SoloWilderness
WKR
Sounds like you are headed in the right direction by hunting an area that you have experience in. I've hunted the same general OTC area for close to 20 years, and it took me several years of setting up a big stationary camp and hunting out from it to realize that pressure is one of the key factors to locating elk in the OTC areas. Use the trailheads, outfitter camps, and groups of other hunters to your advantage. Look for steep escape areas that other hunters will push elk into, that are too nasty for your average weekend warrior to pursue them in. Once you identify these areas, run loops through areas that you think are productive, and look for signs of seeps, fresh wallows, feed meadows, and bedding areas. I do employ the loop hunting strategy quite extensively, focusing on picking apart a major canyon or drainage with each loop. I would identify the nastiest, hardest to access drainages in your general area, and focus on those. Try to locate areas of sign during your pre-season scouting, without stomping all over the place too close to the season.I think I was thinking about doing things in the wrong order.
My plan was to go to areas where elk "should" be and then set up shop and start glassing morning/evening and still hunting during the day. Now that sounds like a recipe to waste a lot of time.
It sounds like the better plan is to create a ~10-15 mile loop from the truck and back with ~15 spots where elk "could" be. Then throw your pack with 4 days rations on and start hoofing it (while being aware of wind). If you don't find any sign... get in the truck and move to the next zone/loop and repeat. If you do find good sign, start triangulating food/water/cover and then figure out a way to hunt the area.
This also explains why conditioning is so important... I though it was just flatlanders needing to get ready to move in the mountains and potentially pack out an animal. It sounds like if you're doing it right, you could have several days where you're hustling while carrying a load before you slow down and really hunt.
If I'm running a 4 day loop, I would pick a drainage that I can access from the side, get to the very top of it and glass hard, try to identify a few groups of elk to work. Then sweep down across your basin without losing much elevation, and work in on these groups of elk, being mindful of the wind, and of blowing out your other groups. End your days on high points that you can glass from, and key in on areas that are the edge terrain, not necessarily the big meadows. I try to set up in a spot that I can glass from and watch for elk moving from feed to cover at first light while I pack up and eat my breakfast. Think mixed brush, aspen and timber, with some grass and water mixed in. Glass hard, and listen at night for elk noises, in heavily pressured OTC country you can sometimes hear the herds moving away from pressure. Often this is not full rip bugles, but rather "murmuring" as the cows quietly keep the calves close, and the bulls occasionally bugle to keep the herd together in the dark. Once you locate elk, hunt them hard, as they will move frequently in the OTC areas. Be mindful of your wind, and set up your camp spots so that your scent is carried into adjacent basins, rather than down into the one you are hunting. Above all, be flexible, if you don't find FRESH sign, keep moving until you do.
I am a mediocre caller, so tend to run as silent as possible if I'm solo, not even cow calls if I have elk located. Just listen for the elk and creep in on them, don't give them a reason to look for you by calling. If I'm with my hunting partner, who is a great caller, I run silent and let him draw the attention.
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