Chris in TN
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2025
- Messages
- 158
I have dissected the unit(s) my daughter got her elk tag in. I've drawn a 1-mile buffer around every road and hiking trail, a 2-mile buffer around every trailhead or dead end road, I've shaded out all of the south facing slopes and every steep cliff face and every north facing slope that is steeper than 30 degrees. I've buffered around all of the outfitter campsites and ranger stations. I've eliminated everything below 7500' elevation because it's either private or too hot for fall elk.
The good news is, after doing all of that, all of the elk in the unit either live on private land or in a handful of six-acre blocks that are left. The Colorado hunting atlas says one of those blocks sits directly between the summer and winter ranges, so that spot should be money.
The bad news is, that spot is a seventeen mile hike from the trailhead.
Alright, just joking about all of that. Or venting. Or realizing that a lot of e-scouting conventional wisdom only goes so far and hunting can't be reduced down to a complex exercise in linear programming.
Moving on to actual serious questions:
Setting aside the problems of having to climb over dead trees that are everywhere, is there a maximum slope figure you guys use when planning approaches? I am not a mountain climber. My daughter and I did a hike in the smokies the other day - which are not nearly as steep as the rockies in general - and we climbed a hill of about 450' elevation gain that looks to average about 16% overall. I know I've hiked up roads that were pushing 40% before. But those were more or less open bare dirt. I know physical fitness plays a role in this and we are on our way in that arena, I'm just wondering what my practical safe limits are here....I'm thinking longer 40% slopes are probably the max, especially if they have any little ledges at all in them. In years past I've been in places in the smoky mountains where I was following a ridgeline cross-country and came to a near vertical cliff and had to make long detours to get off that cliff. I am trying to avoid that here.
Second question: I have AT&T cell phone service. Looking at their map, they claim service across most of the mid and high elevations in the area we're looking at hunting. Is this ridiculously optimistic? Am I correct that I should expect at very best to only have service on ridgelines? I don't *need* service but if we end up needing to call a game packer or wanting to text a picture to the folks back home, it would be nice to not have to hike back to the truck and drive halfway back to town. Yes, we plan to have an inreach (maybe two) but I'm just trying to figure out if our phones will be useable at all. I vaguely remember having maybe one bar of service the last time I was in the area on a USFS road and that area shows coverage on the current AT&T map, but I don't know what if anything has changed since I was there last. I searched and found a thread on this forum discussing cell service but it's a couple years old now and I know the answers change every year.
Also - apart from hunting pressure, do timberline elk normally perhaps feed on one side of a mountain, in one drainage, then cross back over to another drainage to bed/water? And if those elk are pressured while near the treeline would it be normal to expect them to be just as likely to go over the top and drop into the next drainage, instead of going downhill into the same drainage, away from something that spooked them? I'm looking at a couple of ridgetop saddles and wondering if they'd be productive once shooting starts.
There's just a heckuva lot I simply do not know.
The good news is, after doing all of that, all of the elk in the unit either live on private land or in a handful of six-acre blocks that are left. The Colorado hunting atlas says one of those blocks sits directly between the summer and winter ranges, so that spot should be money.
The bad news is, that spot is a seventeen mile hike from the trailhead.
Alright, just joking about all of that. Or venting. Or realizing that a lot of e-scouting conventional wisdom only goes so far and hunting can't be reduced down to a complex exercise in linear programming.
Moving on to actual serious questions:
Setting aside the problems of having to climb over dead trees that are everywhere, is there a maximum slope figure you guys use when planning approaches? I am not a mountain climber. My daughter and I did a hike in the smokies the other day - which are not nearly as steep as the rockies in general - and we climbed a hill of about 450' elevation gain that looks to average about 16% overall. I know I've hiked up roads that were pushing 40% before. But those were more or less open bare dirt. I know physical fitness plays a role in this and we are on our way in that arena, I'm just wondering what my practical safe limits are here....I'm thinking longer 40% slopes are probably the max, especially if they have any little ledges at all in them. In years past I've been in places in the smoky mountains where I was following a ridgeline cross-country and came to a near vertical cliff and had to make long detours to get off that cliff. I am trying to avoid that here.
Second question: I have AT&T cell phone service. Looking at their map, they claim service across most of the mid and high elevations in the area we're looking at hunting. Is this ridiculously optimistic? Am I correct that I should expect at very best to only have service on ridgelines? I don't *need* service but if we end up needing to call a game packer or wanting to text a picture to the folks back home, it would be nice to not have to hike back to the truck and drive halfway back to town. Yes, we plan to have an inreach (maybe two) but I'm just trying to figure out if our phones will be useable at all. I vaguely remember having maybe one bar of service the last time I was in the area on a USFS road and that area shows coverage on the current AT&T map, but I don't know what if anything has changed since I was there last. I searched and found a thread on this forum discussing cell service but it's a couple years old now and I know the answers change every year.
Also - apart from hunting pressure, do timberline elk normally perhaps feed on one side of a mountain, in one drainage, then cross back over to another drainage to bed/water? And if those elk are pressured while near the treeline would it be normal to expect them to be just as likely to go over the top and drop into the next drainage, instead of going downhill into the same drainage, away from something that spooked them? I'm looking at a couple of ridgetop saddles and wondering if they'd be productive once shooting starts.
There's just a heckuva lot I simply do not know.