When I was a kid starting out hunting in the boondocks of bushland Saskatchewan, which is north of what they call the parklands, hunting was walking until you found a fairly fresh track. From our house less than ½ mile put you in excellent deer pasture. Walk most of the day and there would be a 50-50 chance of finding a fresh moose or elk track.
Easily, my most memorative day of hunting was when I was about 16, maybe 17. Fifteen minutes from the house I spotted a large whitetail buck, standing facing me, with just his head and neck showing above the willows. I levelled the long barreled 30-30, model 94 at his neck and let fly. The buck took off and I started off following his tracks in the two inches of snow.
By noon I had seen his big flag and watched him bound away, at least three times. Still only fifteen minutes from home, I walked in and ate. Went back after him, saw his rear end once or twice and at dark I walked the twenty minutes to the house! I don't think he ever took me more than half a mile from home, all day.
To me that was hunting, while the old buck taught me all the tricks.
Moose are equally smart. They always bed down in a thicket of bush, but first they walk down wind. Thus, if you follow their tracks, they will smell you coming, every time. Once you put a moose out of his bed, they are extremely hard to get for the rest of that day.
Their pattern is to feed in the early morning, then bed down for a daytime rest. In about November, they will get out of their bed about 2:30, and feed again.In the hilly country of central BC, I once picked up the tracks of two bulls, about nine in the morning. I followed them all day, then shot one of them on their afternoon feed, about 3:00.
Another time I got on a fresh bull track in the morning, spent a lot of time trying to figure out wher he would bed for the day. I picked the right spot and was circling it, when he jumped up about 75 yards to the side. I put a 220 grain 30-06 bullet through his ribs.
To me, these instances were the ultimate in hunting.
I too, have jumped out of a truck and shot both elk and moose. (On different occassions!) But to me, that is shooting game, not hunting it.