Jon Boy
WKR
Lots of great advice in this thread. And as you can tell it all varies greatly. I think regions vary greatly in the best elk tactics to be used. I admire and respect @Matt Cashell as an elk hunter but after years and years of figuring out my zone, being glued to a glassing spot just isn't going to cut it. Particularly for more mature bulls.
I roll country hard and won't even mention how many miles I put on a day as most will probably roll their eyes and think its an exaggeration. Majority of elk where I am at head to private ground. The ones that stay will find one little secluded pocket and will live there until absolutely forced out. Generally it will be dead fall timber with an occasional avalanche chute or park nearby. Covering ground, looking for tracks, glassing for tracks, and following your gut into obscure spots has been what's working for me in recent years.
The two big bulls we killed this year we glassed, covered country, looked for tracks and just hunted where we thought they would be. Both days resulted in 10+ mile days and wouldn't you know it, both bulls we killed we never even cut there track. They were living in such small zones and holding tight we were right on top of them and saw them at under 100 yards before ever cutting their track.
Both times we were hunting in familiar country we knew well and got 'lucky' i guess.
I've hunted other regions as well as wyo and idaho. And the glassing game is where its at. As far as my home country in sw montana, its a ground pounding suffer fest that I've grown to love
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I roll country hard and won't even mention how many miles I put on a day as most will probably roll their eyes and think its an exaggeration. Majority of elk where I am at head to private ground. The ones that stay will find one little secluded pocket and will live there until absolutely forced out. Generally it will be dead fall timber with an occasional avalanche chute or park nearby. Covering ground, looking for tracks, glassing for tracks, and following your gut into obscure spots has been what's working for me in recent years.
The two big bulls we killed this year we glassed, covered country, looked for tracks and just hunted where we thought they would be. Both days resulted in 10+ mile days and wouldn't you know it, both bulls we killed we never even cut there track. They were living in such small zones and holding tight we were right on top of them and saw them at under 100 yards before ever cutting their track.
Both times we were hunting in familiar country we knew well and got 'lucky' i guess.
I've hunted other regions as well as wyo and idaho. And the glassing game is where its at. As far as my home country in sw montana, its a ground pounding suffer fest that I've grown to love
Sent from my SM-G965U using Tapatalk