Interested to know if anyone has any info they could share with me in regards to hunting western Oregon for a Roosevelt Elk? It appears from what I can see that I can buy a general season elk tag OTC, and the Oregon website says the populations are good and the general areas are good....however, being a Colorado Native I know how reliable the claims of good hunting in OTC units can be. Sometimes they are true, often times they are not. Has anyone been successful harvesting a Roosevelt Elk in Oregon? Would you consider this any harder or easier than chasing elk in Colorado? Anything to be aware of as I don't know too much about Oregon hunting? How long did it take you to draw a limited tag as a non resident for a Roosevelt Elk area?
rifle or archery?
i grew up here and have hunted roosies since i started hunting. i archery hunt them, but take friends and family rifle hunting them every year.... regardless, one isn't harder or easier than the other (rifle vs bow) it's just different challenges.
as a non resident i can't see it being super worth it to come rifle hunt roosies, crazy high pressure, and coming in blind seems like it would be frustrating unless you came before to get an idea of things.
i personally love chasing roosies, and it would take a pretty special elk tag somewhere else to get me off the coast, but it's not due to the hot action, they are just cool critters that live in a cool place.... there is no cooler scene in the woods than a pissed off black horned roosie coming straight to you through the chest high ferns.....
it's getting really crowded, archery season this year resembles rifle season and i assume rifle season will be a total **** show. if you do come to hunt, rather than e scouting good looking habitat, i would be looking for harder to access country.... an "easy" elk are going to be known about by a lot of people, and it takes all of the fun out of it fighting the yahoos for the easy areas.
i mainly focus on national forest land these days, just to stay away from pressure.... people don't like hunting it, and it's apparent why after a couple days of hunting it, it's hard to navigate that country, and it's really thick.... it's not a manicured timber patch with roads on each ridge like timber company property, it's a steep jungle of thorns. the elk feed through the salmonberry thickets, but home is usually pretty and open, but to get to that nice ridge, you may have to sidehill over 3 nasty ridges with a nearly impassable salmonberry patch in each draw.... some ridges may be covered in salmonberry too.... you'll be hung up non stop, especially the frame of your pack, or your bag if it's not low profile... your rifle or bow, it's like going through a messed up carwash, and it all has thorns.... that's how you will spend a good part of your day in NF land, but then you get to a nice open ridge with chest high ferns, and there is fresh elk sign all over it..... very short term memory is a big asset, because you have to keep trudging along if you aren't finding elk, or fresh sign. the ridges are mostly steep, and often times you have to drop off the top and fight your way to the bottom to get into those pretty elk habitats, then you will have to claw your way back out.... there will be ridges or draws you cannot get across, and will have to go up and around, then drop back down..... the pressure is way less because it sucks getting through country, the habitat is way more broad vs obvious habitat on timber company land, and the overall biomass of elk is lower, and more spread out in NF land.
if you are a little more specific on what season you are looking to hunt, i can give more relevant info too you, and will try to be as realistic as i can about it. like i said, i love chasing these elk... they are the prettiest elk there are, and they live in some pretty amazing country, and could be a fun hunt with realistic expectations and full effort. since you don't know the country, physically being able to punish yourself and keep grinding every day would be super helpful. having bulletproof legs is a big help, and being desensitized to some suck helps too.
hunting gated logging roads is way easier, and the food sources are way more defined, and you can glass and see a ways (long ways in some country) but the hunting pressure sucks, and elk season brings out some assholes with no common courtesy.
mature bulls will mostly be solo or small bachelor herds rifle season (not always) and very, very few people hunt them, people hunt the bigger herds and most rifle bulls will be spikes and rags, with an occasional bigger bull, but when you are hung up in salmonberry, death by a million stab wounds, know that you could be walking into the home of that big black horned bull all by himself.... another cool thing about hunting NF