First Elk Hunt

If the elk you're after aren't pressured, spend the first day or 2 spotting. You'll get a good idea of their travel patterns & you can see what there is for legal bulls. I've had my best luck walking in well before 1st light with a spot already picked out to sit. I also park my transportation a minimum of 1/2 mile from where I'm going. Be ready to shoot at first light because it may be the only chance you get. Since you're going with friends, you might want to pair up. If they get shot at, there is a good chance they'll move where you can't go after them ( unless your friend can get you more access ).

Best of luck.
 
whacker: Get ahold of yourself...

I don't believe in Santa or the Easter Bunny any more Ben, so my annual elk hunt is now the highlight of my year. The one event I look forward to more than any other. I am not lucky enough to be able to live in elk country (yet), so the two or three weeks I get to spend in the bush with great friends, chasing elk, and experiencing all that is elk hunting is truly treasured, and something that I look forward to with great anticipation. I hope that never changes.:D

Rookie Wildcat, good luck with your hunt. I'd be interested to find out how you make out. Even if you don't connect this year you will get a feeling for the property and be better armed for next. My guess is you'll be back either way it turns out. I drive 12 hours every year to get to camp. A buddy of mine from Ontario came out for his "once in a lifetime" elk hunt a few years ago. This year will be his third "once in a lifetime" trip.:rolleyes: He was real excited when a bull chased a cow and calf past him at about 30 yds. but the deal got sealed later when we called a bull to the far side of a small buck brush choked draw. The look on his face was priceless, as this bull, still unseen, screamed and beat the crap out of some alders less than 50 yds. away:eek: We couldn't get the bull to cross the draw, but it didn't matter, my buddy was hooked, already scheming as to how he could make it back for another hunt.:D
 
If you haven't bugled before then don't a lot of new hunters tend to bugle badly and too often.
If you want to bugle there are lot's of good ones on the market I prefer the Abe and Sons great sound.
Pick up a Hootchie Mama cow call easiest to use and sounds pretty good. I personally don't use one of that type but know a lot that do.
Locate the trails and get downwind and hang out
 
Would you guys hazard a rough guess mid september is when the rut gets going? I have a draw tag this fall, starts on the 17th and I have never gone this early for them, would like to book my holidays roughly at peak time so maybe they are vocal.

Thanks!
 
Would you guys hazard a rough guess mid september is when the rut gets going? I have a draw tag this fall, starts on the 17th and I have never gone this early for them, would like to book my holidays roughly at peak time so maybe they are vocal.

Thanks!

Where I hunt in the East Kootenays, the peak of the September rut is generally thought to be around the 23rd of the month. Pray for cooler weather, I've always thought that a good heavy frost will get the bulls talking as much as the rut will. The last couple of years it has been pretty warm when we've been out and the bulls were pretty quiet. Seems they are always a little more active after a couple of really cool nights. Your mileage may vary;) Good luck.
 
Would you guys hazard a rough guess mid september is when the rut gets going? I have a draw tag this fall, starts on the 17th and I have never gone this early for them, would like to book my holidays roughly at peak time so maybe they are vocal.

Thanks!

My experience is that earlier is better Noel - but if the weather is very warm it will delay things.

Which zone?
 
Would you guys hazard a rough guess mid september is when the rut gets going? I have a draw tag this fall, starts on the 17th and I have never gone this early for them, would like to book my holidays roughly at peak time so maybe they are vocal.

Thanks!

second week of september has always been when i see things really pick up.

they are bugling and responding to calls already however....go get em!

