Ownthewest
WKR
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2019
- Messages
- 318
I too have a Colorado Moose tag this year. Congrats to everyone that drew. Thank you all for sharing such valuable info and tips. I love how supportive everyone is on Rokslide.
I love shooting them in shallow creeks, gets things cooled off right away and I can just wash the blood/gut pile away. Last two seasons, my moose have both dropped in 10-12” water. Zero negative consequences but your experience might not be the same.
sweet geezus thats a monster.
Thanks for posting. If I hunt at tree line I’ll have a 4mi. Pack out. I’d like to avoid that but I will do what I need to do.
Thanks for suggesting Billy Molls as a resource, I'm trying to gather as much information as I can get!Can’t offer much on CO moose but I’ve gotten a few AK moose myself and my dad has been on over 40 successful trips.
Be patient, scouting helps, be a good shot, understand that moose are big, make sure you can shoot while under pressure and fatigued, you can get pretty close to moose (at least I have. Last years was 40 yards the year before that was 25), big moose get big because they are patient if you think it ran away but you didn’t see it, its probably still in there. And again be patient. Billy molls on youtube offers a lot of the same advice my dad gave me
I have more tips and quite a few stories if you’re interested. For calibers I like 308 under 200 yards. People will argue go bigger but my dad got a 65 inch bull with a 243 one shot. But my gram used to make my dad shoot ~ 1000 squirrels every summer in the head for parkas.
308+ will work great. I like barbes ttsx, nosler partitions, sciroccos, A frames, accubonds, federal terminal ascents if I had the choices. But remington corelokts was all my dad used for 20 years. You might want a bigger caliber because of the elevation and as a just in case.
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So sorry to read you had to return the tag. Big bummer but clearly you have other things to take care of. Wish you well in pulling tag again as the odds are so terrible.Thank you to everyone that has provided information and shared their hunting experiences. I’ve never used a forum before for any reason and I’m amazed how much hunters are willing to help out other hunters. I greatly appreciate it.
Unfortunately, I had to turn my moose tag in. As much as I didn’t want to, there is more important things going on for me right now. Hopefully I won’t have to wait another 13 years.
If you or anyone you know lands a moose tag in the next few weeks, I’d like to be able to help in anyway I can. I’d also like to hear about their hunt or anyone else’s hunt for that matter. This will help my mental state since I probably won’t be getting into the mountains much for any animal any time soon. Thanks
@adturn01 i was successful getting a bull moose down in the flat tops area a week ago. My advice would be to stick to where you are seeing the most sign and water. Moose will use the blowdown areas but most of the cows I saw were all pretty close to large willow complexes (or slightly uphill from them). I think the weather coming up will help you a lot. On hot, dry days I would only see moose very early in the morning or at last light. When it got cooler and rainy, they stayed out until at least 11 or so. Looks like it is going to be cooler and rainy this weekend which should help you out. You should see more activity as we get closer to the peak rut.I hate to be "that guy" but here we are. I, too, drew a Colorado tag, 37/371 cow, and have been following this thread for a while, but never participated.
I've been out scouting and have a couple of spots that I really like. One has a creek, beaver ponds, willows, etc with timber on both sides of it. I have seen a ton of fresh sign, like hours old fresh, but no moose. There appears to be quite a bit of logging going on in this area as well.
The other is a bit drier but still has water and lots of timber. Some sections have a tremendous amount of blow down to the point that it is incredibly difficult to navigate. I saw a bull up there today. Lots of older sign, as well.
So, a couple of questions:
Would you hunt the area that appears to hold moose, even if you haven't physically seen one? Or go to the spot where you saw a bull, despite having a cow tag. Since rutting season is getting close, I assume that where there is a bull, there is likely a cow nearby.
Will the moose hang out in/travel through the blow down area? It is extremely tough to travel through, so that's where I'd go if I was an animal.
Anything else I should consider? Good luck to everyone else with a tag next week!
Thanks so much and congrats on your bull! I'm heading up tomorrow to check cameras one last time and hopefully get in to them this weekend. I greatly appreciate the advice and hope I can post a success story here in the coming days/weeks.@adturn01 i was successful getting a bull moose down in the flat tops area a week ago. My advice would be to stick to where you are seeing the most sign and water. Moose will use the blowdown areas but most of the cows I saw were all pretty close to large willow complexes (or slightly uphill from them). I think the weather coming up will help you a lot. On hot, dry days I would only see moose very early in the morning or at last light. When it got cooler and rainy, they stayed out until at least 11 or so. Looks like it is going to be cooler and rainy this weekend which should help you out. You should see more activity as we get closer to the peak rut.
Also, I know those units get a ton of hunters and recreationists this year (in fact my parents in Breck doing the leaf peeping thing right now). The individual moose I came up to weren't concerned about me as an individual but the highest concentrations of moose I saw were all still well away from trailheads. If you can find an outfitter to pack out, I'd head as far back in as you are comfortable. Just keep in mind even these Shiras moose are an incredible challenge to pack out.
Feel free to PM me with any questions and good luck!
Apparently it works the other way, too. I've been looking for moose and have gotten in to elk every day. This morning I had a bugling bull with about a dozen cows within 50 yards. It was awesome.In my experience, be looking for elk and you'll find moose. Often bow close.