I have experience hunting whitetails and mulies in California, Texas and Arizona but this September will be my first time chasing elk. I thought I’d throw my plan out to the brain trust here and see if you guys can tell a rookie where he’s thinking about this wrong.
I’m not going to identify state or unit for obvious reasons but here’s a quick overview so we’re on the same page.
I’ll get there a week early to acclimate to altitude – I’ve done a lot of trail running and backpacking in the area and am very familiar with how much I need to acclimate before pushing it. I’ll also try to avoid going much over 12k. For my body a switch just flips over 12k and performance suffers. I'm 30 and in good shape. I’ve been doing 1 hour of stairs 5 days/week carrying a 60# pack and will bump that up as I get closer.
Right now, my plan is to systematically just work 2 basins per 4 day hunt to identify elk sign. I’ll backpack (solo) in 2-6 miles and spend mornings/evenings glassing meadows from high points. During the day I’ll slowly work the timber and look for recent sign. I’ll sleep in the timber and listen for night bugles to see if I can get a feel for where they are active at night. I’m not planning to focus much on daytime calling/bugling because of the crowds but I’ll get a cow call so I can disguise my awkward stumbling through the timber.
If I beat the odds, I’ll use a zoleo to send GPS coordinates to family to hike in and pack the animal out in 1 trip. I’m going to have to bone out the meat because they aren’t going to carry more than ~50# each.
What have I not thought about here? Is this strategy a good use of time or would you guys do it differently? Should I be changing up elevation, not basin until I find them? Would you work the private property boundaries even though they are low (and elk should be higher in September)?
I’m not going to identify state or unit for obvious reasons but here’s a quick overview so we’re on the same page.
- Above objective elk numbers, but most likely a ridiculous number of hiking hippies and hunters (OTC unit and surrounding units just went draw)
- Unit is a series of north-south basins with valleys at 8-10k and ridgelines from 10-13k, some more easily accessible than others
- Typical aspen groves at lower elevation with dark timber above that to treeline (plenty of elk cover)
- River meadows in the valleys and alpine meadows at upper ends of basin (plenty of elk food, water)
- Basins, ridges and mountains are public land and they spill out into foothills below that is a patchwork of private properties
- There are at least 2 outfitter camps in the eastern section of the unit and the southern (high altitude) section has a busy 4x4 vehicle trail
I’ll get there a week early to acclimate to altitude – I’ve done a lot of trail running and backpacking in the area and am very familiar with how much I need to acclimate before pushing it. I’ll also try to avoid going much over 12k. For my body a switch just flips over 12k and performance suffers. I'm 30 and in good shape. I’ve been doing 1 hour of stairs 5 days/week carrying a 60# pack and will bump that up as I get closer.
Right now, my plan is to systematically just work 2 basins per 4 day hunt to identify elk sign. I’ll backpack (solo) in 2-6 miles and spend mornings/evenings glassing meadows from high points. During the day I’ll slowly work the timber and look for recent sign. I’ll sleep in the timber and listen for night bugles to see if I can get a feel for where they are active at night. I’m not planning to focus much on daytime calling/bugling because of the crowds but I’ll get a cow call so I can disguise my awkward stumbling through the timber.
If I beat the odds, I’ll use a zoleo to send GPS coordinates to family to hike in and pack the animal out in 1 trip. I’m going to have to bone out the meat because they aren’t going to carry more than ~50# each.
What have I not thought about here? Is this strategy a good use of time or would you guys do it differently? Should I be changing up elevation, not basin until I find them? Would you work the private property boundaries even though they are low (and elk should be higher in September)?