406LIFE
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- Joined
- Aug 18, 2016
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I leave in the morning for Western Washington for my first Roosevelt elk hunt. The buddy that I am taking with me and I are elk hunters from Montana, but this will be an entirely new challenge. The environment is very different: only 1200' of elevation with 200' changes; wet and cold, rain supposed to be nearly the entire time and hovering in the 40s; and super thick on Weyerhauser land. The permits we got are the ones that let us drive in the unit. We have e-scouted and located many areas that we think will hold elk: clearings near benches that are isolated. The sub-species is also different: Rosies are bigger bodied, smaller antlered. I really don't know what to expect as for behavior differences. Still, we have talked to the WA biologists and the private land biologists and gotten good read on the land and realistic expectations on size and density. Other than that, there is surprisingly little on specifics of chasing Rosies.
So I will try to update daily as we are out there, as coverage allows. We will have one full day of on the ground scouting followed by the opener on Nov 3 and seven days of hunting. My partner will have first right of refusal and three points are the minimum. Neither of us are picky, so I imagine first bull seen will fall.
So I will try to update daily as we are out there, as coverage allows. We will have one full day of on the ground scouting followed by the opener on Nov 3 and seven days of hunting. My partner will have first right of refusal and three points are the minimum. Neither of us are picky, so I imagine first bull seen will fall.