Middle Fork September Elk/Deer hunt

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Aug 21, 2017
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The biologists know little to nothing about those units, it’s so remote and they are rarely in the field. They will tell you this personally. The last 10 or 15 posts on this topic will start you off in the right direction, as there has been about 3-5 separate ones every year.

Edit* That May have been a little steep saying that the biologists know little to nothing. But I do stand by the statement I made about it being remote and them not spending a ton of time in there. This was told directly to me from the biologists in 27. Point being, I think this thread as well as the previous threads are your best bet for preparing for the hunt. Good luck to you.
 
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May 10, 2017
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Haha you’re right. The bios do fly it in the winter every few years and one flies into the strips most years in November and checks things out during the hottest times for the strips. None of them hunt it regularly but some F&G guys in the Boise office do.

The pilots who fly back there know what’s up and the guys who’ve hunted it a few years +.
 
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Haha you’re right. The bios do fly it in the winter every few years and one flies into the strips most years in November and checks things out during the hottest times for the strips. None of them hunt it regularly but some F&G guys in the Boise office do.

The pilots who fly back there know what’s up and the guys who’ve hunted it a few years +.

Absolutely. The pilots probably know more than anyone. However they’re likely not going to just feed info to every Tom, Dick and Harry.
 
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Absolutely. The pilots probably know more than anyone. However they’re likely not going to just feed info to every Tom, Dick and Harry.

They want your business and they want you to have a good experience which means not leaving you at the worst strips. You’d be surprised.
 
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They want your business and they want you to have a good experience which means not leaving you at the worst strips. You’d be surprised.

I understand that. I’m saying if you’re spending money, they likely would be more than happy to help out. But it takes spending the money to get any insight.
 

npm352

WKR
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Apr 18, 2018
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I think it is neat and admirable to want to hunt elk in there, but from what I hear, it seems like a lot of guys have the same idea and use the same few airstrips, which kind of defeats the point to me. Maybe I am just a wuss. I'd chase sheep and goat in that stuff, and apply for one or the other every year, but the thought of packing a bull elk out of that makes me hurt all over.
 
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It would be different if the units held large numbers of animals. They just don’t anymore. Odds are very good you would drop into that canyon, climb all the way to the top and back down the other side and not cut one track. A huge percentage of those areas can be completely void of game.
 
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IDbull.jpg

It's doable but I will echo everything else said in this thread. I killed this bull 13.5 miles from an airstrip, first week of October 2011. It took me 4.5 days of about 16 hours/day packing to get him back. And honestly, I got really lucky. He was with ten cows and they were the only elk in the country. I cut two other tracks on the 13 miles back to the airstrip.
 
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That was our concern with driving that far and hunting right next to someone else. The biologist said at 3 miles in we would be alone, and at 5 miles from a road, we would find elk. The said most of the pressure is within a mile of a road. Our plan either flying in or driving is to go in about 5 miles for camp and hunt from there.
I am looking to go in mid october. Can I please get the number of the biologist you talked to? Much appreciated.
 
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