Well I finally did it - I put in for and drew my general tag and permit for Montana archery elk 2022.
I've been wanting to go for a few years now but couldn't for one reason or another so I bought points instead.
I am an avid outdoorsman who is totally comfortable solo in the back country. I've been hunting whitetail for 10 years with rifle/bow and enjoy camping every month of the year in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Usually in the Boundary Waters but also dispersed on National Forest land. I'm very bear aware and practice bear safe camping methods. I have never camped in Grizzly country and so I will be carrying bear spray and my Sig P320 9mm with 147g +P underwood hard cast - just in case. My biggest concern - if I'm successful in getting an elk down - is how best to butcher it while keeping lookout for a Grizzly trying to steal my meat. Any tips from other's who have done this would be appreciated. I've read about fires, lights, glow sticks, peeing around the meat left to hang etc... but there must be other ways people avoid the apex predators stealing their meat.
As a first timer hunting elk in Montana I'm looking for any pointers on how to go about identifying where the elk may be in the unit I'll be in during mid September. Due to my kids school schedules I won't be able to start hunting until a week into the archery season(9/10) but I'll have 7-14 days to hunt. I've talked to a local biologist who gave me some good advice and I've been doing lots of e-scouting with OnX, Gohunt, and Google Earth. I have a few spots picked out but am fearful the spots I've found will be hit hard by the time I'm able to get there a week after archery season opens so I plan to have a dozen or more spots marked and prioritized to run through once I get there.
My basic plan is to park somewhere, take all my gear and 2-3 days of food with me, hike to marked spots from e-scouting, setup camp near sign and hunt that area. Then I'll go back to truck to refill food or move to another spot if needed and repeat until I get one or my times up.
I will very much enjoy my trip regardless, but I am planning on taking a bull or cow if I get the chance. I am not going to be picky my first time as I truly just want the experience. I know it will be a successful trip already, just going - if I fill a tag or not.
Any and all advice very much appreciated!
I'll be in zone 2 and so I'm looking for general tips that would apply to that region.
Thanks in advance!
Post edited to fix:
I've been wanting to go for a few years now but couldn't for one reason or another so I bought points instead.
- Initially I didn't know any guys to go elk hunting with and my wife was not a fan of me going alone in 2019.
- Covid derailed my 2020 season.
- 2021 I drew(and filled) my Wisconsin bear tag which fell right in prime archery elk season.
- And then in the fall of 2021 life threw me a curveball I didn't see coming - I'm now in the midst of a divorce and so my only reason to not go solo is quite literally gone.
I am an avid outdoorsman who is totally comfortable solo in the back country. I've been hunting whitetail for 10 years with rifle/bow and enjoy camping every month of the year in Minnesota and Wisconsin. Usually in the Boundary Waters but also dispersed on National Forest land. I'm very bear aware and practice bear safe camping methods. I have never camped in Grizzly country and so I will be carrying bear spray and my Sig P320 9mm with 147g +P underwood hard cast - just in case. My biggest concern - if I'm successful in getting an elk down - is how best to butcher it while keeping lookout for a Grizzly trying to steal my meat. Any tips from other's who have done this would be appreciated. I've read about fires, lights, glow sticks, peeing around the meat left to hang etc... but there must be other ways people avoid the apex predators stealing their meat.
As a first timer hunting elk in Montana I'm looking for any pointers on how to go about identifying where the elk may be in the unit I'll be in during mid September. Due to my kids school schedules I won't be able to start hunting until a week into the archery season(9/10) but I'll have 7-14 days to hunt. I've talked to a local biologist who gave me some good advice and I've been doing lots of e-scouting with OnX, Gohunt, and Google Earth. I have a few spots picked out but am fearful the spots I've found will be hit hard by the time I'm able to get there a week after archery season opens so I plan to have a dozen or more spots marked and prioritized to run through once I get there.
My basic plan is to park somewhere, take all my gear and 2-3 days of food with me, hike to marked spots from e-scouting, setup camp near sign and hunt that area. Then I'll go back to truck to refill food or move to another spot if needed and repeat until I get one or my times up.
I will very much enjoy my trip regardless, but I am planning on taking a bull or cow if I get the chance. I am not going to be picky my first time as I truly just want the experience. I know it will be a successful trip already, just going - if I fill a tag or not.
Any and all advice very much appreciated!
I'll be in zone 2 and so I'm looking for general tips that would apply to that region.
Thanks in advance!
Post edited to fix:
- removed zone and replaced with region
- tag/permit clarification
- fixed curveball date
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