TrailDog
FNG
I'm sure this has been discussed before, but I'm curious...
I work and live in the mountains of NWest Montana. Specifically, I work for the state DNRC and cover A LOT of ground during the year, seeing and learning 1,000's of acres of good game habitat. Over my 15 years as I hunter here I've had highly variable success...never finding a "spot" but rather lots of areas that are decent enough to warrant some hunting effort. I've hunted areas hard for a week, seeing nothing, and gone back the next year and found success at first light on opening day. That seems to be the pattern here in Region 1...variable!
Do most of you spread your hunting effort out over lots of terrain...or focus on a few key areas? Within a 1 hour drive of where I live the amount of huntable terrain is mind boggling...let alone a 1/2 day or full days drive. I want to be as effective as possible, but struggle to find consistant, reliable success, in proportion to the amount of effort and time I typically exert. So I'm curious, lacking a quality "spot" for deer and elk...is it better to cover and hunt more terrain over the season or trust that a few decent spots will eventually produce?
I work and live in the mountains of NWest Montana. Specifically, I work for the state DNRC and cover A LOT of ground during the year, seeing and learning 1,000's of acres of good game habitat. Over my 15 years as I hunter here I've had highly variable success...never finding a "spot" but rather lots of areas that are decent enough to warrant some hunting effort. I've hunted areas hard for a week, seeing nothing, and gone back the next year and found success at first light on opening day. That seems to be the pattern here in Region 1...variable!
Do most of you spread your hunting effort out over lots of terrain...or focus on a few key areas? Within a 1 hour drive of where I live the amount of huntable terrain is mind boggling...let alone a 1/2 day or full days drive. I want to be as effective as possible, but struggle to find consistant, reliable success, in proportion to the amount of effort and time I typically exert. So I'm curious, lacking a quality "spot" for deer and elk...is it better to cover and hunt more terrain over the season or trust that a few decent spots will eventually produce?
Last edited: