How to pick between basecamp or spike camp?

For learning an area, I am big fan of a basecamp. It is much more comfortable. And then each morning, you drive 0-5 miles and hunt for the day. It lets you comfortably explore a fairly large area.

But once you find a spot, how do choose between basecamp and spike camp? I heard Randy Newberg say something like "under 3 miles in, he will return to basecamp". Seems reasonable.

I have done a spike camp when I found an area about 2 miles from the road that I wanted for explore for a few days. It was nice to have a fairly comfortable camp pretty close to my hunting spots.

How do others choose?
I typically always have a base camp that I work out of. If I leave BC on foot, I often start hunting almost immediately because, over the years, I have run into animals not far out of BC, or during archery elk, and I have often heard bulls bugling at night, so I have a good idea where to go.

On foot, I typically try to limit my mileage to under 4 miles, but it's more about the effort to get back to BC than the distance. I always carry a tarp shelter and a lightweight bivy bag, and if I feel it's too much effort to return to BC, I will make a hasty shelter or sleep under a tree for the night and return to BC the next day. I always have 4k calories of food with me aswell so food is not a concern.

If I leave on my motorcycle, quad, or truck, I travel for several miles before parking it and continuing on foot. Again, I try to keep my distance under 4 miles, but it's about the effort, not the distance, to get back to my vehicle.

Typically, I don't spike camp much during archery or rifle season as I prefer to do more of a backpack hunt loop for a few days, then return to my vehicle or BC, but if I decide to spike camp out for a few days, I tend to stay within 2 miles of spike camp.

For late-season, I am more likely to use a combination of base camp and spike camp, but current and future weather and conditions dictate my distances from BC or spike camp.
 
Spike camping where there aren’t any elk, really sucks.

I think of it as time to sleep. In September, you’ve got long days. If you tack on a 1 hour hike on either side of the day, and a 30 minute drive, you’re eating dinner at 10PM and breakfast at 4AM.

I’d rather be sleeping where the elk are than hiking and driving in and out to where they aren’t.


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