IDspud
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2021
- Messages
- 187
Clearly practice isn't it. I've been at it for 6 years and I still suck. I feel like my first two years I learned a lot, but now I feel like I'm just *wasting* my time. Field time is never a waste, I just mean I'm putting in tons of miles and not progressing in skill or knowledge.
How do you become better at this? I watch a ton of hunting videos on Youtube on different tactics etc. Not only am I still not at the point to pass on anything but the smallest bucks, but I almost never get into elk or decent deer. My neighbor slays it every single year. He passes on tons of bucks and bulls that I would die to take. I even offered to pay him to go out with me and give me a "lesson" to see if I could be doing things better but he turned me down.
I've taken one elk with a rifle which was mostly a stupid fluke. Last year during archery season I only saw 2 elk. One opening day, and one right at the end. Between that time I logged over 100 miles in rugged terrain on my GPS with nothing. Not even a bugle in the distance. I know my area isn't great (13% success rate) but what the hell? I feel like I put in way more work than the majority of guys out there. I know Youtube videos are edited and would be boring if they showed all the work that went into finding them, but I feel like I'm missing 90% of "the hunt." I can't even locate the elk to begin a plan of attack and stalking.
For the last 2- I'm always using thermals to make sure they aren't winding me. I'm seeing lots of doe, and barely any bucks. Maybe 30:1 ratio and the bucks are forks or at best 2x3. I saw one single bucks that may have had 4/5 points all year.
I think I'm justing pissing into the wind and hoping to maybe find one loner bull in a random draw like last year. Seeing so many deer over the years with only one decent one that situation doesn't seem too great either. Being curious if I'm missing things I took my thermal scope out for a test on my last hunt. I glassed with regular binos, then the thermal in a giant canyon. I had picked out just about everything. Not a single buck or elk in the entire canyon.
Does my area just suck that bad? Is hunting mostly about find the "sweet spots" to keep coming back to yearly rather than going to good looking areas? I attached a satellite photo showing how I might hunt. I usually go out before first light and glass a canyon, then call and move, call and move. 30 mins at each calling spot. I come back in the afternoon and then go somewhere else miles away and try the same thing until dark. Am I covering too much ground? Focusing on too small of an area? Least year I covered just about everything on this map. I'd hike up a ridge and connect with the one I hiked previously from a different side or access point. I did this same thing in 2 or 3 other areas 10-20 miles away as well.
The old saying about 10% of the hunters getting 90% of the game sounds so true. How do I become the 10%? As much as I want to down a decent bull, I'm more interested in become a good hunter that knows what he's doing more than becoming a lucky one.
How do you become better at this? I watch a ton of hunting videos on Youtube on different tactics etc. Not only am I still not at the point to pass on anything but the smallest bucks, but I almost never get into elk or decent deer. My neighbor slays it every single year. He passes on tons of bucks and bulls that I would die to take. I even offered to pay him to go out with me and give me a "lesson" to see if I could be doing things better but he turned me down.
I've taken one elk with a rifle which was mostly a stupid fluke. Last year during archery season I only saw 2 elk. One opening day, and one right at the end. Between that time I logged over 100 miles in rugged terrain on my GPS with nothing. Not even a bugle in the distance. I know my area isn't great (13% success rate) but what the hell? I feel like I put in way more work than the majority of guys out there. I know Youtube videos are edited and would be boring if they showed all the work that went into finding them, but I feel like I'm missing 90% of "the hunt." I can't even locate the elk to begin a plan of attack and stalking.
For the last 2- I'm always using thermals to make sure they aren't winding me. I'm seeing lots of doe, and barely any bucks. Maybe 30:1 ratio and the bucks are forks or at best 2x3. I saw one single bucks that may have had 4/5 points all year.
I think I'm justing pissing into the wind and hoping to maybe find one loner bull in a random draw like last year. Seeing so many deer over the years with only one decent one that situation doesn't seem too great either. Being curious if I'm missing things I took my thermal scope out for a test on my last hunt. I glassed with regular binos, then the thermal in a giant canyon. I had picked out just about everything. Not a single buck or elk in the entire canyon.
Does my area just suck that bad? Is hunting mostly about find the "sweet spots" to keep coming back to yearly rather than going to good looking areas? I attached a satellite photo showing how I might hunt. I usually go out before first light and glass a canyon, then call and move, call and move. 30 mins at each calling spot. I come back in the afternoon and then go somewhere else miles away and try the same thing until dark. Am I covering too much ground? Focusing on too small of an area? Least year I covered just about everything on this map. I'd hike up a ridge and connect with the one I hiked previously from a different side or access point. I did this same thing in 2 or 3 other areas 10-20 miles away as well.
The old saying about 10% of the hunters getting 90% of the game sounds so true. How do I become the 10%? As much as I want to down a decent bull, I'm more interested in become a good hunter that knows what he's doing more than becoming a lucky one.
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