Yellowstoner
Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2015
- Messages
- 166
Some really good insights here. I wonder how your strategy changes with migratory elk herds? Where I hunt, our elk herd is on the move out from high country. In my experience, if you're a mile away from an elk, chances are you aren't going to see him ever again. I try to anticipate where the elk are going to move, but it seems like a slight variance in their patterns and the elk are moving miles away from where they moved through the morning before. Is the trick just to get up high and try to set up somewhere you might intercept them? Are you mostly glassing from exposed ridge lines, or from treeline down below? Are you trying to be in a spot where you can glass multiple drainages, or are you focusing on one particular park or spot?
On a different note - since they are closing my unit down for the last 2 weeks of the season, I'm looking at hunting elsewhere in the state for those last 2 weeks. How do you find a spot where the elk aren't super pressured at this point in the season, on likely a general tag? Any tips for approaching a new area late in the season? I will likely try to backpack hunt at this point in the season, but it seems like it's rolling the dice to travel a day or two into the backcountry to potentially not even lay eyes on an elk, vs. traveling around a unit and hiking / glassing until you find them. Do you just convince yourself that you are going to go find elk in the backcountry, and then it normally happens, simply due to lack of pressure, and having certain areas pre-targeted to scope out?
On a different note - since they are closing my unit down for the last 2 weeks of the season, I'm looking at hunting elsewhere in the state for those last 2 weeks. How do you find a spot where the elk aren't super pressured at this point in the season, on likely a general tag? Any tips for approaching a new area late in the season? I will likely try to backpack hunt at this point in the season, but it seems like it's rolling the dice to travel a day or two into the backcountry to potentially not even lay eyes on an elk, vs. traveling around a unit and hiking / glassing until you find them. Do you just convince yourself that you are going to go find elk in the backcountry, and then it normally happens, simply due to lack of pressure, and having certain areas pre-targeted to scope out?