Next season
Posted: Sun Dec 08, 2013 10:27 am
As an Elk hunting fanatic, the only time I am not dreaming of Elk hunting is when I am hunting.
2014 season began last September when I found the largest rub I have ever seen, with tracks resembling a moose more than an Elk in the area I hunt.
This is Coastal Washington, where the woods are thick, and visibility is limited, and after searching fruitlessly for the maker of these tracks, I have to wait until spring to get up there and set up some cameras hoping for confirmation of my suspicions of a large bull.
We encountered a small herd in area, but the bull with them was a small 3pt bull (early Sept. pre-rut) and larger herd was on other side of ridge, but only a few small 5pts in that herd.
I KNOW that he was somewhere in area, but no visual, or rumors from other hunters of a large bull.
I was planning on scouting out several gates (locked) by bicycle this summer, as I like to have options when I hunt.
I like to have several different areas where I know elk to be, but is quality preferable to quantity ?
I hate to "put all my eggs into one basket" especially because I feel that this bull moved to where the cows were more numerous, or he has a favorite "girlfriend" or rutting area.
One of the things I have learned when Elk hunting is that sometimes you have to collect all the pieces of the puzzle before it makes sense, but am I wasting my time scouting an area that I find empty during season ?
2014 season began last September when I found the largest rub I have ever seen, with tracks resembling a moose more than an Elk in the area I hunt.
This is Coastal Washington, where the woods are thick, and visibility is limited, and after searching fruitlessly for the maker of these tracks, I have to wait until spring to get up there and set up some cameras hoping for confirmation of my suspicions of a large bull.
We encountered a small herd in area, but the bull with them was a small 3pt bull (early Sept. pre-rut) and larger herd was on other side of ridge, but only a few small 5pts in that herd.
I KNOW that he was somewhere in area, but no visual, or rumors from other hunters of a large bull.
I was planning on scouting out several gates (locked) by bicycle this summer, as I like to have options when I hunt.
I like to have several different areas where I know elk to be, but is quality preferable to quantity ?
I hate to "put all my eggs into one basket" especially because I feel that this bull moved to where the cows were more numerous, or he has a favorite "girlfriend" or rutting area.
One of the things I have learned when Elk hunting is that sometimes you have to collect all the pieces of the puzzle before it makes sense, but am I wasting my time scouting an area that I find empty during season ?