I've enjoyed doing these write ups the past few years and think it's been huge in helping me grow my skillset. The feedback from more senior members as well as the self reflection aspect has been very helpful. So, without further ado, here's the wall of text no one asked for.
2023 (Bonus Hunt)
A co-worker drew a MI cow elk tag, so I get to start my year out helping him. After that a friend and I would be bow hunting Kansas whitetails for a week then heading to MT for rifle deer with his family and two of our buddies. Not sure how I feel spending a weeks’ vacation on a species we have at home, but with everything I’ve heard about giants around every corner I’m interested in giving KS a try.
2023 MI Cow Elk
A month or so of e-scouting and a few phone calls to the local biologist and I was on my way up in late august to meet my friend. The Michigan elk hunts are broken into two season each with three 4-day periods. We’d be hunting the first season and with my limited vacation I planned to hunt the first two days of the first period then all four days of the second.
Day 0/1
The season started with a mandatory meeting for all tag holders on a Monday before the Tuesday start of hunting. As a non-tag holder, I worked Monday and left after work. I headed up to meet my friend at a campground near our planned hunting area that he’d been at since the weekend as he had to attend the meeting. After a few last-minute truck issues corrected I was on my way and arrived at camp around 9pm. Two beers, a morning weather check, and alarms set, and we were off to bed.
At early dark thirty we were in the truck headed to our hunting area. I’ve been in the opening day game long enough to know that we needed to be at “our” spot 30 minutes or so ahead of our actual need to beat the crowd. Well, we got there early but no one else showed up. We waited until gray light then headed in towards our destination glassing area while still hunting along the way. After glassing a few groups of deer, I noticed my friend didn’t have his, actually my, binos with him. I told him we needed to go back for those as we’d be using them all day and sharing wasn’t an option. Back at the truck another car was pulling in. I went and talked to them about our plan, and we agreed to split the area in half with us sticking to the north half while they hunted the south half.
With the area split and binos inhand chest packs we were back on our way. We continued spotting deer, but no sightings of the species we were after. Eventually, we made it to our planned glassing area. We spotted a few groups of deer including a nice 10-point buck. We worked the edges glassing everything we could and eventually spotted three elk feeding out in front of us. All bulls. Of course, we have a cow tag... As we continue watching them, we spot two more elk following them. A small bull and a cow! We crept in closing the distance but ran out of cover and couldn’t get closer than 330. Wanting a shot inside 200 we waited for them to hit a pocket of cover and got after them. Slowly we walked out after them glassing where they had come from worried about more trailing elk. Suddenly the elk had made it thru the pocket and were back in the open with us out in the open. We hit the deck, but too late, they had spotted us. Waiting until they moved back into the cover, or we ran to get into position where it looked like they would pop out again. Just like that and they were out in front of us three bulls and one cow. Shouldn’t they be in bachelor groups this time of year? “Are you sure that one’s a cow?”. Sure looked like it. And then she turned towards us, and then we saw HIS nubs. DON'T SHOOT. Couldn’t have been more than 3 inches, but they were there. Well shit… Back to the drawing board.
On the plus side, it started raining. That perfect amount of rain and warm weather where you’re not sure if you want to sweat in rain gear or just get, we from the rain. I opted to get wet (never the right call, but the one I typically make). We continued hiking and glassing and were getting a good feel for the area. We found some food plots that the DNR had put in, some large aspen stands, and some open grassy areas. At one point I thought I found an area that smelled “elky”, but nothing really panned out there. Around 11 we decided to go check out one last open pocket, head back to the truck, get some lunch, and make an evening plan. On the walk back the rain that had been going on and off all day picked back up heavy again. Already wet, it seemed pointless to put the rain gear on, but on it went. A few hundred yards from the last field we turned a corner and were 150 yards from a herd bull with 6 cows. Let the rodeo begin. Only the bull had seen us and was feeling spooky but didn’t want to leave his cows. The bipod was too low to shoot over the small berm, so I told him to shoot off my shoulder. I’d done this a few times and thought it would work but didn’t account for the frame on my pack. I realized my error when I felt the forearm of his rifle on the top of my bicep. Trying my best to hold still I realized this wasn’t going to work. I pivoted my had down to my side forming a triangle and immediately felt things steady up and BOOM! It looked like a good hit, but they all balled up trying to figure out what was going on in the downpour. He reloaded and we moved up to the top of the berm, got the bipod set, and waited until all the unwounded elk moved away. One more (likely unneeded) shot and she was down for good.
The tagging process in MI is super involved. You put your tag on them, then you call the DNR, and they come check the elk. There are so few tags that they are able to manage them at this level, collecting samples for testing, as well checking that you shot the correct animal. We sure were glad we got some good looks at that first “cow”. from there on out it was all sunshine and rainbows, both literally and figuratively. The rain stopped, the sun came out, and the DNR officer opened a closed road for us so we could drive to the elk. It was the best packout I’ll ever experience. We quartered the elk straight into the cooler in the bed of the truck. We were back at camp by 3pm and after a victory beer I was headed home less than 24 hours from when I had left. I don’t know if MI elk hunting is this much of a layup or if we ran into some special circumstances with the overcast and rainy weather keeping them on their feet late into the morning, I just hope I get my own chance to find out one day.
Lessons Learned: If you are moving in on a target animal, go as quickly as possible. Bumping trailing elk might have hurt that opportunity but would not have caused a negative impact on our target animals. Make your move and make it as efficiently as possible.
Questions: N/A
Trip Thoughts: The whirlwind trip is going to keep this short. I had a great time seeing a new part of my home state but feel like we got a bit cheated tagging out so quickly. We never got a chance to look at other areas, but an elk sighting rate of 2 per hour blows my western elk hunting out of the water. Even if we had a bull tag, we would have at least tried to hang in on the midday herd bull. Hoping to get my change one day and I’ve definitely got a good starting point.
