Warning...Long....4 years til success

Joined
Jun 14, 2020
I have not posted my elk hunting experiences for the last four years anywhere. Here it is. Sorry very long.

I have been hunting in Colorado in the same area for the past four seasons. I will be back again this year.Assuming I draw my tag again. Five years ago, I e-scouted and chose this area. After talking with the outfitter, he recommend this area because it is the same place he takes clients who do it themselves with their own drop camps. So he has packed my camp in every year.

For me, I wanted to do a horseback ride in as part of the hunt experience. I also wanted to be in the wilderness away from trails and roand as many other hunters as possible. This area is right in the middle of elk every year.

Before going my first year I did the elk 101 course as well as the elk calling academy. I felt like the elk calling academy was probably the best resource I had. Each year I have adjusted and tweaked the gear I carried. Every year I stay for ten days of hunting.

1st Year
During the summer before the season I hiked the area and placed three cameras on some water holes. I hunted the first ten days of the season. The first day of the hunt I retrieved those cameras and decided where I wanted to hunt. I had my first encounter the very first opening morning. I had him bugle on one of the water holes as i was approaching. I set up in what I thought was a good area and began my calling and raking sequence. He bugled a time or two and was headed my way. I was expecting him to come down the trail in the draw to my left. Instead , he came in to my right and barked at me at 18yds. I did not know he was there until he barked. Needless to say , I was pinned down and he moved away before I could get a shot opportunity.

The next day I busted a nice 6 with a spike and a few cows just south of camp about a half a mile. I set up and tried to call them back in. After about ten minutes I turned my head to the left slightly. I was staring eye to eye with the six at 20 yards. That slight movement made him leave.

The next 4 days had me chasing a big 6 on that same water hole from the first day. I had four encounters with him under forty yards. I drew on him one day but did not have a clear shot. One of those days I called him in and he bugled at me at 30 yds. Then he left and went back up the ridge. I called him back down again to the same area but I made the mistake of moving over slightly to a different spot for a better view to try to cut him off. He instead went back to that previous spot and I had no shot.

One of those days, I watched him for twenty minutes as I was pinned down and no clear line to him. He sat there wallowing in Is that water raking his horns, slinging mud and bugling. It was an awesome display.

I ended up that nine day hunt with seven encounters with 6x6 bulls all under forty yards.

I learned a lot on set ups.And calling during that hunt.

2nd Year
I had a group of friends with me on this hunt. We also hunted the first ten days again. We got into camp a day before the season opened. That morning, before the season opened, we watched two big 6s Feeding on the sad of a meadow and working their way down into the timber. We were excited. Opening morning, inpassed on a cow. Day three, a storm rolled in and the whole mountain went silent for the rest of the hunt. We only saw a few cows and heard very few bugles.

3rd Year
This was my first solo hunt. This year, I went the last two weeks of the season, during the rut. Elk were bugling as I arrived and set up camp. After setting camp, I quickly took off to one of my spots overlooking a large meadow. As I sat waiting, Dark clouds and heavy thunder and lightning started rolling in over the horizon. At that time, a very large 6 moved in to a water hole at the bottom of the meadow over a quarter mile away. I had to turn and head for camp to try to beat the heavy storm as the bull exited the meadow. I did not make it back and had to seek shelter under a tarp in thick cover.

The second morning I had a bugle in that same Meadow.Wow getting ready at camp. At first light as I got to the meadow I saw a small five Is moving across. Trying to call him, he was somewhat interested but finally left.

That evening, as I got into camp about thirty minutes after dark, I heard a bull bugling, coming across the meadow near camp. He got to within less than one hundred yards of camp. He then barked a couple of times, i'm guessing from seeing the light of my camp. He then turned and continued to bugle back across the meadow from where he came. Believe it or not, he did the exact same thing the next two days, all about 1 hour after dark.

On day five, I found myself overlooking a large basin. Clouds rolled in and within an hour, the ground was covered in about two inches of snow. I was listening to a herd bull and lots of cows talking in the timber beyond the meadow in the bottom of the basin. Another big bull and cows were to my right at the far reaches of the basin on some rock shelfs.

i decided to make my play on the heard bull in front of me. As I circled to my left to get down wind of the herd, two more bulls began to bugle from the far side of the timber. They pushed the herd bull and his cows across the meadow and up on the ridge I had just left. I then began to watch two more 6s from the far herd move down toward this herd. As I skirted the edge of the meadow working toward the herd, The two 6s trotted in towards the herd. The herd bull bugled and ran his cows across the meadow back into the timber. Now I was between the herd and the other two bulls. At that moment I heard something behind me. As I turned quickly , two cows stopped, looked at me and turned and ran off. They had not seen me and was about to run over me. As darkness was approaching , I used along the edge Of the meadow toward the closest of the two 6s. I closed to seventy yards, But the wind and blowing snow did not give me a calm, comfortable shot opportunity. After dark I headed back to camp leaving all of the bulls bugling in the meadow.

That storm brought in heavy winds for the next 4 days. elk were bedded. i heard no bugles and saw one cow.

When the weather broke on the next to the last day of the hunt, i headed back to the meadow from day one where i had seen the large 6 and also the 5. I knew what my game plan would be when I heard him bugle. I knew he would be over the cliffs in the timber and would work his way up to the meadow. When he bugled, i would quickly make my way down the side of the meadow towards the water hole and setup with the wind in favor.

