Do you have any more specifics? Are you looking for alpine/ high mountain, desert, or just off the regular beaten path? What’s your expectations? Experienced hunter or new to the game?I'm planning a mule deer hunt in Idaho and was wondering what unit would be good for a first time backpack hunt/hike?
High mountain and no experience.Do you have any more specifics? Are you looking for alpine/ high mountain, desert, or just off the regular beaten path? What’s your expectations? Experienced hunter or new to the game?
There is a lot to unpack. What is your expected year to hunt?High mountain and no experience.
None of them. They're all ruined because yuppies keep asking stupid questions on the internet, and morons keep answering them.
Go there and figure it out, stop looking for handouts.
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And I'm not asking for a handout just never been in any mountains before thanks for the helpHigh mountain and no experience.
I understand that. I plan on hunting next year. I've been looking at base map alot and trying to figure out what unit that isn't too dense (to glass) and it doesn't have to be easy to access. I have a few in mind tho and don't have a ton of time to travel 24 hours to scout but I'd love to just visit and scout.There is a lot to unpack. What is your expected year to hunt?
Yeah honestly probably a good idea to just get a feel of the country and thank you for the info.Maybe you should take a week long summer trip out here and rent a vehicle, drive the state, lay your eyes on the land, and see what intrigues you. Take a drive from Boise to Weiser to McCall to Stanley to Ellis to Howe to Arco to Picabo to Boise and then you will know what you are dealing with.
another idea is check out the harvest reports on the website and pick the highest success rate and just go for it.
Generally north of the Salmon River is thicker timber, between Salmon river and snake river is steep and mixed sage/timber, and south of snake river is more gradual slope and open. Generally.
Yeah im probably biting off more than I can chew coming from Iowa. I'll plan a scouting trip and thanks for the adviceDownthepipe gave you some great advice. It’s hard to imagine how gnarly parts of Idaho are until you’ve been here. Google Earth doesn’t do it any justice. High Mtn hunts are hard for the most experienced hunter. Weather and terrain are extremely unpredictable and unforgiving. Make your self home on this site and start reading threads with Frank Church or Selway in them. There is tons of information in them. Feel free to message me anytime.
Yeah im probably biting off more than I can chew coming from Iowa. I'll plan a scouting trip and thanks for the advice
Hey thanks this was alot of help.Nah. Not at all. Ya just have to do some research and be smart so you don't end up getting yourself killed or having to call SAR.
I recommend south central and southeast. The mountains aren't as steep as north and central Idaho, they're more open for glassing, and they're still beautiful. No clue on deer quality though!
Just find the absolute steepest hill you can in Iowa and go up and down it for 1-2 hours multiple times a week. Then do that with a 50lb pack for awhile. Find some trails to go running on to get your ankles strengthened... The more rocky, rooty, and terrible to run on the better. It will help you learn balance on uneven and sidehill type terrain.
Then learn about mountain weather - not too complicated.
Then make sure you don't spend too much money on gear because everyone here loves custom this and custom that. A couple of things you definitely want to have are good wool socks, boots or shoes that you know will treat your feet well (doesn't have e to be fancy... I wear crappy Salomon $110 lowcut hiking shoes because they're comfy and give me good ground feel. I just have to switch to boots when I know there's going to be lot's of high water crossing), a tent that doesn't weigh a million pounds and won't fall over in high wind, a decent sleeping bag and pad, and a decent down jacket. And maybe some gaiters if you're a pansy. I wear gaiters.
And learn about thermals vs prevailing wind