Browtine908
FNG
Hello All,
Would love to hear your thoughts or experiences on something I'm finding myself questioning lately.
I usually stick to the theory of "don't leave elk to find elk". Meaning, if I'm hunting an OTC area and I'm finding a good amount of elk, but not finding what I'm looking for in a bull and/or opportunity, then I'll be patient and sit on those elk until what I'm looking for presents itself.
I've been in the same situation over and over where I'm hunting a big canyon (7 to 8 miles long, 2,000+ verical ft canyon walls) and I'm finding a good amount or a lot of elk. But being an OTC tag there are also plenty of hunters in the area. I have had success by being patient and waiting for the right opportunity, while also being very aggressive when opportunity is presented. But I've also been unsuccessful because opportunity wasn't presented. Followed by continuing to go back each day, finding elk in the same area but having the same result of no luck on my side for an opportunity. In this scenario I'm encountering multiple groups of hunters, which is also pushing elk around all over the canyon. This blows elk out, but also produces other elk into the area over time. Bulls come and go. Big ones get reclusive the further past the opener you get. But spikes and raghorns show their faces regularly. You might find elk you can't get to that day, but decent chance they won't leave the canyon until something pushes them.
Everyone has their own style of doing things obviously. I know of guys that just keep pushing and moving until they run into what they're looking for. But if I'm glassing and finding 50+ elk its hard to leave them knowing something could shake loose to go after.
Question/prompts:
- Would you leave the area to find other elk in hopes that it would potentially not be as heavily hunted?
- Would you stick it out until you got the opportunity you were looking for?
- Would your theory change if you were simply hunting any bull to fill your tag, or if you were hunting mature bulls?
Would love to hear your thoughts or experiences on something I'm finding myself questioning lately.
I usually stick to the theory of "don't leave elk to find elk". Meaning, if I'm hunting an OTC area and I'm finding a good amount of elk, but not finding what I'm looking for in a bull and/or opportunity, then I'll be patient and sit on those elk until what I'm looking for presents itself.
I've been in the same situation over and over where I'm hunting a big canyon (7 to 8 miles long, 2,000+ verical ft canyon walls) and I'm finding a good amount or a lot of elk. But being an OTC tag there are also plenty of hunters in the area. I have had success by being patient and waiting for the right opportunity, while also being very aggressive when opportunity is presented. But I've also been unsuccessful because opportunity wasn't presented. Followed by continuing to go back each day, finding elk in the same area but having the same result of no luck on my side for an opportunity. In this scenario I'm encountering multiple groups of hunters, which is also pushing elk around all over the canyon. This blows elk out, but also produces other elk into the area over time. Bulls come and go. Big ones get reclusive the further past the opener you get. But spikes and raghorns show their faces regularly. You might find elk you can't get to that day, but decent chance they won't leave the canyon until something pushes them.
Everyone has their own style of doing things obviously. I know of guys that just keep pushing and moving until they run into what they're looking for. But if I'm glassing and finding 50+ elk its hard to leave them knowing something could shake loose to go after.
Question/prompts:
- Would you leave the area to find other elk in hopes that it would potentially not be as heavily hunted?
- Would you stick it out until you got the opportunity you were looking for?
- Would your theory change if you were simply hunting any bull to fill your tag, or if you were hunting mature bulls?