roosiebull
WKR
Elk behavior will probably change a lot when you are hunting depending on what’s going on before your hunt, but scouting is always beneficial.So I’m hunting second rifle and I think I’m only gonna be able to hunt three days with my hunting buddy due to his work not letting him get off more. I plan on hunting the second weekend too with another friend. My friend who is a guide told me to scout every weekend before my season up to a few weeks in advance but everywhere I’ve seen says that scouting can be useless a week or two before the season opener. I think we are definitely planning on scouting the day before our opener too. Any tips on scouting? I know I should scout from a distance to avoid pushing the elk, but does it really matter if I’m hunting in an otc unit and other people are gonna push them regardless? Also is three days enough? I’d be willing to hunt alone a couple days during the week but the thought of packing out a bull elk by myself seems pretty daunting. As you can tell I’m a noob.
I like to scout as much as possible when hunting a new area, often not to pattern animals, but to get a very good understanding of the landscape and where elk leave sign (both present and historical)
From there, I feel like I can pretty much find elk to hunt… I don’t set cams or anything scouting, I just like knowing an area well and staying dynamic once hunting starts, and relying on the basics… not finding elk somewhere doesn’t mean you write it off, just start narrowing things down and following the clues and slowly tighten the noose until you are looking at one you want to kill
I figure it’s all scouting until you are getting ready to shoot, and learning the lay of the land is a very key first step. Find sign but no elk? If you know the area, you can figure it out pretty quickly
If there is no hunting pressure leading up to your hunt, finding one to shoot opening morning is obviously best case for a rifle hunt, granted you aren’t hunting elk a bunch of people know about