Moose Wallow

Joined
May 27, 2024
Messages
35
I had a trail camera out (cell camera that will send 100 photos a month unless a guy pays for more... which I don't) and this camera stayed out for 1 year. The animal I target is elk, but in this area I get all kinds of animals coming and going and this specific spot had a lot of moose. I went out to retrieve the camera this July to inspect the SD card and to put the camera in a different spot since I had a years worth of intel. I got there and packed up the camera and figured I'd take a look at an area where I consistently saw moose come and go from (based on the photos that camera was sending). Only about 150 yards away from where I originally had the camera set up was a dry muddied area that looked like a fairly large wallow type area with tracks everywhere. Instead of taking that camera home, I set it up at this spot and when the camera connected, I got 100 photos in 2 days: Cow moose, calves and bulls all frequenting this spot. It's out of control.

I know the moose rut is months away and I didn't smell any odor like an active elk wallow. As far as I've been led to believe, moose will make scrapes or smallish rut pits but only during the rut. When I found this area the region was in more drought conditions and the 'mud' was dried except for some tracks that held a bit of water. Maybe there's a mineral seep or a water seep where they can drink from but it looks like a wild animals living room for lack of a better description. Has anyone found a spot like this for moose before? Is this something that seasoned moose hunters look for that isn't discussed much? Like a communal area they congregate in? I've just always thought of moose as less social then this.

I don't have a moose draw but can get an archery tag from Aug 25th to Sept 23rd. I plan on setting up an ambush on that 150 yard trail leading into that area and potentially trying some cow calling or raking getting closer to Sept 20th. If I do some calling I'm calling from the mud and setting up on that trail... Can't believe I had that camera so close to that amazing spot and didn't even know it was there. Also with the whole year of that camera sending photos, I did not receive 1 picture of a human, so it's an isolated spot.
 
I would love to hear from the seasoned vets on here on the topic of wallows as well. In my experience they typically just hit them during the rut but from reading about it they dont come back to them very often.
 
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