HighUintas
WKR
- Joined
- Feb 2, 2020
- Messages
- 2,729
Hey all,
I live and hunt in Utah. I've hunted 20+ years, but I'm only 4 years old to Utah and western hunting in general. I archery hunted in the Uintas last year and found success, but was actually pretty darn close to a road and not that far into the high wilderness boundary. I was only there because I happened to decide to check the place out, happened to find great sign a week before season, and sealed the deal the next week. Otherwise, the plan was to go way back into the high Uintas, maybe 10 miles or so in.
Reading the biologist's report on Utah's interactive hunt planner, it sounds like most of the elk are at lower elevations in the unit, closer to private land. They say the high wilderness is mostly sterile ground and the elk stay lower close to the Aspen/sage/pine mixture altitude. Well, the high country isn't mostly sterile ground, and I know there's elk up there. This year I'm definitely heading way back in the Uintas, 10+ deep. I'll be trying to have a child this year, and I want to be able to do a 10 day hunting trip into the wilderness without worry.
I'm wondering, has anyone here hunted both the Frank Church and the high Uintas? I ask because my wife and I plan to move to Salmon in about 6 or so years, and I am really looking forward to getting deep into that nasty, steep, wolf ridden Frank Church, regardless of elk numbers. I was just reading a couple of threads about the Frank and was wondering if there's anybody here that's done both. How do they compare, as far as finding elk? (Disregarding wolves, of course) I know the high Uintas aren't as steep as the Frank, but they are heavily wooded, not suited to glassing, and very very vast. If you ask any of the local guys about hunting in the high Uintas, they'll say you're nuts for wanting to pack 10 miles back in there to not find any elk.
I live and hunt in Utah. I've hunted 20+ years, but I'm only 4 years old to Utah and western hunting in general. I archery hunted in the Uintas last year and found success, but was actually pretty darn close to a road and not that far into the high wilderness boundary. I was only there because I happened to decide to check the place out, happened to find great sign a week before season, and sealed the deal the next week. Otherwise, the plan was to go way back into the high Uintas, maybe 10 miles or so in.
Reading the biologist's report on Utah's interactive hunt planner, it sounds like most of the elk are at lower elevations in the unit, closer to private land. They say the high wilderness is mostly sterile ground and the elk stay lower close to the Aspen/sage/pine mixture altitude. Well, the high country isn't mostly sterile ground, and I know there's elk up there. This year I'm definitely heading way back in the Uintas, 10+ deep. I'll be trying to have a child this year, and I want to be able to do a 10 day hunting trip into the wilderness without worry.
I'm wondering, has anyone here hunted both the Frank Church and the high Uintas? I ask because my wife and I plan to move to Salmon in about 6 or so years, and I am really looking forward to getting deep into that nasty, steep, wolf ridden Frank Church, regardless of elk numbers. I was just reading a couple of threads about the Frank and was wondering if there's anybody here that's done both. How do they compare, as far as finding elk? (Disregarding wolves, of course) I know the high Uintas aren't as steep as the Frank, but they are heavily wooded, not suited to glassing, and very very vast. If you ask any of the local guys about hunting in the high Uintas, they'll say you're nuts for wanting to pack 10 miles back in there to not find any elk.