Noteworthy Gear: Not much to talk about here. Binos were the ticket and with the thickness of MI tripods and spotting scopes wouldn’t do much good unless you had pre-scouted vantage points (there might be 1 within a 50 mile radius).
Gear to Buy/Consider: I wish we had a standing height bipod. It would have worked better than my chicken wing and been quicker. I also think 15s would have been cool for this hunt. Something with a bit more zoom would have been nice when we were trying to make sure it was a cow and not button bull. They’re already on the list but do feel like a niche type item as 10s + spotter can do everything the 15s can.
2023 (Bonus Hunt)
A co-worker drew a MI cow elk tag, so I get to start my year out helping him. After that a friend and I would be bow hunting Kansas whitetails for a week then heading to MT for rifle deer with his family and two of our buddies. Not sure how I feel spending a weeks’ vacation on a species we have at home, but with everything I’ve heard about giants around every corner I’m interested in giving KS a try.
2023 MI Cow Elk
A month or so of e-scouting and a few phone calls to the local biologist and I was on my way up in late august to meet my friend. The Michigan elk hunts are broken into two season each with three 4-day periods. We’d be hunting the first season and with my limited vacation I planned to hunt the first two days of the first period then all four days of the second.
Day 0/1
The season started with a mandatory meeting for all tag holders on a Monday before the Tuesday start of hunting. As a non-tag holder, I worked Monday and left after work. I headed up to meet my friend at a campground near our planned hunting area that he’d been at since the weekend as he had to attend the meeting. After a few last-minute truck issues corrected I was on my way and arrived at camp around 9pm. Two beers, a morning weather check, and alarms set, and we were off to bed.
At early dark thirty we were in the truck headed to our hunting area. I’ve been in the opening day game long enough to know that we needed to be at “our” spot 30 minutes or so ahead of our actual need to beat the crowd. Well, we got there early but no one else showed up. We waited until gray light then headed in towards our destination glassing area while still hunting along the way. After glassing a few groups of deer, I noticed my friend didn’t have his, actually my, binos with him. I told him we needed to go back for those as we’d be using them all day and sharing wasn’t an option. Back at the truck another car was pulling in. I went and talked to them about our plan, and we agreed to split the area in half with us sticking to the north half while they hunted the south half.
With the area split and binos in
On the plus side, it started raining. That perfect amount of rain and warm weather where you’re not sure if you want to sweat in rain gear or just get, we from the rain. I opted to get wet (never the right call, but the one I typically make). We continued hiking and glassing and were getting a good feel for the area. We found some food plots that the DNR had put in, some large aspen stands, and some open grassy areas. At one point I thought I found an area that smelled “elky”, but nothing really panned out there. Around 11 we decided to go check out one last open pocket, head back to the truck, get some lunch, and make an evening plan. On the walk back the rain that had been going on and off all day picked back up heavy again. Already wet, it seemed pointless to put the rain gear on, but on it went. A few hundred yards from the last field we turned a corner and were 150 yards from a herd bull with 6 cows. Let the rodeo begin. Only the bull had seen us and was feeling spooky but didn’t want to leave his cows. The bipod was too low to shoot over the small berm, so I told him to shoot off my shoulder. I’d done this a few times and thought it would work but didn’t account for the frame on my pack. I realized my error when I felt the forearm of his rifle on the top of my bicep. Trying my best to hold still I realized this wasn’t going to work. I pivoted my had down to my side forming a triangle and immediately felt things steady up and BOOM! It looked like a good hit, but they all balled up trying to figure out what was going on in the downpour. He reloaded and we moved up to the top of the berm, got the bipod set, and waited until all the unwounded elk moved away. One more (likely unneeded) shot and she was down for good.
The tagging process in MI is super involved. You put your tag on them, then you call the DNR, and they come check the elk. There are so few tags that they are able to manage them at this level, collecting samples for testing, as well checking that you shot the correct animal. We sure were glad we got some good looks at that first “cow”. from there on out it was all sunshine and rainbows, both literally and figuratively. The rain stopped, the sun came out, and the DNR officer opened a closed road for us so we could drive to the elk. It was the best packout I’ll ever experience. We quartered the elk straight into the cooler in the bed of the truck. We were back at camp by 3pm and after a victory beer I was headed home less than 24 hours from when I had left. I don’t know if MI elk hunting is this much of a layup or if we ran into some special circumstances with the overcast and rainy weather keeping them on their feet late into the morning, I just hope I get my own chance to find out one day.
Lessons Learned: If you are moving in on a target animal, go as quickly as possible. Bumping trailing elk might have hurt that opportunity but would not have caused a negative impact on our target animals. Make your move and make it as efficiently as possible.
Questions: N/A
Trip Thoughts: The whirlwind trip is going to keep this short. I had a great time seeing a new part of my home state but feel like we got a bit cheated tagging out so quickly. We never got a chance to look at other areas, but an elk sighting rate of 2 per hour blows my western elk hunting out of the water. Even if we had a bull tag, we would have at least tried to hang in on the midday herd bull. Hoping to get my change one day and I’ve definitely got a good starting point.
Noteworthy Gear: Not much to talk about here. Binos were the ticket and with the thickness of MI tripods and spotting scopes wouldn’t do much good unless you had pre-scouted vantage points (there might be 1 within a 50 mile radius).
Gear to Buy/Consider: I wish we had a standing height bipod. It would have worked better than my chicken wing and been quicker. I also think 15s would have been cool for this hunt. Something with a bit more zoom would have been nice when we were trying to make sure it was a cow and not button bull. They’re already on the list but do feel like a niche type item as 10s + spotter can do everything the 15s can.