Kenai_dtracker
Lil-Rokslider
Weird title, I know. I've read a ton of posts here and a lot of guys have shot a pile of elk over the years, and of course the number one advantage is location. If you live in elk country, you tend to shoot more elk, but I'm certainly not taking away the skill that's also needed. I live in the northeast, and know that if I moved to MT, WY, etc, and hunted elk the way that I hunt whitetail, I'd probably still end up on the losing end.
I normally hunt northern Maine or New Hampshire in the mountains, and I prefer to track if there's snow. If there's no snow, I still-hunt, and pretty much hate sitting or stand hunting, as I like to be on the move. With fresh snow, I prefer to move fast, cover ground and find a track. If I jump a buck, that's fine because he's now in front of me leaving tracks and they don't cover the ground like elk.
My first year elk hunting in 2019 there was 12 inches of new snow. I hiked up through the aspens and within 30 minutes of legal shooting light I'd spotted 4 legal bulls and harvest the last one. Yay! Great! I'm an elk hunter and have it all figured out....Haha, that last statement is so far from the truth it's laughable. 4 of us went back to that same area in 2022 and all we all got skunked. I saw plenty of cow elk and spikes, but no legal bulls, and felt that days that I zipped, I should have zagged, and I also feel that my whitetail hunting strategy of putting on lots of miles is not the best way to elk hunt in the later season. As a reference, the guys that I hunt with don't have any more elk hunting experience than me, so that's why I looking here for advice.
What are guys rifle season strategies for elk on public land? Still hunt dark timber, track elk, glass meadows in morning or late afternoons? Do you sit tight during the midday or move? I like to keep hitting the next ridge, or just another mile in, but that can be pretty tiresome and by the later afternoon I'm pretty beat. I'll be 50 this summer and although I keep in pretty good shape, there's always someone that can go deeper or higher, so that's not always the strategy to go with. At the end of the day, I just love being in the woods hunting and seeing new country.
I normally hunt northern Maine or New Hampshire in the mountains, and I prefer to track if there's snow. If there's no snow, I still-hunt, and pretty much hate sitting or stand hunting, as I like to be on the move. With fresh snow, I prefer to move fast, cover ground and find a track. If I jump a buck, that's fine because he's now in front of me leaving tracks and they don't cover the ground like elk.
My first year elk hunting in 2019 there was 12 inches of new snow. I hiked up through the aspens and within 30 minutes of legal shooting light I'd spotted 4 legal bulls and harvest the last one. Yay! Great! I'm an elk hunter and have it all figured out....Haha, that last statement is so far from the truth it's laughable. 4 of us went back to that same area in 2022 and all we all got skunked. I saw plenty of cow elk and spikes, but no legal bulls, and felt that days that I zipped, I should have zagged, and I also feel that my whitetail hunting strategy of putting on lots of miles is not the best way to elk hunt in the later season. As a reference, the guys that I hunt with don't have any more elk hunting experience than me, so that's why I looking here for advice.
What are guys rifle season strategies for elk on public land? Still hunt dark timber, track elk, glass meadows in morning or late afternoons? Do you sit tight during the midday or move? I like to keep hitting the next ridge, or just another mile in, but that can be pretty tiresome and by the later afternoon I'm pretty beat. I'll be 50 this summer and although I keep in pretty good shape, there's always someone that can go deeper or higher, so that's not always the strategy to go with. At the end of the day, I just love being in the woods hunting and seeing new country.