Read your story. I first came hunting out West several years ago from Tennessee as well and ended up moving out here to SW CO as a result.
You didn’t go into detail, but I’m curious why you guys pulled the plug and cut the trip in half. You really should be looking at any such trip as an adventure first and foremost. If there’s that much friction, I can understand tempers getting short, but spending 30 hours in a vehicle together isn’t going to really help that aspect. I’d say, split up for a night with a plan to meet back up and see if tempers cool off a bit. While not seeing sign cAn be an indication to move, it just doesn’t sound like you guys covered enough ground or spent enough time in the area to really draw any Conclusions. While the outfitters advice may have been worth something as a starting point, I’m sure you also drive past a lot of elk country during that 60 mile drive.
For extremely rough terrain:
- 1 elk tag for your party is ideal and economical. Rotate years as to has has the tag. You’re not packing Two elk out of the gnar, much less 3. The other guy or guys can do the calling. Who pulls the trigger is irrelevant. It’s an adventure and weapons are heavy to carry anyway. Since it’s a long trip maybe do 4 guys, 2 tags.
-show up in the best shape of your life. Unless there is a continuous cliff line that is taller than 5 feet, you figure out a way through it. Sometimes the pace is hours per mile. That’s just part of it.
-sounds like you should ditch those guys. If I was on a trip that ended up being cut in half due to friction as you describe, no way in hell I’d be on another trip with them. Recruit a new partner and set out a list of expectations.
-scouting. You really need to figure out a way to make that happen in some capacity. It’s the biggest advantage. A scouting trip + hunting trip is still cheaper than a outfitter.
-look into renting llamas. Around here, they are $125 a day each for a frame of reference.
-60# packs sound like hey are too heavy for you. You might try packing in food for 3 days at a time and cut that pack weight down below 50#. It makes a huge difference.
-your creek look anything like this one? We do actually climb this stuff. Straight up it.