- Thread Starter
- #21
That’s a great point, lot more species out there than MaineAnother issue to get used to following the above comment, in fresh fluffy snow where you can track the disturbance but can't identify the track. I have followed a young or cow moose a considerable distance before they stepped under a tree where they left a readable track. It also becomes important to tell the differance between moose pee and elk pee. The elk is usually sweet while the moose is kind of musky.
In nw Montana/ Northern Idaho the whitetails and the muleys are mixed. Many times not even separated by elevation. The only thing I have found is that muleys tend to form herds while whitetails are more solitary or doe - fawn/fawns combinations. The whitetail tracks seem more pointed while the muleys are a little more rounded.
I haven't noticed them as mixed in sw montana but along the Idaho border country in the 70s-80s I killed big whitetail bucks on one ridge and the next day saw nice muley bucks on the next ridge.