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  1. #1
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    Default I don't want to screw up my bull elk hunt

    So I'm pretty familiar and comfortable in the area where I hunt during muzzleloader every year. However, I hunt with old family members that want to walk less and less each year and drink more and more beer. I find that it's easy to have grand ideas of trekking all over the place in the comfort of home in the spring, but by the time the season rolls around, I just do what is comfortable and familiar, and see the same old nothing each year. Sometimes there are younger guys that accompany and we motivate each other to find new places. Those guys won't be around this year, and this is the first time I've held a bull tag in an area that I feel like I have a chance of actually seeing elk. I don't want to screw it up, so I'm going to actually develop a hunt plan this year to give me something to focus on, instead of wandering around aimlessly. At the very least, I'll cover new ground and see new stuff, and maybe bump into some stuff I otherwise wouldn't have.
    Since everything is walk-in where I go, and you can't camp on the trust access, it doesn't take much walking to get away from most of the other hunters, and in general, I don't usually see many other hunters.

    I've always stuck almost exclusively to the north side of the mountain I hunt. Should I be looking on the south side this year? I don't think I've ever seen anyone hunting over on the south side, judging by where vehicles would be parked for access. Now that I look at the map though, it looks like I could actually camp in BLM pretty near the area I want to check out. My initial idea is the south side, toward the top. This is at about 11,000ft elevation. The one or two times I climbed to the top of a ridge to see a south facing slope, it mostly seemed much hotter and dryer than on the North side (duh right?). I kind of wrote it off as "not a good elk area" but I need to come to terms with the reality that I'm not very experienced and it's foolish to be making those kinds of judgements without really knowing.

    So to boil down the initial inquiry to one simple point, what are your thoughts on North vs. South sides of a mountain? I assume we'll delve into all the other factors of food, cover, water, safe bedding, etc. But from a high level basic view point, do you have a preference?

  2. #2
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    I found this article on the CPW site, and I'm sure I've seen it before but was lazy and didn't read it. I have just enough experience in the woods now that this actually makes sense and explains why I've seen what I've seen and where over the years. Exactly what I needed to read. Great resource for elk hunters that didn't grow up playing Daniel Boone in woods.

    https://cpw.state.co.us/learn/Pages/EHU-CH2-L02.aspx

  3. #3
    Fancy & Customized User Title .455_Hunter's Avatar
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    My elk have all been in transit or in transitional spaces when shot- like moving from afternoon sunny dry slope into snowy north slope, or coming out of north slope dark timber into open grass slopes at first legal shooting light.
    The vagrants of Boulder welcome you...

  4. #4
    Looking Elsewhere
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    Granted I have yet to take an elk but my personal experience has been that in the area I hunt there is a stream at the bottom of the valley which is the south side of the mountain and the other side of the stream is a fairly heavily recreated area. There is plenty of tree cover on the south slope and I find plenty of fresh sign on the south side. At night the elk will travel down to the stream and feed down there all night and then when morning hits they high tail it uphill in to the upper forested areas which are still on the south side. Some do go over the top I think to the north side but that side of the mountain is fairly steep and doesn't have water anywhere so I don't think they go far. So I guess it all depends, I think food and cover is probably more important than north south.

  5. #5
    Grand Master Know It All Sawin's Avatar
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    All of my elk have been in transition areas too. I think unless you’re going to terrain where you spot them a long way off, you’re gonna have to get in to where they’re heading to bed down early and wait for daylight to push them to you, or get nearby and knock one down before they get where they’re going.
    I’ve only taken one that was bedded down and managed to glass her before the herd made us, and that was about 280-300yards. As soon as she stood up, whaaackkk.
    Please leave any relevant feedback here:
    Sawin - Feedback thread.

  6. #6
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    I've been hunting a resident herd. I can camp in the new door that I want to look in, and like the idea of being on the very top (because you don't call big bulls down the mountain), but would be a bit concerned about the morning air heading down and letting them wind me right off the bat.

  7. #7
    Splays for the Bidet CS1983's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Irving;[URL="tel:2339141"
    2339141[/URL]]I've been hunting a resident herd. I can camp in the new door that I want to look in, and like the idea of being on the very top (because you don't call big bulls down the mountain), but would be a bit concerned about the morning air heading down and letting them wind me right off the bat.
    Morning air heads up, generally, as it is heating (hot rises). Cool = down. Swirls at mid day are all bets off if not consistent.

    do you carry a wind/powder indicator bottle? When making movement into an area you should puff the powder out to confirm wind direction.
    Last edited by CS1983; 08-16-2021 at 19:03.
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  8. #8
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    I feel like the cold air moves down the mountain right before sunrise, which is what I'm concerned about, then as soon the sun hits the ground it starts moving up.
    I did add a powder puffer to my pack last year. I'm getting amped up about this year.

  9. #9
    Beer Meister DFBrews's Avatar
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    I’ve always had to grind it out and cover ground to be successful find a good vantage point early in the morning then make decisions from
    There
    You sir, are a specialist in the art of discovering a welcoming outcome of a particular situation....not a mechanic.

    My feedback add 11-12 ish before the great servpocaylpse of 2012

  10. #10
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    I just need to resign myself to covering way more ground than I'm used to, and explaining it to my hunting buddies, even if that means not being allowed to stay in the cabin anymore and solo camping, which is what I've been doing during later seasons anyway, so no biggie.

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