lots of frost on the ground this morning....i love this time of the year
 
I just returned from a quasi-successful elk hunt and there were parts of it that were absolutely horrid.
Father and son as my hunting partners. Father has NEVER hunted big game until now and the son is the world's greatest shot and hunter extraordinaire (I found out last week that this was the first animal he has ever shot).
Neither had time to sight in rifles, so I did it for them. Then the Dad went to the range with me and fired 2 boxes of bullets to familiarize himself with the .30-06 rifle again. The son decided to go to a gravel pit and shoot at junk at unknown distances with his new .300WM. He actually fired 8 rounds!!
Preparation for the hunt:
Everyone had a seat, a bi-pod or mono-pod, a rifle and a range finder. Also everyone had various calls and scent covers/ attractants.
First evening of hunting, landowner pointed out where he had seen animals and that another area held great bunches of tracks. Right off, the son decides that I should take the area where there were tracks so that he and his dad could take the oat-field where elk had been seen each night.
Everyone gets set up. The father gets set up, rifle resting on bi-pod, binos searching the field. The son sets up, mono-pod collapsed on the ground, rifle laying on the ground beside him, rangefinder in his pack, calls around his neck, smartphone in his hand playing games.
Father sees an elk, starts to call it in with a hoochie mama. Elk looks at the noise (apparently, that means he saw the hunters who were buried in a copse of tress 300yds away) and turns to continue to the oats in the field. Father calls again, elk turns and walks toward the sound, browsing as he moves. Calls stop and he loses interest and turns (to run away in absolute fright). Son picks up rifle from ground, sitting, fires off-hand at the elk 250yds away on a perfect broadside shot. Elk jumps, lands, not really upset so Father throws one at him. Elk turns to leave field, son fires one at the back of his head. Father sees Blood fly and tells him he had blown his brains out. Elk picks up speed and Dad throws another one in his direction.
8 hours of tracking later (4 that night and 4 the next morning), found a dying elk. Son shoots it from 20feet and blows its lower jaw off, elk uses that momentum to get up and try to run, son fires another round into the neck, elk is down. one more for good measure to the back of the head puts it out.
The consummate hunter then has no idea how to gut or quarter the animal. I am in HELL!
Check the bullet wounds. There is one in the shoulder (shoulder is broken) but no similar damage on the opposite one. Bullet exited in front of the breastbone at the bottom of the body. A hand-full of clotted blood in the body cavity and a slightly nicked lung. Called him on the broadside shot, he said it was and then I told him that the wound channel doesn't lie. Quartering away and you shot too far forward. Tore off the hair between the antlers. No evidence that the dad even hit it. Not sure they will be speaking to me again.
Worst hunting trip I have been on, and that included the time I gutshot a fawn when I shot her mother (she was on the opposite side and slightly higher).
 
Oh, and by the time we got there, they were done with the rut. No bugling and they were not answering ours either. Barely interested in coming to cow calls. And hunting pressure in the general area had chased out every elk but the one "we" shot. Going back next year before the day the season actually opens.
 
I hunted with my outlaws once in a while. Out of 12 deer we got one year they shot 8 of them in the rearend and figured that was good shooting. As long as the deer stopped it didn't matter where it got hit doing it.
 
I refuse dto take any video and dad took "hero pics" with the son's phone. I don't want pics of that disgusting display. I also refused to hunt any longer with them that week and went to town. Saturday, church on Sunday, and walked about 4 km on Monday looking for a new spot and trying to come down again.
 
Good call on not hunting with them agian. They don't seem the type to learn from bad choices.
We invite a lot of rookie elk hunters to our camp, and so far all but one has got an elk. That's a very rewarding experience for the partners in our camp. It takes a mentor for a lot of folks to learn how its done properly, but even with careful coaching the behavior of a couple of our first time guests means that they won't be invited back. The elk deserve better than indifferent preparation and hope shots.
You seem to be off to a good start by asking lots of questions and making good choices for yourself. Don't get discouraged! You'll have fun next season. And maybe fill your freezer too!
 
Elk

I refuse dto take any video and dad took "hero pics" with the son's phone. I don't want pics of that disgusting display. I also refused to hunt any longer with them that week and went to town. Saturday, church on Sunday, and walked about 4 km on Monday looking for a new spot and trying to come down again.

With your good character and strong ethics, you'll do well with a new group. I've hunted WMU 356 last 6 years and finally got a good bull.
Cheers and good luck.
geoffandelk.jpg
 
Wow, sorry to hear your first experience with elk was soooo wrong. The bull deserved way better than he got. He was at least recovered, and not lost to the 'yotes and ravens.

It was a difficult year this year. The bush was lush and green and the temperatures quite warm. The bulls were quiet and hard to coax out of the cool dark timber. It was a fantastic time none the less with a bull hanging on the pole by the end.

I hope you will be able to return next year with more suitable partners and enjoy the hunt for what it should be.

P1040954.jpg


P1040974.jpg


P1040978.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom