Worst spike camp locations

Joined
Aug 14, 2016
Messages
1,526
Location
Great Falls MT
Any resident westies notice some really dumb spike camps this year? I mean like really dumb! I found two this year. One was in a sanctuary/bedding area. The other was along a drainage bottom below meadow that's a big elk hangout. The elk walk up and down the creek as a travel route.

If you're coming from the Midwest on you're first public land otc diy whatever hashtag hunt. Think of it like whitetails. Ask "would I pitch a tent in a bucks bedding or his transition area?

Boys the non resident pressure is bad enough. But let's not shoot ourselves in the foot by being dumb.

Find an area away from water. You're better hauling water than blowing the elk out.

Also think of where your scent is going throughout the a 24 hour period.
ba607483a46d2d013338212954ef326d.jpg

f7463f2f9adb6f6ba8f9adafe8dd725b.jpg
 
Joined
Jan 26, 2013
Messages
1,026
Location
Colorado
Had a otc spot a few years ago, with a few cams, taking hundreds of pics all summer.
Beautiful grassy saddle, thick timber all sides with water and wallows.
Opening weekend, these two chumps pitched camp right in the open, in the middle of the saddle.
Walked past their camp one morning as they were just getting up to make coffee, and they asked…where are all the elk.

I said, they used to be right here, until someone camped right smack dab in the middle of one of their most frequented spots.

Asshats stayed right there all week, and cams went from to many pics, to nearly zero.
 
Joined
Oct 5, 2018
Messages
2,063
Location
Colorado
Definitely see questionable camp locations. My favorite was a camp at the very top of a basin/bowl in early Sept where every animal within 1/2 mile would see them walking around and their scent broadcast up and down the entire area.

People pick campsites that are generally flat (well except for the guy in your 1st photo) and near water. Elk and deer like to travel through those places too. I'm sure I've spiked in places where someone else hunted through, I don't know if it can be completely avoided.
 

Poser

WKR
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
5,624
Location
Durango CO
It’s simply often the case that if you want to be camped in direct proximity to animals, you’re not going to be camping in ideal or even comfortable locations or you’re going to risk blowing them out. It sucks to sleep on a slope, having to pile rocks to keep yourself from rolling down the hill, meanwhile there is a perfectly flat and scenic meadow at the bottom of an avalanche chute next to a creek nearby.
 

Poser

WKR
Joined
Dec 27, 2013
Messages
5,624
Location
Durango CO
It’s simply often the case that if you want to be camped in direct proximity to animals, you’re not going to be camping in ideal or even comfortable locations or you’re going to risk blowing them out. It sucks to sleep on a slope, having to pile rocks to keep yourself from rolling down the hill, meanwhile there is a perfectly flat and scenic meadow at the bottom of an avalanche chute next to a creek nearby.
 

3Esski

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Aug 26, 2023
Messages
187
Good on them for getting out. I think it's pretty tough in new areas. I have a hunt coming up where I've never been. Picked a drainage I plan on hunting and a spot on the other side down from the ridge I plan on setting up in. I could be setting up in some guys preferred area, no idea, but based on the topo and walking in at night its the most logical place for me.
I've definitely ran across camps in places i hunted for years and wondered why the heck they would ruin an area by setting there. Atleast in areas I know i can adjust my plans and use their bad location to hopefully increase my odds or narrow my search area.
 

feanor

WKR
Joined
Aug 15, 2018
Messages
1,224
I think unfamiliarity with areas could be part of it, but also many people don’t want to set up camp a mile or two away from where they hunt. They don’t want to walk that far. I’m sure I’ve set up camp somewhere that looks like a bad spot to somebody else also.
 

Scooter90254

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 7, 2018
Messages
248
Location
Michigan
We did that once. Got in late to a new spot and camped on an existing spot just about dark. Proceed to hear bugles and get barked at all night.

After our morning hunt it became pretty obvious that we camped right in the middle of the drainage the elk were using to go up and down the mountain. One of these years we are going to go back and hunt that drainage without camping in it first.
 
Joined
Dec 30, 2014
Messages
9,719
It can be pretty tough at times finding a flat spot where you're not bumping elk. I know elk were burned at both my camp locations last week but far as I could tell there weren't alternatives that wouldn't burn at least some spots.


Wish I'd have taken a picture of the big canvas tent camp packed in by a wallow last week. 10 yards from the tent they had a trailcam on the wallow:ROFLMAO:
 

Team4LongGun

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Aug 4, 2019
Messages
1,768
Location
NW MT
It can be pretty tough at times finding a flat spot where you're not bumping elk. I know elk were burned at both my camp locations last week but far as I could tell there weren't alternatives that wouldn't burn at least some spots.



Wish I'd have taken a picture of the big canvas tent camp packed in by a wallow last week. 10 yards from the tent they had a trailcam on the wallow:ROFLMAO:

I guess I need to come hunt with some of you Gents.....there are times I would dang near pay to see elk, let alone be so close to bump em!
 

mtnwrunner

Super Moderator
Staff member
Shoot2HuntU
Joined
Oct 2, 2012
Messages
4,113
Location
Lowman, Idaho
Man, everyone has their opinions. I've slept many a time in a deer or elk bed as they just happened to be what I chose for various reasons. And I'll keep on doing that if that's what it takes. The couple of photos in this thread are of backcountry tents.....good for them. At least there's not a 4wheeler or motorcycle next to them.

Randy
 
Top