay of the land, not die, and figure out all the things NOT to do on an elk trip. Shooting one would be a bonus for sure.
Are the odds of a new person with no real understanding of elk country good enough to limit range from 150 yards on cows only, to 60-70 yards with the bow for either sex?
I'm the ultimate pragmatist, so it's difficult for me to imagine a scenario where 5 greenhorns walk into OTC public ground during the ML season and have elk in our laps.
Any thoughts are appreciated.