Sure.Enough about 30 minutes before dark, he bugled exactly where I thought he would be. I quickly work my way down the ridge to the water and set up. Has I got set up I immediately cow called. He then bugled bright back. He was just two hundred yards up wind coming into the meadow. it was raghorn 4, but it was getting to the end of my hunt and i wanted an elk. I quickly started working along the rocks and small clump of trees, closing the distance, calling each time i stopped. He would bugle and walk into the edge of the meadow, look my way for the cows, and then circle back. I continued this sequence, closing the distance each time, until I was finally at the spot where I had first seen him. I could see him through the edge of the meadow where it turned around the edge of the timber. He was just beyond the corner about seventy yards out. I called one last time. Hey bugled, and then walkes out into the meadow broadside and stopped. It was a long shot , but I felt comfortable. As the release fired, I knew my pin was a little low. At the last moment the lighted knock dropped low on the shoulder. As he whirled and ran, I could tell the arrow did not get good penetration and I hit the bone. After about thirty yards I saw the arrow fall out. A few minutes later, I went to retrieve the arrow. It was broke off and it appeared about 5-6 inches was missing. I could not see any blood. I decided to come back and look the next morning.

The next morning I arrived back in the meadow to my arrow. As I worked toward the timber where I saw him enter I still could not find any blood. After about thirty minutes of grids searching a small patch of timber, I picked up blood along the edge of the ridge on a trail. i followed it, faint most of the time, for about 200yds. I did find several spots where he had laid down with blood pressed around the bushes on about a three foot circle. Finally I lost blood and began another grid search. After searching for an hour, I decided to head back to the last spot.I had found blood. I looked for the nearest trail headed in that direction. Immediately upon getting on the trail, I spotted blood on a bush. it was 130yds from where my last blood was. i followed the trail, as it crossed a rock chute and into the timber on the other side. he was headed into the really steep timber and cliffs. As I searhed for blood, I noticed two brown patches about 100 yds down the steep timber. As i moved for a better view, i spotted two cows. at that moment, a bulled bugled to their right and they all bolted. it was that 4. He had survived with only a flesh wound. I never gave up trailing him. I was five hundred and thirty yards from where I shot him the evening before.

continued in next comment...
 
4th Year - Last Year
My buddy and I got into camp and setup. We split up that afternoon and decided to sit and glass the two big meadows, him to the one where I had all of the bulls the year before and me to the meadow where I shot at the bull the year before.

Day one was raining, so I decided to stay in camp. i knew we had plenty of days to hunt. He on the otherhand went back up in the ridge to watch that meadow again. Working his way back to camp, a nice 5 came trotting over a rise just below him but he was at 75 yds and never gave him a shot.

On day two, we went back to my meadow. We heard two different bulls bugling. One was in the timber two our right, and the other was in the timber in the cliffs where my bull ran the year before. Nothing developed. Day three , we circled the timber to the right where the bull was and worked through another smaller meadow. As we called he responded in that same timber between the two meadows. As we worked closer and setup, he only responded one more time and then fell silent. We worked our way back to the same vantage point as the day before. As we sat glassing, we spotted a nice 5 with 2 cows to our left on the far side of the meadow working into the timber. We slowly made our way towards them. We never encountered them again but we crossed a drainage and scouted the ridge beyond.

Day 4 finally brought success. My buddy went to the water holes over in the deep timber where I had encountered that bull three times my first year. A camera on the water hole showed bulls visiting 3 times in the last week, including the day before. I went back to the vantage point on the meadow again. About an hour after light, nothing had bugled or came to the meadow. I decided to work across the meadow to my left toward the timber where we spotted the 5x5 and two cows the day before. My plan was to work along the edge of the drainage we had crossed the day before and head to the low side of the meadow into the steep timber where my bull that i shot the year before was at.

When I got to the edge of the timbe where it began to slope down into the drainage, I cow called 3 times. Immediately a bull bugled beyond the drainage on the far ridge we had scouted the day before. From the sound I was guess he was probably four hundred yards away. After waitin a few minutes, I slowly worked along rhe edge of the drainage about 30 yards. I stopped and called a few more times. Immediately the bull bugled again but this time he sounded much closer, probably 200 yds. I knew he was coming. Again I moved forward about forty yards. I found a set up point and dropped my pack. I found a stick to use to rake a tree. I knocked an arrow and laid my bow on my pack and got ready. I started raking a tree and then began panting like a bull. Next I cow called. When the bull answered, I could tell he was in the bottom of the draw crossing over to my ridge. After a couple of minutes, I did the sequence again. This time he answered and was about 75yds coming up a trail side hilling up to me. i dropped my bugle tube and the stick and grabbed my bow. i quickly and quietly made a half circle loop back away from my spot and up the ridge toward the bull about 30 yds. I then moved slowly towards the edge to try to spot the bull coming up the ridge. When I got to the edge I froze. There he was just a little over 20 yds below me. He was stopped looking up the ridge towards where I had called from. As I waited, he took a few steps forward and stopped behind some thick bushes by a tree. I quickly grabbed my rangefinder and ranged the tree in the opening just ahead of him, it was 23yds. i hooked my release and waited. After a few seconds, he tilted his head sideways as he maneuvered his antlers through the brush as I drew my bow. When he stepped into the opening, I gave a quick "YOLL" with my voice. He stoped and looked at me. When I released, the arrow found it mark, double lung, center mass. He flinched, startled, but then turned to his left and slowly walked back down the trail he came. After a few seconds, I heard a loud crashing sound.
I knew he was down. Excited but I did not go straight to him. I backed out of the area and went back to the meadow. I messaged my partner to come meet me. Then I led him back to the spot where I shot the bull. Blood was everywhere and We easily followed the blood back down the trail. He walked forty four yards. He walked 44 yds from where I shot him. Below is how we found him. It took us an hour to cut him out before even getting him down the slope to cut him up.

The pack out below...well that was easy. We quartered him up in this draw. We only had to pack him two hundred yards up the drainage to this meadow where the outfitter could pick it up with horses. 🙂

Four years of fun, excitement and learning. I am looking forward to going back this September to try again.
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