Brownell's Spring Reloading Sale

So.... What is it I'm supposed to be looking for?

TexanSam

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2018
Messages
351
Howdy folks,

I guess I'm going to ask a question that may seem a bit obvious to some, yet to me it seems baffling. I recently purchased OnX for all 50 states. My experience with it before was to aid in waterfowl hunting by looking up landowners with fallow corn fields that geese were feeding on in my home state. Now that I'm using it to plan for something out of state on public land, I get how the layers work showing me where the public land is, but my next question is, what else am I looking for?

Right now I am holding a pretty decent northeast wyoming pronghorn tag, as well as a region deer tag that overlaps the pronghorn unit. Trying to plan my hunt, I'm looking at areas that have shades of yellow, blue, purple, green and so on over a satellite image of the area I plan to hunt. I understand that the shaded areas I am legal to walk onto and fire my rifle at an animal that I have a tag for, so that gives me a place to start.

My main question then is, using the different layers, and content seen from the satellite and topo maps, what are some things I need to look for in order to plan a hunt? Is it just roads leading to the shaded areas so that I can access them? Or should I narrow it down further by looking at places that might offer things such as water, forage, elevation change, woods (or lack the thereof).

Sorry to have to ask something so simple, I have hunted elk, waterfowl and whitetail in areas where the geography is different than eastern wyoming and where there was no question on what was legal to hunt and what wasn't. if someone came to me asking these questions, I would have a hard time explaining what areas in my mind are good because they look "ducky" or "deery".
 
I look for anything that requires me to get out of the truck and walk. By following that simple philosophy you're going to eliminate most of your competition. Of course you need your basics, food and water, but also look for terrain. Places that are not visual from the road. Don't discount private land too, pay attention to what is going on in private. Some private lands hold some feed and connected to public pasture ground that requires a lot of walking to get into a good position but can yield some great hunting. Just use your head and legs and you'll do fine.
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
115,587
Messages
2,102,850
Members
37,209
Latest member
Stockbowhunter24
Back
Top